Wednesday, 18 February 2015

LET'S HAVE SOME LIGHT AROUND HERE...



Here's a funny thing.  "About time!" you cry.  No, I mean 'funny-peculiar', not 'funny-ha ha' - although it is about time, so to speak.  You know how, when you associate a particular item with a specific place and period in your past, the association sometimes seems 'all-inclusive', whether it actually was or not?

"Good grief!  What's he wittering on about now?" you may be asking yourselves - so I'll tell you.

On my living-room ceiling are two circular fluorescent lights, which were first acquired in a previous house back in the 1960s.  I know we didn't always have them as I remember my father bringing them home one night and having to return one for a replacement the next day because it was broken.

We'd moved into the house in 1965, but it could've been anytime between 1966 and '67 at the earliest (maybe even '68?) before the lights assumed their place on the ceiling.  I can't remember the exact year we got them, but I now associate them so strongly with the house that, whenever I think back, it seems as if we had them the entire period we resided there, even though I know it isn't so.

Over 20 years ago, I visited my old home for the first time since leaving 16 years before, and was surprised to see patches over our old paper on the ceiling where the lights had once been.  (The patches were still there a few years later and perhaps might yet be there now, for all I know.)  Anyway, seeing that the lights had left their mark for so many years afterwards only reinforced their connection to the house in my mind.

It's the same with toys and comics.  Over the years, I've been lucky enough to re-acquire many items I once had as a child and have now owned them for far longer than I ever had the originals.  Some I originally maybe had for only a few weeks or months, others a year or three - and, as is the way of such things, some were consigned to history long before others made their appearance - yet somehow I seem to remember possessing each and every one of them concurrently and for the same duration.

One example I spoke about in a previous post is the first issue of the revamped SMASH! from March, 1969.  I only had it for around four days before selling it on to a classmate (it was my intention to buy another copy the next day, but I couldn't find one).  However, every page had embedded itself in my memory with such clarity that, when I tracked down a replacement copy over 15 and a half years later, it was instantly familiar - as if I'd last seen it only a few weeks before.

Here's the kicker though - whenever I leaf through its pages,  I'm instantly transported back to the living-room of the house I lived in at the time.  What's more, it seems to conjure up every aspect of that house and all the years I lived there, even though I only had the comic for a mere four days.  Uncanny!

So, I don't know about you, but I find it exceedingly strange that some items inform our recollections of a place to such a degree that they seem to represent the entire 'picture' as opposed to only a part of it (if that makes any sense).

If you've any thoughts on the subject, feel free to let rip in the comments section.  (And if you can tell me what I've just been talking about, I'd very much appreciate it.)
  

8 comments:

  1. Well, I've got a china plate with an old fashioned sailing ship on it that comes from my Grandmother's house and whenever I look at it (which is often as it's in my kitchen) I'm instantly reminded of my Gran (who died in 1989) and her house so that would be the 'entire picture' I suppose.

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  2. Absolutely, Kid - I'd love to know when and where it was bought but that will always be a mystery now.

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    1. Who knows, CJ - perhaps another relation knows its history.

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  3. They're all dead, Kid - but the ship is called "Friendship Of Salem" so I googled it and saw the very plate, identical to the one I've got. Apparently they were made in the '70s to the '80s which isn't very precise but I'd wondered if the plate was older than me and now I can see that it isn't.

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    1. Yet I'll bet you probably associate it with your Granny's house for all the time she lived there, which is what the post was alluding to. Strange thing, the mind, eh?

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  4. Well, I can certainly associate with the time that I was visiting her as it could have been bought from the early '70s onwards. I don't actually remember seeing it while she was alive but that doesn't mean anything as she kept her china plates and knick-knacks in a couple of glass cabinets which I took no notice of at the time - one china plate looked much like another to me. But that's why I can think of that plate as the 'entire picture' because I don't associate it with any particular time so it represents the entire time.

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  5. And even if you had seen it, but didn't know she'd only acquired it the day before, you'd have assumed that she's always had it and that you'd only just noticed it, and associated it with the 'entire picture' long after the fact. Confused? You will be.

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