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224 pages, Hardcover
First published February 4, 2025
‘These pages show you how I read my own embodied past, how I imagine a map for myself that loosens the grip that sorrow has on my soul without erasing my experiences, and how the map moves. I understand I cannot make a map for you—you have to retrieve the important particles from your own life that will help you story, destroy, and restore your life, and create your own map. At the interstices of our lives, we trade stories and secrets, we take turns helping each other go on. May these shared moments and rituals for release and revivification raise your own sweet solaces.’
‘Smell kelp and taste salt; feel that underwater animals have brushed near you. Remember parts of your body are scattered in water all over the earth. Know land is made from you—Have endless patterns and repetitions accompanying your thoughtlessness, as if to say let go of that other more linear story, with its beginning, middle, and end, with its transcendent end, let go, we are the poem, we have come miles of life, we have survived this far to tell you, go on, go on. You will see you have an underlying tone and plot to your life underneath the one you’ve been told. Circular and image bound. Something near tragic, near unbearable, but contained by your irreducible imagination—who would have thought of it but you— your ability to metamorphose like organic material in contact with changing elements. The rocks. They carry the chronology of water. All things simultaneously living and dead in your hands.’ (from TCoW)
‘Narrative is a shapeshifting space — carries with it the possibility of arrangement, de-arrangement, and rearrangement, as does language itself. If I step back into a story I have been carrying in my body about my experiences, it is possible to change the point of view, it is possible to curate the elements of the story differently, bring different themes or images forward or let them recede — I’m talking about what we do with events in our lives. We story them and try to learn to live with them. Anything that can be put to story can be storied differently. Ask any member of a family about a holiday dinner and you will get a different story. One of the greatest transmographical spaces we experience in life happens at the level of memory. Memories are conjurings.
At the same time, memory is a mind-fuck. It doesn’t give a shit what you think about it. Memory slingshots you back and sideways. It interrupts time whether you like it or not, usually through your body. A sound, a smell, an image, and your body becomes a quivering wobble.’
I believe that memory inside the brain and memory as we experience it as a storytelling field carries within it tiny interstices or flash points where more than one meaning is available. In some ways I have come to think of memory as oceanic or like space. The way it stretches out or contracts. We enter into that fluid, vast space and locate moments that we use to create narratives that sustain us. We carry our memory pieces in our actual bodies. I often wonder what memory pieces we may be carrying from before we were born.