If I lose my memory, at least, if it's Alzheimer's, it's like a trip back through time. People seem to lose recent memory and then they are in past memories, which burn out like small fires. Like matches, taking the neuron with it.
I have joked that if I was in memory care, I would be singing. I know 9 verses of Clementine and I would sing and sing and sing, because my earliest happy memories are singing.
I know the silly add on verses.
"Now all ye boy scouts, learn a lesson
from this dreadful tale of mine
Artificial respiration
would have saved my Clementine."
"How I missed her, how I missed her,
how I missed my Clementine
'Til I kissed her little sister
And forgot my Clementine
"In my dreams she still doth haunt me
dressed in garments soaked in brine
In my life I would have kissed her
Now she's dead, I draw the line."
Here is Pete Seeger, banjo and all.
The words change. Second verse for me is "Light she was and like a feather". His version is "like a fairy". It's lovely to see how the versions change over time. I did not learn the churchyard verse, and he does not sing the three verses that I add above.
Meanwhile, Steeleye Span did not do Clementine, at least not on Youtube. But this is my favorite moral song from their albums. Would you run as, well, you'll have to listen to the ending to hear the three seven year penance punishments.
Anyhow, I learned to sing at the same time that I learned to talk. Singing was the happy and safe part. That is where I will go if my memory fails me.
The photograph is from my father's 70th birthday, in 2008. He is the one with the guitar. Andy Makie is on harmonica and CF is in the back. I don't know what song this was, not Clementine. My friend Maline took this photograph. She died in 2023. My father died in 2013 at age 75. He was not confused when he wore his oxygen. Without it, he sounded drunk.
For the Ragtag Daily Prompt: dementia.
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