Which Moments Will They Remember?

Our lives are made up of small moments. There are those moments we forget, or try to forget, and those we remember and cherish.

To me, these small moments are like luminous stars in the sky, guiding my journey ahead and shedding light on the experiences and people who’ve shaped me into the person I am today.

I often wonder, which moments will my children remember?

View of Geminid meteor shower on December 14, 2012

Will they mostly remember the times I’ve said “Not now,” “Just a minute,” or “Because I said so!” Or will they remember the times I set aside what I was doing to watch another ripstick routine, play a game of ping-pong, hunt for another pair of missing leggings, proofread their school papers, scrub a chocolate ice cream stain off new shorts . . .

Will they remember our family nights playing cards on the living room floor and making s’mores out on the deck? Will they remember the Sunday morning caramel rolls? Or will they mostly remember the rushing around to basketball practice and soccer games?

Will they remember walking the streets of San Francisco while sharing a sack of chocolate covered fortune cookies? How about the time we got lost hiking in the woods somewhere in Wisconsin and it started to pour?

Will they remember peeling corn on the cob with their Grandpa years ago or making paper snowflakes to give to Grandma as a Christmas present?

Of all the projects my children have brought home from grade school, my all-time favorites are the stories they wrote during the small moments writing unit. The kids are asked to visualize a small, specific event from their lives, draw a picture of it, and write it down step by step, using colorful words to describe the sounds and smells and textures and feelings.

At the start of these units, each of my kids struggled with coming up with a moment to write about. “I can’t think of anything,” they each said. Or they got stuck on big general stories like the day they visited a petting zoo instead of the moment a goat ate from their hands.

After we reminisced a bit, though, the moments and details came: Sliding down that glow-in-the-dark water slide, passing around a tub of cookie dough while watching Star Wars in our basement, getting a tooth knocked out by a friend’s foot while going down the neighborhood park slide.

It’s easy to say, “Oh, it’s all a blur,” or dismiss the importance of remembering those small moments that helped mold us. But, personally, I want to be overflowing with all those snippets and stories, because they add depth and wholeness to my life’s narrative and the experiences and relationships within it.

I think that’s why I enjoy writing so much. It helps me slow down, be in the quiet, allow for the small moments to reemerge and glimmer. Sometimes they come like bright shooting stars in a meteor shower. Other times, they’re faint lights in a clouded sky. But one thing’s for sure. I’ll never stop looking out for them.

These are the small moments that flickered in my memories today as I prepared for this post:

  • I remembered the day I got my first tricycle. It was raining, so my Mom let me ride it inside the house.
  • I remembered walking past a small chapel somewhere and seeing my Dad kneeling with his head bowed down into his folded hands.
  • I remembered those every other Fridays (payday) when Mom came home after work with a carload of groceries, and we all pitched in to unload the marvelous snacks inside the brown paper bags. Green grapes, Oreos, fresh bread, Corn Chex, yogurt, a big pail of vanilla ice cream. The abundance in our fridge and cupboards on those Friday evenings was magical.
  • I remembered what it felt like walking into the lunchroom when I was the new girl in 7th grade. I still get that feeling sometimes.
  • I remembered crowding around the television set surrounded by my siblings’ stinky feet and passing around a big bowl of buttery popcorn, which my Dad made almost every night it seemed.
  • I remembered the day we buried our dog, Jamie, in the wooded area in our yard and the small wooden cross my brother engraved to mark the spot.
  • I remembered my first kiss. It was on a parked boat. It only lasted for about half a second, but I felt like I was floating for a whole week after that.
  • I remembered the afternoon I caught a glimpse of my Mom on a corner of the couch with her legs propped up eating ice cream right out of the bucket.
  • I remembered the time my Dad was in charge of decorating the cake for one of my birthday parties, and he sprinkled Cheerios over the whole thing.

What’s a small moment you remember and cherish?

I’m Julie Jo Severson, mom of three and freelance writer. I launched this blog Carvings On A Desk in 2015 to reconnect with my own voice and write the stories down. To see other recent posts, click here.

 

About Julie Jo Severson

Julie Jo Severson, former PR girl, is now a freelance writer, journalist, editor, and lost-and-found attendant for two teens and a tween. This is where she doodles about past, present, future clinking glasses and making peace.

10 comments on “Which Moments Will They Remember?

  1. I Love This! I wonder that, too – which moments my kids will remember the most. You mad me think back and remember some special moments, too! 🙂

  2. This is such an excellent post, Julie! I absolutely love it! My favorite line – “I want to be overflowing with all those snippets and stories, because they add depth and wholeness to my life’s narrative and the experiences and relationships within it.” You are SO right! They do! And I want to be overflowing with them, too! It’s all these small moments that become treasures to us and we cherish them until the day we take our last breath. Little snippet of things. Not whole events. Thank you so very much for reminding us of this today and for sharing your beautiful post with #1Word. It’s tremendous! 🙂

  3. I absolutely loved this too and as a mom to two small girls I often wonder this, as well as to what they will remember. And is also why I write so much of this time down, because I hope I never forget either.

  4. Struggling with this ALL. THE. TIME. right now. This move is not bringing out the best in me. Between damages, downsizing, and all the regular mommy duties, some days I don’t think I’m getting even one thing accomplished. The good news is, I’m almost out of boxes! Thank you for such an encouraging post and your comment earlier today. It’s taken me this long to really slow down myself.

  5. Oh I don’t even want to try and imagine packing up a house with little kids around again. I’m staying put. Good luck with the move, and thank you for taking the time to read and leave a comment. Means a lot.

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