A phrase landed in me during the week that my mother was dying, as I grasped at any words I could find to make sense of the enormous shift in front of me.
The shape of every memory is changing.
I was seeing with painful clarity what anyone who has experienced big loss knows: I would now have two lives. The first life was the previous 26 years in which I was lucky enough to have my beloved mother with me in life, and the second, however much time I have in front of me, in which I would have to hold her close as a beloved ancestor. And every memory from that first life was now changing, shaped by the reality of this sudden ending.
My mother was a constant in all of the life Iβd already known. Her steady presence, her love and care, was a backdrop to all things β a backdrop so fundamental to my experience of life that it was hard to see it clearly at times. Her love had always been at the center of my life, but I wouldnβt have named it as such until I realized I would have to live without her living presence reinforcing it. Perhaps thatβs just the way of everything that is fundamental. We assume there will always be air to breathe, until there isnβt; we assume the sun will rise every day, until it doesnβt.
Now, the backdrop of my every memory was suddenly shifting into focus. Now, in the constant foreground: the gift of having had my mother for any time at all, my gratitude for any moment we spent together in life. The shape of every memory had changed.
So many other things have come into clearer focus along with that shift. There is painful truth to the cliche that major loss makes you realize whatβs most important. Iβve moved through the past year with much more clarity about how I want to use my time and energy, letting go of past insecurities and narratives that no longer serve me. With my motherβs love at the center, I understand the sacredness of my life more fully. The shape of my every memory has changed, and with it, the shape and direction of my life.
Memory is not static, an unchanging account of events and relationships and facts. It is the source of our meaning-making, a collection of threads from which we weave the narrative that holds our life. The shape and texture of our memories change along with us, as we need them to, to make sense of the ever-changing reality we are faced with.
Letting the shape of my memories change to foreground my motherβs love is one of the things that has saved me, that has made surviving this first year without her possible. How we remember matters β and the shape of our memories can shape our lives as we move through them.
May you each find a shape to your memories that allow you to move through loss and change with more ease. May you know, always, that you are loved, and let that holding shape all of your life to come.