One memory you may have in your youth is when you suddenly could not recall the name of someone you knew well. That panic that sets in when you know you should know it, but you draw a blank – until you think about something else & your relaxed mind delivers the answer.
It is a funny in your twenties. In your seventies, when the same thing happens, it brings a different kind of panic. "Am I getting Alzheimers? Is age attacking my brain?"
Chances are, you are fine. But, bias against aging can make it hard to accept that truth – especially when younger people look at you & you know they are thinking: "Uh oh. Erie is getting old & his memory is failing."
My theory is that a one reason healthy older people have memory problems is the huge volume of information we have collected – like a sky jammed with starling's murmuration. How many people you have met, medical words learned, books read, movies seen?
No wonder that it becomes difficult to withdraw the right information you "know so well" from your brain's packed computer.
Still it is a quandary. What to do?
Quandaries
We are not meant
to escape them,
not
for very long.
They are the songs
where, midway,
you forget the words & hum,
you & the band hoping
you will remember them.
If you do recall
you have a moment
to sit in the chair
that adjoins all quandaries,
rest from your quest
for a few moments at best
before the band strikes up
a tune you know
but cannot recall the words.
At least at first.
-Erie Chapman
Photograph: "Murmuration" by Erie

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