Genuine tragedies have occurred when false memories have resulted in false accusations. Fortunately, most false memories are relatively harmless, and easily corrected when brought to light. Our family has a “false memory” story, which we laughingly bring up whenever we doubt one another’s recollection of an event.
During a time before everyone had cell phones, when we were
living in a suburb of Baltimore, our seventeen year-old daughter J called from
a friend’s house to ask for an extension of her curfew. My late husband, David,
was in Europe on business, and as I listened to J’s request, I prayed I would
make a decision that he would agree with.
J explained that, because she had been unexpectedly asked to close the store where she worked part time as a cashier, she had left the store much later than usual. She then got lost while trying to find the home of the friend who was hosting the party. She finally arrived about 15 minutes before she was due home. After considering the circumstances, I felt prompted to give her permission to stay out later.
J explained that, because she had been unexpectedly asked to close the store where she worked part time as a cashier, she had left the store much later than usual. She then got lost while trying to find the home of the friend who was hosting the party. She finally arrived about 15 minutes before she was due home. After considering the circumstances, I felt prompted to give her permission to stay out later.
When J returned home, she explained how grateful she was for
the curfew extension. Her friends (most of them not LDS) had encouraged her to
make up a story about a flat tire or something similar. She had told them that
she never lied to her parents, and that they were generally understanding and
reasonable about modifying the rules in special circumstances. The fact that
she obtained a curfew extension when telling the truth, greatly surprised and impressed
them. I was very thankful that I had followed my spiritual impression to grant J’s
request.
Soon after this experience, David phoned me from Europe, and
I explained in great detail the extenuating circumstances, hoping he would
agree that I had done the right thing. He was very impressed with the positive
outcome of this event, and the details stuck in his mind. Some years later, when David was speaking of this experience to some friends. I was shocked to
hear him tell it as though he had
been the one who had spoken with our daughter. I didn’t interrupt him at the
time, but I later reminded him that J had spoken with me, since he was in Europe at the time.
David didn’t believe me. Apparently I had recounted the
experience to him in such vivid detail, including my emotional and spiritual feelings
about what had happened, that he had internalized it completely. Thus, many
years later, when recalling the event, he was fully convinced that he was the one who had granted the
curfew extension resulting in J’s relief and justification in the presence of
her skeptical peers. I was incredulous, thinking that he must be joking (a
pastime he frequently engaged in) when he continued to insist he had answered the phone that night
David was so confident and forceful in his assertions that I eventually began
to wonder if I had fallen prey to early onset Alzeheimer’s.
Fortunately for me, some time later, when our daughter
confirmed my version of the experience, he graciously conceded that he had
obviously been mistaken.
Once there was a second witness, my husband had to admit intellectually that he must have remembered the event incorrectly. However, judging from stray comments he made about the incident over the succeeding years, I suspect that false memory may have remained in his mind until the day he died as a strikingly clear and vivid record--of something that never happened.
Once there was a second witness, my husband had to admit intellectually that he must have remembered the event incorrectly. However, judging from stray comments he made about the incident over the succeeding years, I suspect that false memory may have remained in his mind until the day he died as a strikingly clear and vivid record--of something that never happened.
4 comments:
When I was still in elementary school, I realized that in one treasured memory from kindergarten, I could see myself.
I've never entirely trusted me memories since then, though I do enjoy them.
To me, President Stone's mind was like a steel trap. It seemed he could remember details effortlessly. I loved all the stories he told. He was such an inspiring storyteller. I'm so grateful to have known him.
Thank you, Sis. Stone, for faithfulness and example (and your recent uplifting posts).
Sincerely,
Darrell Manning
James, just the other day I ran across something I had written about an experience shortly after it happened; and I realized I had often recounted that event with different details over the years. I’m more careful now about prefacing my stories with a statement such as, “As I recall,” or “If my memory is correct.”
Darrell, Pres. Stone did have an incredible memory of things that he had read, heard, or experienced. He also had the ability to illustrate important principles with interesting and inspiring personal experiences (his own or those of others). He could also recall pertinent quotes from literary works, as well as from the Scriptures. He was continually treasuring up words from “good books” so that he could call them forth at an appropriate time.
It’s kind of a sweet thought that your explanation was so completely what he would have felt and said, that he felt “as one” with you.
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