I remember / je me souviens
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For those limbic bursts of nostalgia, invented by Proust, miniaturized by Nicholson Baker, and freeze-dried by Joe Brainard in his I remember and by Georges Perec in his Je me souviens.

But there are no fractions, the world is an integer
Like us, and like us it can neither stand wholly apart nor disappear.
When one is young it seems like a very strange and safe place,
But now that I have changed it feels merely odd, cold
And full of interest.
          --John Ashbery, "A Wave"

Sometimes I sense that to put real confidence in my memory I have to get to the end of all rememberings. That seems to say that I forego remembering. And now that strikes me as an accurate description of what it is to have confidence in one's memory.
          --Stanley Cavell, The Claim of Reason


Sunday, October 26, 2003
I remember seeing how far I could walk down the street with my eyes closed. I would always aim for twenty steps, though things often started getting ticklish around ten. How far I would try to walk was a function of several different things: were there people in front of me? Coming towards me or receding? Where there people behind me? Was there traffic on the street? Parked cars? Trees on the sidewalk? Garbage? Balustrades? Wrought iron fences? Sun or darkness? How wide was the sidewalk? I would always slow down for the last few steps, which always became a question of will. And yet I was rarely as far off of my planned trajectory as I always feared I was. If there were people behind me I imagined they thought I was drunk. When I was drunk (like, maybe, senior year of high school, the year of Southern Comfort) I'd walk more rapidly, in a haze of self-assurance.

I remember as well that much easier was going up or down steps with your eyes closed. There's a kind of visual or iconic counting that goes on, so that you know when you reach the last step, even when they're twelve or fourteen of them, without either counting the steps you see or the steps you take. Your feet know. Steps are easier. But I remember how surprisingly jarring it is to miss a step. To expect to have to step down one more riser, and to find you're already at the bottom.

I remember doing this once in Long Island, at night, through some fields with trees in them, and Jimmy Buhler (of whom, at some other point, much more later) watching me and wondering what was going on. I told him and he offered to guide me. This seemed a neat experiment, but he couldn't resist guiding me right into a tree, which really hurt. Jimmy once ran right into our sliding glass door, though, banging his nose terrible (though not breaking it) a scene I remembered when reading Michael Cunningham's amazing (fictional) account of the death of the narrator's brother when he crashes through a door and pulls a piece of glass out of his carotid artery.


posted by william 2:14 PM
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