The Memory of All Things
Somewhere beyond us, everything we’ve ever been is still unfolding.
Nothing ends
the way we think it does.
It only leaves
the version of the world
where we can still see it.
A word spoken once
does not disappear,
it moves.
It settles somewhere
beyond the reach of our hearing,
still carrying the shape
of the mouth that formed it.
Every moment
we have ever lived
does not collapse into the past.
It expands.
It continues
without us,
in a direction
we were never meant to follow.
There is a place,
not a place we can point to,
not a place we can return to;
where everything remains.
Not as memory,
not as fragments,
but whole.
Untouched
by forgetting.
And sometimes,
without warning,
it returns.
Not as it was,
but close enough
to be felt.
A feeling
you thought had ended
standing quietly
inside a new moment.
A sound,
a silence,
a shift in the air
and suddenly
you are no longer
only here.
You recognize it
before you understand it.
That faint, familiar weight.
That echo of something
you once carried.
Not unchanged
but not entirely gone.
The laughter
you can no longer recall
finds its way back
in the curve of someone else’s smile.
The version of you
that existed for only a moment
brave, broken, uncertain, alive
returns in fragments,
in gestures,
in choices you don’t question.
Nothing announces it.
Nothing explains it.
It simply arrives
softly,
persistently
as if it had never stopped existing
at all.
And maybe it hasn’t.
Maybe nothing we have been
ever truly leaves.
It only waits
beyond our noticing,
for the right moment
to be seen again.
So we move forward,
believing in distance,
believing in endings.
But every now and then,
something finds its way back
not to restore what was,
but to remind us
that somewhere,
beyond what we can name
or return to,
everything we have ever been
is still happening;
quietly,
completely,
and, somehow,
still finding its way
back to us.
About the Creator
Lori A. A.
Writer, Teacher exploring identity, human behavior, and life between cultures.


Comments
There are no comments for this story
Be the first to respond and start the conversation.