à la recherche du temps perdu

Essence des choses. And that's about all I know about Marcel Proust (1871-1922), and Swann's Way.  I It/he was on my Honours French course, I guess in 4th year.  I read the relevant parts, his famous layered memory stuff.  Does everyone know about the madeleines?  (A madeleine is a kind of tea cake, significant to Proust for the memories it recalled and beautifully described.)  You know it:  it's the incredible recall of the first time a thing came home to you, fully registered in your mind and memory, so that every time you encounter it again, the first time comes rushing back and layers over your present experience.  

We are told that the olfactory sense is the fastest, most effective aid to remembrance of things past. I used to keep a lipstick that reminded me of the spring I was 14.  Is that proof?  

I'm thinking about this now because of the book I'm writing about age. It's a combination of a memoir and a travel book.  The more I dig into my past and the more questions I ask about my future, the more I am remembering and piecing together hitherto buried memories, discovering links I hadn't been aware of.  I'm finding out reasons, maybe, for funny things I do.  I never put the cap on the end of a pen because three-quarters of a century ago, one stuck and I couldn't get it off. I think maybe the reason I don't drink Coca Cola or any other soft drink is that I didn't have access to them during my formative Coke-drinking years. During World War Two, Coke was not available. I was 13, spending the summer in Gimli on Lake Winnipeg in the home of my maternal grandparents, most of the time on the dock at the harbour (the first year I was allowed to swim in deep water).  I still remember the day a case of Coke came to town.  The news spread like (artificial) maple syrup on a hot pancake  and we all picked up our towels and headed in to town.  Like everything else at that time, the Coke was rationed. My uncle the pharmacist had a soda fountain so he got six bottles. The Chinaman's, the best restaurant in town, got six bottles. I don't know how the remaining 12 were allotted. We all went to the Chinaman's because there were booths and we could squeeze in. I think we were allowed two bottles among us - maybe six or eight of us.  As I say, I never developed a Coke habit and that's probably why.  

That was the least of our deprivations. We were a small, lost generation. There were fewer of us because we were Depression babies. Our parents had to have been very brave to have children in the early 30s, and they were lean years. And then the war deprived us of our teenage insouciance.  We weren't young enough not to care and we weren't old enough to do anything useful, so we just hung around waiting for it to be over and life to begin. 

Remembrance of things past. Not much to remember, actually.

later

This has been an odd, ragtag day.  Monday is usually good. I start with a plan and try to allocate my time, but as the morning went on I started to get jumpy.  Too many things to do, and I met obstacles. I have to get only 3 Visas for the big trip I'm going on; the cruise company will get the rest.  So I begin by not getting online. My desktop was  not on.  So I moved over to my laptop -online - and started work, finishing my chapter on Forgetting.  Finished and printed, and then I thought of a couple more things to say. By that time I had gone on to the next one on Comforting so my pagination is going to be wrong when I add stuff.  Later. 

Finally on line with the desk top and I pulled up the form to apply for the Visas, and it/they didn't have a province list for me to choose from.  So I couldn't move on. I tried the phone number I was given but the person who answered spoke French only, with a bad accent, or I would have tried. Try later.

I'm going to Stratford again on Wednesday, the last time this season, and I will have seen EVERY ONE of the season. (Very time-consuming.)  So I'm going to make crab wraps for a picnic - I checked the weather and it will be okay. I needed to buy crab meat (I buy pollock disguised as crab meat - cheaper, but good), and I was about to go to the store when a man came to restore the compressors (if that's what they're called) for my AC units that have been non-functioning all summer long as part of the balcony disaster project. So no store.  I ordered early from Gateway Grocery (I love them; they carry for me!) for delivery tomorrow morning so I can make the crab wraps in time for the picnic Wednesday.  The AC remote was breathing hard and I had new batteries but we (the AC man and I) couldn't figure out how to get the thing open to replace the batteries.  Later. 

My challenged son needs a will with a Henson Trust, that will allow him to have money (like from me, if there's any left, when I die), and I've been trying to arrange a meeting with the lawyer but we have been delayed and put off several times and it happened again this week.  Later.

I wrote my blog late last night and I knew it needed checking but I went to bed instead and corrected it this morning.  So then I didn't feel like writing a blog for today's date until later. Like now. Here I am. Nothing accomplished.

Maybe later.