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Memory, Hold the Door
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One of the best memories of my childhood are the long walks I used to go on with my grandfather. This was in England during the 1950's and 60's. We lived in a small village in the heart of the Devonshire countryside and, being surrounded by rivers, woods and fields, gave life an almost magical feeling. The feeling that nothing would ever change. But of course, it did. Life has a habit of changing when you least expect it and you try to hold on to it for as long as possible, knowing full well, that it will only exist in your mind. It all sounds a bit sad really, but one consolation is that you got to live through it. You had the privilege of enjoying something for a fleeting moment in time that nobody else knew or cared about. The memory of sleeping in a huge four poster bed in a manor house and wishing that you could stay there forever. Impossible to value in a material world and yet it means the world to you. You do have the memory of better times. Times when the world stood still and all you could hear was the sound of the wind through the trees and the birds singing. The smell of damp earth and woodsmoke. Blue skies and white fluffy clouds straight out of a picture book. All gone forever. Beautiful times that made me feel special with an innocence destined to fade all too predictably. Even sadder, I can feel those memories slipping away slowly from me too. Memory, hold the door.
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Hi, welcome
Perhaps you should visit
As a city boy in Melbourne we'd visit my cousins place in Tassy for 6 weeks a years to milk cows and cart hay. At the foot of Mount Roland it was just like England. Now the land has been carved up and the milking machines silent. Sad yes but priceless memories.
Thankyou for your post, it too is valuable.
TonyWK
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Hi Tony,
Thank you for your kind words. They are much appreciated. Nothing stays the same forever, does it? As much as we might lament the passing of familiar and treasured memories, we have to surrender to the ravages of time. Of course, some things mean more to some than others. That is to be expected but I think it is safe to say that we are richer for having those memories. My family and I came over to Australia in 1970 and I have never had the desire to return. There is a mixture of good and bad memories back there in England and I prefer to remember the good ones for as long as possible. Many of the things I remember are so strong and clear that they might have happened last week instead of half a century ago.
Regards
AMD