Driving along a certain road, a route I frequently venture down. It’s not a bad trip at all, nice country views, not too much traffic and memories. Just on the outskirts of the city, the road runs by a little road side cafe.

A smile. Always a smile.

Mum’s 70th.

That cold, frosty and beautifully clear morning, Mum had just landed in a farmer’s field….. A so called bumpy landing, ‘came in a bit hard’ …. A hot air balloon flight over the city and countryside. Mum now had a tale to tell, so the family gathered to listen in this small roadside cafe. Tea and Cream Scones, sat huddled on the wooden benches outside. Much laughter. All the funnier as mum revealed a secret, she was scared of heights… If we had known earlier she might well have had a birthday boat cruise down the river.

Over the proceeding years the cafe has physically not changed much, maybe the wooden benches are looking a little more creaky. But one change is that it’s increasingly become a bit of a biker pit stop haunt. Yamaha’s and Motörhead Jackets reside on the wooden benches alongside couples and families, cream teas still being consumed by all. Mum would find this amusing.

Feels like a timeless memory to me.

There is another road, often ventured as well. Nice road, very like the other road. This one had another memory.

But no smiles this time, they have slowly faded..

This road runs by a derelict pub, one that’s been up for sale for too many years. Sadly the years have not been kind to the old building. Windows broken, part of the roof have collapsed, weed filled car park. Surely it can’t be too long before the bulldozers move in and put it out of its misery. Yet this was still the site of a memory. For weeks we had kept our work romance quiet but finally it was time to come clean. A Christmas office quiz night and meal at an old country pub. Back then it was a place full of life and character, really well kept and stylish. The big reveal ended up probably not being a romantic one, rather that the seemingly clever bloke from Finance in the three piece suit was in fact a monumental idiot whose useable pub quiz knowledge was limited to football and football…. Plus wow, was he an embarrassing dancer. Little did they know that it took years of practice at the Top Deck in Redcar to get this bad….. WHAT on earth could she see in him…… What she did do that night was to convince me to go on holiday with her to Switzerland, our first trip. That old pub and that night proved to be our gateway to The Alps. And as we left, it started to snow, snow just a couple of days from Christmas.

That memory would bring a smile every time I passed this pub. But that was when it was a busy, working pub, when it had life. Watching it fade away started to change the feel of the memory as well. As the life slowly ebbed from the pub, the gloss and magic went from the memory. The memory became less vivid, less colourful, faded, transient. Now when I pass here, I struggle to see the memory anymore, I just see a sad old derelict building. When I do try to recall the memory it feels really ancient, from a different world, almost artificial. Compare that with Mum’s birthday memory which feels alive, vivid, as if it was yesterday. But heres the thing, both memories were born just a few months apart.

Memories are delicate, can’t be taken for granted. Yet is it also possible that some memories are intrinsically tied to something like a location, a sound, a smell. Things that stimulate a certain reaction from our senses that link to a memory. If that thing is damaged, the memory is also damaged. But surely it might also be possible that we can find memories that are more embedded, tied to things we pick up on which feel like that have more permanence. Let’s say locations that appear untainted by time, places where we can still talk about timeless personal memories.

Time for a little piece of Switzerland. So many memories flow from just looking at these photos. Memories that feel as fresh as ever.

13 thoughts on “Memories

  1. Beautiful memories and photos.

    When buildings become so run down because no one seems to want to buy a pub it becomes sad.
    I have seen that myself. It became so run down that it had to be knocked down. So it’s a site of just rubble. And it is probably still like that.

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  2. Beautifully recounted, nostalgic – and very honest. I feel, perhaps, we all have a similar experience with regard to memories. I was thinking… it would be great if someone took over the old pub and turned it into something which would create positive memories for the future.

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  3. It’s the magic of photos that can bring it all back, don’t you think? I just have to look and I’m back there in the moment. I do love a cream scone though!

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  4. Both memories are so beautiful, Gary, although I understand the second one feels more tender and has changed in context.

    I love the memory of the quiz and the dancing and how it was a prelude to your lifelong discovery and love of Switzerland.

    May that memory shimmer and glimmer one more time for you in the coming future.

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  5. It is sad to see favourite places fall to ruin especially when such special memories are attached. But I think Switzerland will be the same. I love the picture of the little church and young Hawklad.

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