The Making of a Memory

Some memories feel like they just happened yesterday. Yet others can feel so far away.

I remember just about everything from the trip my then-boyfriend and I took last summer. I remember the clothes I wore, the food we packed, and the name of the sweet lady who’s cabin we stayed at. I could tell you the name of the park we were visiting, the path we were hiking, and even the exact time that my boyfriend got down on one knee and became my fiancé. 

I knew that entire weekend that we were making memories I would want to hold onto forever. For some people, remembering details like these may seem like a breeze. But I am what you could call a poor historian — I struggle to hold onto my long-term memories. The fact that I can remember these specific details that happened 16 months ago is a small but mighty victory for me!

I’ve always wondered why long-term memories are easy for some to hold onto and not for others, so I did a little digging. What actually goes into making a memory?

Short-Term Memory: the RAM

The brain is a complex organ, so of course the answer to this question is complex as well. But to make this easier to understand, let’s compare the brain to a computer. Our short-term memory is like the RAM in our computers, only holding onto information that we are currently working with. Our short-term memory is probably a lot shorter than you think, lasting only between 15 to 30 seconds! 

For example, if someone tells you an address or phone number, without repeating the information to yourself until it’s been committed to memory you will eventually —and fairly quickly— forget this information. It’s super easy to interfere with our short-term memory with new incoming information, but if you take the time to attend to the information it might just make it to the next stage —long-term memory! 


Long-Term Memory: the hard drive

We have a love-hate relationship with our long-term memory, don’t we? It can hold super sweet moments with loved ones, but it can also cling onto things we might wish we could forget. 

Warning: we’re about to get scientific! Long-term memories actually have a physical presence in the brain. Neurons make physical connections and synapses with each other when a new long-term memory is made. This connection exists whether it’s being used or not. 

There are even different categories for these types of memories: explicit and implicit memories. Implicit memories are those habits and skills that our mind and body does automatically. Like driving a car or or typing on a keyboard.

Explicit memories on the other hand are things that we are consciously aware of. This is also split up into two different groups: episodic and semantic memories. Semantic memories are our general knowledge of a variety of things, such as knowing that the capital of Ontario is Toronto. Episodic memories are memories of things and events, like remembering when you got lost on your trip to Toronto. 

We have the hippocampus to thank for regulating our memories. This region of the brain links all of the information it believes to be relevant and encodes it into memories for us. So the next time you’re frustrated about being kept up late at night reliving a memory you would much rather forget, curse your hippocampus! 

Memories need homes too!

Unfortunately, like your computer, the brain does not have an endless amount of space to store all the memories you could possibly make in your lifetime. While newer memories can hang out in the hippocampus for a while, eventually they have to migrate further into your cortex. Consider this your brain filing things away for you. But unlike a book you can file away and come back to read the same old story again, memories are constantly being updated and tweaked. 

So where do memories go when we forget them? Can we get them back again? It often feels like some memories are gone forever, but they’re just like a lost shoe in your house. It’s there, somewhere, you just can’t use it! When we try to access forgotten memories, signals are sent from our frontal cortex and our computer —I mean brain— reconstructs the memory from the information available to it. The more often you use the memory, the easier it will be to find. 

Our senses often help to rebuild memories too. Our sense of smell is a wonderful tool to help us with memories, but simply being in the presence of any elements that were in your original memory will help with retrieval. So if you’re trying to remember something that happened during a pizza party, order yourself a pizza. This isn’t an exact science, but even if it doesn’t jog the memory you were hoping for, at least you have a pizza! 


Let’s remember, it’s okay to forget

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Now that I’ve overloaded your brain with information, please don’t feel pressured into remembering everything you’ve just read. If you take away anything, let it be this: you can always relearn things, but you can’t always relive them. Our memories are precious to us because we can’t go and relive the same thing twice, not truely. 

Even when our memory fails us, we find ways to remember — from photographs and journals, to blogs and conversations. We have friends that will gladly remind us of all the embarrassing things we did on a night out. We have family that can retell that childhood story from when we were nine. 

Fond memories will find us, one way or another.


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Peyton Scott

Peyton is a full-time student, part-time writer, and partial night owl. She falls in love with everything at least once, but especially (and in no particular order): words, furry creatures, empty notebooks, true crime, hikes (and probably you).

Instagram: @peyyscott

Twitter: @peyytonscott

Movie Memories

The Movie Experience  

There is something about watching movies. Whether it's in the comfort of our own home or the top row of a cinema, we all have fond memories of eating overpriced junk food and discovering our favourite films.

The Drive-In

In 1933, the first drive-in movie theatre opened in the state of New Jersey. During their peak popularity in the 50s and 60s, over 4,000 theatres popped up across North America.

Illustration by Liz

Illustration by Liz

The drive-in was and is still a unique movie-viewing experience. Unlike attending a traditional movie theatre, where you are discouraged from talking to your neighbour, the drive-in can be a real social affair. Family's pile into their cars, friends gather on lawn chairs and blankets. There is no wrong way to experience the drive-in.  

Pulling up to the lot is almost like entering another time. Most drive-in theatres today have kept their vintage aesthetics. They are usually not renovated or remastered. The sound system is as good as your radio, and the picture quality is often grainy (in some cases). But the low quality and greasy foods are what makes the drive-in special. It is less about the movie and more about the experience.

Although its popularity has dwindled over the last thirty years, the drive-in has never faded out of the entertainment industry. Ten percent of drive-in theatres still exist across North America.

 

Renting Movies at the Local Video Store

Before Netflix and Disney+  ruled home entertainment, renting movies from the local video store was the original Friday night ritual. From 1977 to 2010, rental stores such as Blockbuster and Rogers Video brought movie buffs closer to the films they love. With rentals, you didn't have to wait for your favourite movie to premiere on cable tv to watch it again.

For anyone who grew up in the 90s and early 2000s, renting movies was a whole experience. On a Friday night, you would head over to your local rental store with your family or friends and browse the shelves.  Most people didn't have internet, so discovering the perfect Friday night movie was either by recommendation or pure chance. After about 45 minutes, you would bring your pile of movies and snacks to the counter. The sales associate would remind you that new releases are a two-day rental, and a two-dollar fee would be added to your account if you did not return the movie on time. You would then leave with twenty dollars worth of quality weekend entertainment. Life was good.  

Since the rise of streaming services, video stores have become a novelty. Blockbuster, which once had over 9,000 locations, now has only one store left.

Good Old Fashion Movie Theaters

Although traditional movie theatres are not extinct, the theatre experience has drastically changed over the last decade. There once was a time when you would have to stand in line for hours to get the best seat for the latest summer blockbuster. Now with the touch of a button, you can order your tickets months in advance. Remember when you had to save your friend's seat with a jacket as they got their snacks? Now you can order your entire meal right from the comfort of your reclining chair. Back in the day, we had seats with worn-out cushions. If the movie were longer than 90 minutes, you would hear from your tailbone.

Movie theatres have gone through incredible technological transformations—Ultra AVX, IMAX,  and of course, epic surround sound. However, there was nothing quite like experiencing a 3D movie before RealD 3D debut in the mid-2000s. The flimsy cardboard glasses with blue and red plastic lenses weren't the highest tech or the most comfortable. But it was exciting and, for some of us, an entirely new experience.

 As we continue to navigate these strange times of social distancing and streaming services, the cinematic experience is continuously changing. But it's not about how we watch movies. It's about creating a memory that will last longer than any pandemic.

   

  

 

 

 


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Liz Marion

Liz is a full time student with a background in illustration and concept art. She is currently trying her best.