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Lilly Lewis's avatar

This resonated with me heavily. I am an avid junk journaler and “hoarder” of memories. I have a sort of irrational (but in my mind, very rational) fear of being forgotten. Not only by others but also by myself. When I am 80 I’d like to look back at who I am now. 20 years old just trying to figure out how to do this whole life thing. I’d like to sit on my porch and read my journals and smile at the things I taped in there. The receipts, the chocolate wrappers, the pictures, the business cards, everything. They mean something to me now, and even if they don’t mean something to me later, this version of me cares about them and so I want to keep them. If one day I am laying in bed with dementia, I’d like to be able to read my journals and remember even just for a moment. I’d also like my children, my grandchildren to have documentation of me. Not just official papers stating that I existed, but pieces of me, my life, who I am as a person. I do not want to be forgotten.

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the femme footnote's avatar

You and I share a little bit of the same soul—this resonated deeply with me. I’ve always been someone who holds onto small memories, little moments, and the trinkets that come with them. But it became almost consuming when I came home from college. It was as if I was trying to fill my room with as many keepsakes and baubles as possible. I think it stemmed from years of moving back and forth during school, never really feeling settled. After sharing a room for nearly four years, finally having a space that was fully mine—one that stayed put—felt grounding in a way I didn’t expect. I’m really grateful to know I’m not alone in that.

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