Straycat
The Force is Strong With This One
I had a rather unsettling conversation with my sister last night. About 24 years ago we had a paranormal experience in the woods of Oahu. It was awe-inspiring to me, frightening to my sister. She has never liked to talk about all the strangeness we grew up with or strangeness in general, either; any mention of it is quickly shot down with "rational" explanations or she changes the subject or she just doesn't respond. I've respected her feelings on the matter and let the subject drop quickly.
Last night I pushed her a bit to see if she remembered any more details that I may have missed or forgotten about this one experience we shared because it's been on my mind a lot lately. To my dismay, I found out that she hasn't just avoided talking about it, she's constructed entirely different memories of what happened. She now insists that "nothing major or unusual" happened at all and was confused by my account of the event. She swears none of it ever happened.
I also finally brought up how she reacts when any paranormal subject is brought up, how she avoids it. The only times I've ever managed to get a little discussion out of her is when I approach her kind of sideways about it. And I can't ask her much once she starts discussing a memory or she just shuts down. She swears she has no awareness of doing any such thing and is convinced that she talks about it quite a bit. And then when I say I'd like to go back to that place on Oahu again she immediately redirects by talking brightly about places we should check out instead. No, no avoidance there, right?
This of course makes me start questioning my own memories as well as hers. At the moment, I'm more inclined to think hers is the false memory in this particular case because she had always been able to sense things a bit better than me and it disturbed her. She didn't want to see or sense unusual things, it was upsetting to her. It dismays me, but I can understand why she might not want to remember what happened. It's quite possible both our memories are false, but I'm a lot more open to strangeness than she is and can at least remember that it was strange without being upset. If that makes any sense.
So now I wonder how many memories have been replaced in her mind? How many have been replaced in mine? I have no memories of having missing time or blackouts, for instance, but what if some episodes of strangeness were replaced with benign facades that I don't even suspect? I remember that there was a lot of strangeness and unhappiness, but I remember very few "normal" details about my childhood. My sister is the only one left alive who went through it with me, and now her memories are even more tenuous than I realized. :(
From reading the Wave material and all, I had an awareness of how we can be manipulated and deceived. I had an awareness about trauma and false memories. But I suppose I didn't fully internalize the understanding until now.
Last night I pushed her a bit to see if she remembered any more details that I may have missed or forgotten about this one experience we shared because it's been on my mind a lot lately. To my dismay, I found out that she hasn't just avoided talking about it, she's constructed entirely different memories of what happened. She now insists that "nothing major or unusual" happened at all and was confused by my account of the event. She swears none of it ever happened.
I also finally brought up how she reacts when any paranormal subject is brought up, how she avoids it. The only times I've ever managed to get a little discussion out of her is when I approach her kind of sideways about it. And I can't ask her much once she starts discussing a memory or she just shuts down. She swears she has no awareness of doing any such thing and is convinced that she talks about it quite a bit. And then when I say I'd like to go back to that place on Oahu again she immediately redirects by talking brightly about places we should check out instead. No, no avoidance there, right?
This of course makes me start questioning my own memories as well as hers. At the moment, I'm more inclined to think hers is the false memory in this particular case because she had always been able to sense things a bit better than me and it disturbed her. She didn't want to see or sense unusual things, it was upsetting to her. It dismays me, but I can understand why she might not want to remember what happened. It's quite possible both our memories are false, but I'm a lot more open to strangeness than she is and can at least remember that it was strange without being upset. If that makes any sense.
So now I wonder how many memories have been replaced in her mind? How many have been replaced in mine? I have no memories of having missing time or blackouts, for instance, but what if some episodes of strangeness were replaced with benign facades that I don't even suspect? I remember that there was a lot of strangeness and unhappiness, but I remember very few "normal" details about my childhood. My sister is the only one left alive who went through it with me, and now her memories are even more tenuous than I realized. :(
From reading the Wave material and all, I had an awareness of how we can be manipulated and deceived. I had an awareness about trauma and false memories. But I suppose I didn't fully internalize the understanding until now.