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we knew we were loved

tracing a pathway to meaning

By John CoxPublished 2 months ago Updated 2 months ago 9 min read
Winner in Maps of the Self Challenge
a still life of breakfast at the little brick house on the corner of Young and Wick, by John Cox, 2025, without the use of AI

What is essential is invisible to the eye. - Antoine de Saint Exupéry

...

The inception of much of what I have written over the years came directly or indirectly from my wife's wisdom and capacity for distilling concepts to their essence. It is a rare talent and one that I admire greatly. She is my chief muse.

But of the many revelatory conversations we have had during our time together, one returns to mind again and again. It was so long ago that the fact I still remember it clearly is indicative of the extraordinary effect it has had over the course of the intervening years.

We were discussing the strange phenomenon of the soul-self, the sense or feeling that we are bipartite, infinite spirit housed in mortal flesh. This led naturally to a long discussion of consciousness. But when I asked how my wife defined it, she casually answered, Awareness of the self, my jaw opening in surprise.

Not awareness of self for those of you who read quickly. Awareness of the self. I don't even remember what my opinion on the question was anymore, awareness of the self connected, consciousness suddenly meaning something more than simply awake.

Her answer struck a chord like a clue to the enigma obscuring my understanding of the question Who am I? a little piece of my memory suddenly glowing with resurrected meaning. But when I asked her in turn what she thought the connection of the ego was to the functioning of consciousness, that is when the fireworks began.

The ego exists to preserve the integrity of the self, she simply replied, every animal that fights or flees danger demonstrates the ego's evolutionary function. In response, an immense heat radiated through my body like a powerful roar, my aloneness within the cage of self suddenly magnified a thousand-fold as I trembled at the discovery of an animal brotherhood I had never before humbled myself to acknowledge.

I was reminded of our conversation recently when I saw the first wooly bear of autumn as it shimmied up our fence. I have always loved wooly bears and wondered in that moment if his consciousness warned him of danger once he left the protective cover of the grass.

And where was brother wooly bear headed in such a hurry? How much energy did he expend climbing up six feet of wooden fencing, just to climb down the other side? Did the seeming obstacle of the fence confuse him so greatly that he climbed it rather than simply crawling under it? Surely the latter was the more efficient of his options.

I myself have often taken the long way round when failing to appropriately weigh my options. What does that say about me that I am sometimes no wiser in my choices than a caterpillar?

But I was happy to see the little fellow, like so many simple things in life the joy of his appearance sparked the magic of warm feelings, the synapses in my gray matter triggering a cocktail of happy chemicals in my gut. Do such joys trace a pathway to meaning in my soul-self or are they no more than a contact high that science might blandly explain away?

Unlike us, our animist ancestors were anchored to nature and their environs, believing that the souls of loved ones who had died could be trapped by lesser beings like my obdurate little wooly bear or a tree or even an insensate stone. Some were even convinced that only once we took possession of the creature that imprisoned a loved one might we free them.

But this circles back to our remembered discussion about consciousness like a strange loop between science and the belief in something more than synapses and chemicals - psyche, soul, or God breathed spirit. Science can decode our DNA and tell us the precise chemical and biological breakdown of our fleshly bodies, but it cannot tell us who we are or why we are here.

Watching the scurrying wooly bear magnified the sense of frailty in my life and the lives of those I have loved and lost. They are not imprisoned in brother wooly bear or sister robin, but they are trapped within me. I can only unlock the message and meaning of their lives by recognizing their presence within mine. Till memory awakens meaning, I not they am the one held captive.

Memory is a living thing, an organism, a sea of disparate connections. Because brain cells die, memories must be rehearsed and shared in order preserve them. Otherwise, they die or mutate beyond all recognition. In this, memory and its unstable malleability is often the enemy rather than a friend. If the proper connection is not made, I may never truly awaken those whom I have lost.

