Anamnesis
Anamnesis
an•am•ne•sis - ænæmˈnisɪs [an-am-nee-sis] noun, plural an•am•ne•ses
1. the recollection or remembrance of the past;
reminiscence.
2. Platonism . recollection of the Ideas, which the
soul had known in a previous existence, especially by means of reasoning.
3. the medical history of a patient.
4. Immunology . a prompt immune response to a
previously encountered antigen, characterized by more rapid onset and greater
effectiveness of antibody and T cell reaction than during the first encounter,
as after a booster shot in a previously immunized person.
5. ( often initial capital letter ) a prayer in a
Eucharistic service, recalling the Passion, Resurrection, and Ascension of
Christ.
Origin: 1650–60;
< Neo-Latin < Greek anámnēsis remembrance, equivalent to ana ( mi ) mnḗ (
skein ) to remember ( ana ana- + mimnḗskein to call to mind) + -sis -sis
Having opened this page years ago it is right that
this is the first post.
I want to remember waking from the soft flannel nest
of sleep when I was young, pulling on warm cotton clothes and feeling of the
wooden steps beneath my bear feet in my parent’s home.
I want to remember the first breeze that contained
the oceans mist, and the smell of seaweed on the Atlantic shore. I want to
remember the embrace of the day as we set the alarm so we could step foot onto
the cool sand in the dark outside, warm coffee in hand, just in time to see the
sunrise over the water and the new day begin.
I want to remember the holy hush just before dawn,
the mists rising out of the shallow valley, hovering over the water on the pond
which holds the absurd plastic Mallard. I want to remember the way light slowly
burns through the mist, allowing me to glimpse the horses as they graze on the
alfalfa hay, just before I turn to head to work. How amazing to get to travel
this road twice for two separate calls.
I want to remember the cold smell of Liam’s shampoo
when I kiss his head at night and he comes in for a snuggle before ‘lights
out,’ but since he is thirteen, I want to remember everything about this time.
I want to remember the September woods we walk
together - the rich smells, the uneven ground beneath our feet, the earthy
leaves clinging for life before they fall. I want to remember the branches and
twigs that snap and crunch dry and brittle under foot from the drought we won’t
soon forget. And when, exactly, did the grass become lush and green once more,
as if to tease us with this last burst of color. How subtle the sunlight’s dance when the bold
bronze of summer has been exchanged for the golden hue of fall.
I want to remember the exquisite turning of this
page in my life, as the road I travel each day become lined with trees a rich
red glow that seems to send its branches raising giving homage to the God who
called them into being. I want to remember this as if my minds-eye is saying
“Don’t blink.” Every moment this scene is repainting itself, each one more brilliant, each one fleeting,
each one more fragile.
I want to remember the Rose of Sharon that bloomed
in my back yard, and how the ‘volunteers’ just seemed to come up everywhere
this year, sprouting through the dry grass like a powerful jeweled witness that
came scatted amid other weeds declaring a silent victory to the fortitude of
life when the news forecast proclaimed death, despair and famine. I want to
remember the hybrid poplar we transplanted, while hearing, “hybrids won’t move
their ground. Cut it down, and order a new one.” I want to remember those neighbor voices in
the background as we would faithfully water the stick in the ground each night.
I want to remember the beauty of buds that sprouted from the stick, and the
leaves that still hold fast to the tree we were told simply could not be.
I want to remember the mums that seemed to hold
back, only to sprout buds and bring to bloom now at the end of September, long
after I’d given up hope. I want to remember the glorious, yellow of the first
flower spilling out of its green closed
cap. And yes, I even want to recall each
dandelion that has taken advantage of every broken and barren crack in the
driveway. If it is a sign of resurrection hope, then I had best pay attention.
I want to remember the redheaded House Finch that
comes each afternoon to stake claim on the feeder before the yellow colored,
Golden Finch couple comes to chase him away. I want to remember these days
before frost lays claim to every cherished, delicate blossom and what remains of the picture in my
mind.
I want to remember the beauty of solar lights on shepherd’s hooks and the accents along the pathway that allow me to sit peacefully while traffic passes, joggers and dog walkers all go by, all blissfully unaware of my presence in the area I worked to create.
I want to remember how resident I am to see anything
truly come to an end, and given my calling I relish the irony. I see how even now I have left a few dead
flowers hanging on, patiently waiting for me to summon my resolve, but my steady
resolve has been greatly weakened. The presence of powerful grief in our home
will weaken the heart of the strongest among us, for we are not even yet still
ready for the life of our beloved Boomer to have come to an abrupt and
seemingly unjust end.
As the season insists it will transition whether I
desire it or not, I want to remember how it feels to live in one community for
five years. To live in one state for 18, the longest I have ever known a home,
and I feel my own roots sinking into the earth.
I want to remember that while rooted, change is part of being alive.
I want to remember, so I take time to sit in
silence, to breathe into the stillness that is God, the point, where past and
future are gathered. I want to remember the words I have learned-
O God of life,
amid the ceaseless tides of change which sweep away the generations, Your living spirit remains to comfort us and give us hope. Around us is life and death, decay and renewal;
amid the ceaseless tides of change which sweep away the generations, Your living spirit remains to comfort us and give us hope. Around us is life and death, decay and renewal;
the flowing rhythm that all things obey.
Our life is a dance to a song we cannot hear.
Its melody courses through us for a little while,
then seems to cease.
Whence the melody, and whither does it go?
In darkness
and in light, we turn to You,
O Lord, the Source of life, the answer to all its
mysteries.
I want to remember that even these, the most
ordinary of days are extraordinary, as they have been days and nights have been
limned with sadness, punctuated by sleepless hours, a host of worries, and
questions that will remain without answers.
I want to remember that while giving up is not an option, surrender is
possible - possible in that I can be sad and grateful at the same time; I can
be filled up and emptied out, simultaneously; in my heavy, burdened heart I can
still be overflowing with contentment.
I want to remember and will keep my eyes open,
paying attention. I will remember that
no matter how long, life is short. I will remember, so I take time to listen for
the dance.

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