History is my story

A few nights ago, I was watching Emmitt Smith’s story on Who Do You Think You Are.  As he was uncovering his ancestry, he said “history is not the past; history is my story” (or something to that effect).

That got me thinking.  So often, I hear the past is the past, but it’s not true.  The past is in us; it is us.  It shapes us and affects us – we are who we are because of it.

What we consider our past becomes the present, the future, and then the past again. It is fluid – creeping up when we least expect it.

On occasion, the past surfaces and dominates the present.  That happened to me today and it made me realize that I can never extricate myself from my experiences or the people with whom I shared them (for better or worse).  They are part of me  – I can’t escape them, or erase them, or even ignore them.

Everything that has happened to me up until this very moment has contributed to who I am, where I am, and with whom I share my life.  For that, I am grateful.  If given the chance, I would not change any of the bad, for fear of affecting the good.  However, there are some experiences that I never want to repeat and there are some people whom I never want to see, speak to, or acknowledge again. Ever.

I am certain that at some point in my future, my past will creep into the present and slap me in the face again.  When that happens, I will deal with it much as I did today.  Accept it, render it powerless, and move on.  Eventually, it might stop creeping up, creeping in, or creeping, in general.  One can hope, anyway.

Are you gonna go my way?

Alright, so today, I had to take Q to get new passport photos taken.  I had a window of 2 hours within which to get the pics taken and get them to the passport office.  Sounds like a lot of time?  Did I mention Q is a year old?  Yup.

Rewind: When I got his original pics taken, they forgot to charge me, but of course I was honest and told them.  Fatal flaw?  Perhaps.  Nonetheless, it cost me about the same amount for the pics as the passport.

Lucky for me, the photos were guaranteed, so I didn’t have to pay twice, being that the originals were rejected.  But, get this: I went to pick up the new photos and they credited my card for the amount I had paid last time.  That’s it.  I got them for free!  Not only that, but I ended up with 2 poses and the original (because they realized that it was too cute for me not to have).

Unfortunately, because of a variety of technical difficulties, it took 1.5 hours to process the new photos.    1.5 hours of my precious 2!  I got them at 11:27 a.m. and the passport office closed at noon.  I had exactly 33 minutes to get from the photo place to the passport office (in a neighbouring city).  Not likely.

As it turns out, I was at the passport office at 11:41 and out of there by 11:52 (photos accepted).  I question how that is  humanly possible.  I didn’t even need the toys that I remembered to pack this time!

Time must be an illusion.