In his autobiographical novel Remembrance of Things Past, Marcel Proust suggested that memories might return most powerfully when unbidden by a taste or scent reminiscent of a formative experience. After soaking a 'petite madeleine' cake in his afternoon tea, he wrote I raised to my lips a spoonful of the tea in which I had soaked a morsel of the cake. No sooner had the warm liquid, and the crumbs with it, touched my palate, a shudder ran through my whole body, and I stopped, intent upon the extraordinary changes that were taking place.

But drinking the remains of his cake-soaked tea he tries and fails again and again to recall the locus of the memory and tease from it the formative time associated with it from his past. Eventually his efforts pay off, and he tells us the smell and taste of things remained poised a long time, like souls, ready to remind us, waiting and hoping for their moment, amid the ruins of all the rest, his youth unfolding to him like a map of his childhood revels spent with a dear aunt in Combray.

Waiting like souls to remind is a poignant Idée fixe for memory reawakened. In its obsessive preoccupation an emotional picture forms, often as impossible to put into words as it would be to draw it. How very strange the expression of consciousness when caught up in powerfully experienced memory.

I experienced my own Combray in the sleepy little town of Corinth, Mississippi, for me and my siblings the happiest place on earth. But the one thing that might have provided me with my own madeleine cake moment, a fried cornbread known in the old south as a corn stick, I have not eaten since the late 1980's. I have had corn sticks in southern style buffets on occasion, but they are as different from my grandmother's as corn muffins are from fried cornbread in a cast iron pan.

So too is the mournful wail and the rhythmic, staccato rattle of the rails when a freight train passed in the early morning dark a scant stone's throw away from her home. I rarely hear the sounds of a train in the night anymore, but when I do my eyes grow moist remembering wakeful hours spent in the darkness on the sofa bed in my grandparents' living room.

I remember too, the pleasant grinding of our car's tires on their pebbled drive, the sound of the whirring wings of thousands of bees collecting pollen on my grandmother's beautiful Rose of Sharon and the shuddering hum of the fan in her kitchen window. I fear that I will likely never reexperience sounds of their like again.

There are a thousand other memories that I wish I could reawaken that I might use to paint with a metaphoric brush a map of the soul-self to capture the spidering roads leading to the liminal edges of my psyche, the loci where memory and vision ends and forgetfulness begins.

Memory is a pathway of sorts, a wayfinder, we can use it or abuse it, we can reinvent ourselves by altering memories as easily as we might find our true selves in them. But you can no more sketch a map of experienced love than you can of hate. Tracing the liminal expression of character defining moments is as difficult as following your former footsteps by walking backwards in the darkness.

Contrary to the popular rendering of the Proust's tea and petite madeleine memory restoration, scent and taste did not revive it alone. What was awakened in that initial moment was insensate feeling. After repeated efforts failed, it was his obsessive meditation at the liminal edges of memory which returned him to his youth. And then he wrote and wrote and wrote some more. And the more he wrote the more he remembered.

In the last three years of my father's life, I was determined to make a real connection with him, something we had never been able to do when I was young. Both he and his youngest brother spent hours sharing stories with me about their home life and about themselves. And in recording these stories, it gave me greater understanding of where they came from and how they became the men that I knew in my youth and in their old age.

With this foundation I began to write and explore my own memories. Joan Didion once wrote that A place belongs forever to whoever claims it hardest, remembers it most obsessively. The little brick house on the corner of Young and Wick became my Idée fixe. It was already a guidepost in my dreams long before I started writing about it. But within the process of remembering, this story grew into something more, laying down roots in my soul-self, it dimensions in my psyche increasing severalfold.

But the more I wrote, the more my memories focused on my grandmother's sacrificial love. She had lived her entire life in the shadow of the men in her life, her story suborned to theirs.

There were no bad children in her home. In her care and the tight clasp of her arms we knew we were loved in a way that people are rarely loved. Every meal was a feast, the sound of her quavering voice when we talked one of my most precious memories.

My writing came to a halt the morning my father died, my brother calling me at about five in the morning to share that he had passed gently in his sleep. Although I assumed at the time that the news would keep me awake, I remained in bed, meditating on the permanence of death and the harsh reality that I would never see or speak to my dad again.

