pjthompson: (Default)
[personal profile] pjthompson
I’ve been working on editing my mother’s memoirs for a while now, and I’m in the final stages, I do believe. Which means it’s time to replace my bracketed placeholders [insert that picture when you find it] with actual photos. My mother had a huge collection of snapshots and in her later years we’d sometimes go through them and I’d ask who everyone was and pencil in the description on the back. Then Mom “put the boxes away in a safe place” one day and subsequently couldn’t remember where. I’d made a half-hearted attempt to find them—and did find one small collection—but there were tons of photos I could remember but couldn’t find.

Then one day last week I realized there was a gigantic plastic tub—maybe 18 in. tall and wide and about 2 ft long—buried beneath a bunch of bags with books in them waiting to be recycled. I cleared off the bags and looked inside. The pictures my mother and I had both been looking for had been hiding in plain sight all along. So, I started going through them and scanning ones I needed for the memoir. And for other reasons. I’ve only made a small dent in this enormous collection. Many have the penciled information on them, many do not. And Mom kept everything, even the inside-your-purse-mistake photos, the thumb-enhanced photos, the so-blurry-you-can’t-tell-what-you’re-looking-at photos. (Back in the day when you took your film to One Hour Photo and the like they’d print everything, even the crap ones.) I have managed to throw away those, but the others? What to do with old photographs of people you don’t know?

I know what Cleaning Nazi Marie would say, but I just can’t throw them away. It’s like throwing the lives of those people away. I tell myself the old ones at least might have some historic value. And if that self-con doesn’t work, I remind myself that there is something of a market for these things at antique stores and flea markets. I don’t plan on selling them, but maybe the poor unfortunate who comes after me and cleans this place out can make a few bucks. Or finally get around to throwing them out. Either way, I won’t be involved.

My mother was not a particularly talented photographer. Too impatient to wait, frame, focus, get those thumbs out of the way. Just point, snap, and move on. Which is odd because she was a good and patient painter and crafter. There are a number of vacation snaps she never got into albums of places I can’t identify. I may get around to chucking those. Most don’t have people in them and they’re the kind of thing that is only precious to the one taking the picture because it evokes a memory of time, place, feeling. A memory I don’t have.

She also kept every note from baby gifts when I was born, every congratulations message, early birthday cards from her to me, and an entire keepsake book of Pamela paraphernalia. All the things to let me know I was once held precious by someone. I don’t say that in a pathetic way because it makes me feel warm inside. And miss her. The mother she was then, the mother she became again in her later years, not the mother in-between who tried to make me who I am not and who I fought with and hid from so much.

Memory is a double-edged sword, but I’m keeping all the memories, even the bittersweet, because they made me who I am today—as much as my mother did.



 

 

Date: 2020-11-21 11:16 pm (UTC)
From: [personal profile] hyba
I just wanted to say that this was a lovely entry to read, and I think it's great to be able to uncover so many photographs the way that you did from a loved one, even if they're not around anymore. I think it's normal to have sentimental value and a desire to keep photographs with people in them - the idea that by throwing them away, you're throwing the person in the photo away, too. It's a tough and strange emotion - almost as though we battle with the idea that "Ceci n'est pas une pipe".

Again, lovely entry, and you definitely have a way with words! Hoping you find more value in these photographs, whether sentimental or otherwise, and that through them you can learn more about the person who once took them, had them printed, held them in their hands, and stored them away for safekeeping.

Date: 2020-11-22 01:49 am (UTC)
sartorias: (Default)
From: [personal profile] sartorias
Oh, goodness that style! I have that style in my baby book, with my mother's teenage handwriting in it.

Yeah, those photos. I ended up having to deal with Mom's. I did toss a lot of stuff, but mostly bad and blurry black and white shots of flat desert from car windows, or fifty shots of water from a rowboat, or pictures of dead fish that her second husband had caught. As you say, people are harder to toss when one hasn't any idea who they are.

Date: 2020-11-22 09:49 pm (UTC)
rimturse: (Default)
From: [personal profile] rimturse
*hugs*

I'm in the same situation. Luckily my aunt is still alive and well, and she's been able to fill in some blanks, but not all. For my father's photos from the Thule Airbase, I found a Facebook group and asked there if someone was interested in the photos. Had just one taker for an aerial photo, the rest garnered a lot of reminiscing, but not enough for someone to want them. I think I'll throw them out, since I'm not related to anyone there, but yeah... it's more difficult with family photos.

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