On the book My Name is Memory
Book by : Ann Brashares
Article by: Hannah B
Memory - a form of remembrance, where a part of the body is used as tool or slate to put things down. Like a video that you save that can be watched over and over and over again.
Life - the feeling of movement and action; having a body that allows you to breath and understand concepts
Summary
Written by Ann Brashares, the book, My Name is Memory, is about a man/boy(has about six different ages in story) named Daniel, who has the genetic ability to remember his past lives. Often, this man was able to run into a few other people with this ability, but then the other few lost it when they grew older. The only person introduced that could actually consistently remember past lives
other than Daniel was first introduced as a boy named Ben. Ben has been around since as far as the book says, forever. Daniel explains at one point that "Some live only once. Some a very few times. And some just go on and on and on"(147).Along with this ability is a part where souls and lives are connected to one another. Usually one's mother in one life may become one's sister in the next. Plus these people carry the same attributes from one life to the next, "Those memories are in there somewhere. You act on them in ways you don't realize. They determine how you respond to people, the things you love and the things you fear. A lot of our irrational behavior would look more rational if you could see it in the context of your whole long life"(148). An example of this in the story is of a man, who demands to have his healthy right leg cut off, which confuses all the doctors of that time. Daniel at the age of seven goes up to this man and explains the rationality of it; in the man's past life he had been a soldier at war. His right leg had been shot and amputated from the hip down. Another example of this in the story is an asylum. It is explained to be "the densest concentration of people with partial memories you will ever find. They get flashes and visions but usually not in the right order"(149).
Discussion
Though this book was written as fictional, it can be proven factual.
When someone dies his or her brain molecule diffuse from the body and mix into the air soon after death. Once someone's body become's cold, his or her soul is gone and floating around for a new body. The time between the different lives is a consistent amount for each individual. Every person is born again with his or her old memories. At this point, differences begin to occur.
Some (very few) humans have the ability to hold the old along with the new, but most do not have the brain space to do this, and begin to forget the memories from the past life. this occurs around the infant stage. The few like the main character have enough space in their brain to contain all of this information. Like a black hole, Daniel's brain is able to hold all the information in such a condensed space.
Another difference is the amount of lives a person has. As written earlier, some live once, a couple times, and others forever. An example from the book is Hamilton being a brand new soul, while Jefferson was a couple lives old.
Through life unexpected things happen that create scars and behaviors, which promote new actions. This occurs because people have an innate feeling from the brain particles from their other lives to do this. An example of this is the man who feels he must have a completely healthy limb cut off. This is a genetic disorder called Body Dysmorphic Disorder (BDD), where people feel that things which are part or of their body should not be there.
I choose this book, because it reminded me of how life's too short. But if you think about it, Life's not that short after-all with the many different generations and experiences that a person can have. Have you ever had the feeling of déjà vu? or i think i've seen that person before but i just can't place him/her. That's where your old memories kick in and your mind is mixing the past with the future. Maybe you have seen him or her, or a version of that person in your past life.
Questions
- Is there a way to test this in a scientific experiment?
- If memories are placed on brain molecules/cells, what part of a cell's nucleus would they be in? do cell have their own memories?
- If this is true, would there be a way to extract someone's memories of a Alzheimer person's life and give them back their memories?
- Is it possible that the author Ann Brashares has the ability, and is using the character Daniel as a cover up?
- Brashares, Ann. My Name is Memory. New York, New York: Penguin Group, 2010. Print.
- life. N.d. Jpg file. http://www.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://castorel.files.wordpress.com/2008/11/life.jpg&imgrefurl=http://castorel.wordpress.com/&usg=__VSfhJj5uHMoOVxSEB6Thvj8Dn8I=&h=500&w=900&sz=54&hl=en&start=0&sig2=4Bdt-3mDu7kCjn9H32Jaxg&zoom=1&tbnid=tfDNIQCBBQ98XM:&tbnh=88&tbnw=159&ei=8iQpTdH2J4XEsAPI082CBw&prev=/images%3Fq%3Dlife%26um%3D1%26hl%3Den%26client%3Dfirefox-a%26sa%3DN%26rls%3Dorg.mozilla:en-US:official%26biw%3D1152%26bih%3D535%26tbs%3Disch:10%2C112&um=1&itbs=1&iact=hc&vpx=426&vpy=260&dur=1714&hovh=167&hovw=301&tx=145&ty=91&oei=8iQpTdH2J4XEsAPI082CBw&esq=1&page=1&ndsp=18&ved=1t:429,r:14,s:0&biw=1152&bih=535
- origin. N.d. Gif file. http://www.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://www.chemistry.ucsc.edu/~deamer/origin2.GIF&imgrefurl=http://www.chemistry.ucsc.edu/~deamer/&usg=__ey0gktAEqj4otssp0AtGWOeBoGQ=&h=502&w=463&sz=63&hl=en&start=39&sig2=R4gUP34DCyhxPfbw0k_nLg&zoom=1&tbnid=_p0mrraoQ9MsSM:&tbnh=120&tbnw=112&ei=-SYpTYeJDYLGsAOx9ZjOBw&prev=/images%3Fq%3Dlife%26um%3D1%26hl%3Den%26client%3Dfirefox-a%26sa%3DN%26rls%3Dorg.mozilla:en-US:official%26biw%3D1152%26bih%3D535%26tbs%3Disch:10%2C925&um=1&itbs=1&iact=hc&vpx=899&vpy=194&dur=227&hovh=234&hovw=216&tx=142&ty=157&oei=8iQpTdH2J4XEsAPI082CBw&esq=10&page=3&ndsp=21&ved=1t:429,r:20,s:39&biw=1152&bih=535

Wow, your blog post was really good! Even though I've never read (or even heard of) the book, it was an interesting read. :)
ReplyDeleteYour explanations are thorough, and they make sense. The part where you mentioned the feeling of deja vu really made me stop and think--you had a really good point there.
Answering a few of your questions, I don't think 'memories' are actually contained in each and every cell. I don't really see memories as a concrete... organelle or whatever which is contained in every cell. There are a lot of different parts in the brain, and I think the visual memories are stored in one part, hearing in another, taste in another, etc. (I'm not actually sure, I just read that somewhere. I might be wrong!) If I'm remembering it right, though, it might be hard to extract those memories and keep the visual, auditory, and sensory aspects together in one memory for someone who has Alzheimer's. I'm not sure though. Good questions!
Overall, great job! Your post was really interesting. :)
Hey Hannah,
ReplyDeleteYou chose a really interesting topic, one I've never heard of before. The book seems fascinating, and your explanations very plausible. One technical thing: you only have one label :).
In attempt to answer one of your questions, could this ability be tested through a scientific experiment, I think it probably could, but we would need more advanced technology. We would probably need to be able to extract memories, which we don't know how to do yet, and see if they could possible match up with something in that person's current life. If it couldn't, that might be a step towards proof.
I agree with Archana that it probably wouldn't be very effective as a cure for Alzheimer's because memories are not really (I think) a concrete organelle. One question that I had was whether someone who lived the first time (for example, Hamilton, from your post) would be necessarily not as deep as Jefferson, because Hamilton did do some very notable things. Is the number of times a soul lives the extent of its depth?
In summary, I loved your post! It introduced me to a new topic and made me think. Fantastic work! :)