Author: | Steven C. Nelson | ISBN: | 9781370878932 |
Publisher: | Steven C. Nelson | Publication: | February 13, 2017 |
Imprint: | Smashwords Edition | Language: | English |
Author: | Steven C. Nelson |
ISBN: | 9781370878932 |
Publisher: | Steven C. Nelson |
Publication: | February 13, 2017 |
Imprint: | Smashwords Edition |
Language: | English |
Throughout the years, you live and witness and experience. And all of those phenomena are recalled later in varying degrees of completeness and accuracy. These excerpts from life are periods of personal tumult, events that generated intense emotions, and accounts of others’ conquests that are so poignant you’ve never forgotten them, not one detail. They are variations of trite phrases that you’ve altered to help you better remember them and fictional stories incubated in your imagination that you augment to become more complex and pleasing. They are funny things you used to say, a trademark phrase, a “youmark”—something everyone at the party expects to hear at least twice from you. You collect them and protect them because they mean something to you, and maybe only you—they are you. We all live with this cognitive debris, and how we interpret and react to the events of each day is filtered through the prism it creates in each of us. This is mine.
Throughout the years, you live and witness and experience. And all of those phenomena are recalled later in varying degrees of completeness and accuracy. These excerpts from life are periods of personal tumult, events that generated intense emotions, and accounts of others’ conquests that are so poignant you’ve never forgotten them, not one detail. They are variations of trite phrases that you’ve altered to help you better remember them and fictional stories incubated in your imagination that you augment to become more complex and pleasing. They are funny things you used to say, a trademark phrase, a “youmark”—something everyone at the party expects to hear at least twice from you. You collect them and protect them because they mean something to you, and maybe only you—they are you. We all live with this cognitive debris, and how we interpret and react to the events of each day is filtered through the prism it creates in each of us. This is mine.