Monday 1 April 2013

Memory

Memory is a funny thing.  Michael Gove thinks it's very important to remember lots of useless facts.  He, it would seem, is hoping to create a generation of quiz geniuses, which might be very useful, as TV quiz show competitor may be the only job going if we believe the doom and gloom prophecies.  It would be nice if you could open up someone's head and pour in a load of facts that just stay there for ever, but it doesn't work like that.  I've forgotten a lot more than I've learnt.  Now, I do know that can't be true but sometimes it feels that way.

For most of the weekend I have been trying to remember something.  It was a word, a concept, something that I thought I had learnt but it might have just been something I had read.  It might have been something real or something I had made up.  Last week, I told a colleague that I wanted to make a school CD to raise school funds and that I thought it would be a good idea to also use it to encourage Summer.  I said that we could call the CD, "Our School Sing for Summer."  She thought that was funny because she was doing a concert with a choir she sings with called Sing for Spring and wondered why both me and her choir leader had come up with the same idea.  There are loads of examples of this kind of thing happening on a much more important level.  The paperclip was simultaneously invented by three different people.  Elisha Gray and Graham Bell both claim to have invented the telephone.  In fact, Malcolm Gladwell writes in an article in the New Yorker magazine that there have been 148 major scientific discoveries that happened at the same time.

The history of science is full of ideas that several people had at the same time.
The history of science is full of ideas that several people had at the same time.
Read more: http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2008/05/12/080512fa_fact_gladwell#ixzz2PENUySBN

I thought that this idea had a name, but couldn't recall where I'd got such an idea from.  The other strange thing about memory is that you can never remember anything when you are trying to but at 3am ideas come flooding back and I can tell you that I didn't need to be checking out Carl Jung at 3am, to see if my lazy memory recall was right.  Jung was probably my favourite psychologist.  He was a bit bonkers, as they all are (every single one of my lecturers had some kind of speech impediment or twitch or was just plain crazy) but he seem to say things that I agreed with.  His concept of archytypes has always appealed to me, and I have always found it particularly when writing characters.


 

The concept that I was searching for was that of the Collective Conscience; the idea that we are connected to a kind of library of human knowledge.  I also remembered that Carl Jung is responsible for the best ever 
quote from Psychologist:

"Show me a sane man and I will cure him for you."

At a family party, people were discussing how trains had changed in their lifetime.  Now, you wouldn't think that trains had changed that much but single carriages, doors that have stupid catches that you can't open from the inside and itchy, woven, tapestry seats, leather straps to open windows and steam trains are never seen now.

The sad thing is that I might now be able to remember what I bought from the Supermarket to have for dinner tonight but I can remember all of those things.  Except that I couldn't remember steam train because the Liverpool Street to Southend Victoria line was electrified before I was born and no steam trains went into Liverpool Street.  I was confused because I have a very strong memory of a traumatic journey with my Mum when I was about 3 years old.  We walked to the station and picked 'Granny-jump-out-of beds' from the wall, where a teenage girl was trying to see how high she could get her leg up the wall.  We waited on the platform and I was very distressed when the train came in to find that there was smoke coming out of it.  I remember my mum telling me it was OK because that type of train was meant to have steam coming out of it. Then when we got to Romford we had to get a bus to visit my Nan and my mum, who was pregnant, fell and cut her big toe open.  She was really upset and we were surrounded by lots of  very well meaning old ladies who frightened me. 

My Dad said that it couldn't have been true, the Long Suffering Husband thought that no one could remember anything in such detail at three years old but my Mum said, "I'd forgotten that.  I was so upset.  It was a diesel train."

Granny-jump-outa-beds




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