In consequence, I did not notice my unexpected transition from mournful wakefulness to sleep. In the dream that followed I stood quietly in a white room with my wife, daughter, mother, sister and my father’s mother. When a knock sounded at the room's door, I answered it, and my mother’s mother and sister entered the room together. I hugged them both and tearfully told them my dad had died.

Then I awakened with a start.

In my waking hours it was always the men in my life who dominated my psyche. The masks that I wore I learned to wear from them. The reflexive machismo, the stubbornness that kept me from backing down in the face of poor decision-making as well as the deafness to the feminine within my soul-self that somehow still meekly bore witness to my foolhardiness.

In the midst of my grief, it was not those men who comforted me in my dream, but the most important women in my life. If I were to draw a map representing my true self rather than the facade that I long presented to the world, it would be the faces and outstretched arms of these women, the ones who carried the emotional burden that we men could not be bothered to bear. The most humane branches of my soul-self all bear the lasting imprint of these women's lives.

Home is not a place; it is a person. Memory is not a map of self, but it can help us to locate those things that we have in our day-to-day struggles forsaken.

For all of my life each home that I loved, the one where I was raised, the one in Corinth a stone's throw from the rails, and the one I have shared with my wife for almost thirty years; what I truly loved has always and will ever be the women who made those places welcoming.

humanitylove

About the Creator

John Cox

Twisted teller of mind bending tales. I never met a myth I didn't love or a subject that I couldn't twist out of joint. I have a little something for almost everyone here. Cept AI. Aint got none of that.

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Comments (31)

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  • Gina C.22 days ago

    The concept of consciousness has always been fascinating to me, John. I often think about where all this "thinking about thinking / metacognition" goes when we leave. I really love how you connect consciousness to memory and the people who shape who we are. This is an exceptional piece - congratulations on a well-deserved win!!

  • John R. Godwinabout a month ago

    There is just so much going on in this story. It's so rich with imagery, philosophy, human nature and wisdom, that it feels like it could burst at any moment. But beyond the craft, psychology, and erudition, there's the absolutely wonderful feeling of love and support. It's a lush, beautiful panegyric to the women in your life, and as someone whose live has been so blessed by women, I related to it on a deeply personal level. I won't quote too many of my favorite lines, but "...the ego exists to preserve the integrity of the self." hit me in a way that I imagine was similar to the way it hit you. It's not the most poetic phrase in the piece, but its wisdom is profound. The depth of this work amazed me. I'm guessing this was as easy a decision for the Vocal judgets as it comes. Exceptionally well done.

  • Shirley Belkabout a month ago

    Loved this, John! Corinth is only about 30 miles from where my girls live with their families in Blue Mountain, MS. My mother and aunt used to make that homemade cornbread....I can still smell it...yum. Congratulations on that win!!!

  • The Dani Writerabout a month ago

    Congratulations on your win John!

  • Adrianna D Gassabout a month ago

    I resonate with this so much. Home is most definitely people sometimes those we least expect. Great read, John!

  • Marilyn Gloverabout a month ago

    John, this was such a joy to read and really touched my heart. Thank goodness or all the women in our lives. Congratulations on your win; you truly are a fantastic writer!👏👏❤

  • Melissa Ingoldsbyabout a month ago

    Really touching and endearing piece with philosophical and mystical qualities in your poignant piece. Congrats!

  • Tarsheta (Tee) Jacksonabout a month ago

    congratulations my dear, and awesome read. Thank you for sharing

  • Lamar Wigginsabout a month ago

    YES!!! I had a feeling I'd be seeing this again. Super congrats to you, Sir John Cox.

  • Congratulations on your win. I agree, home is where there’s love/loved ones.

  • Raymond G. Taylorabout a month ago

    Fascinating and thought provoking journey through the self, John. Congratulations on your win

  • Andrea Corwin about a month ago

    Congratulations, my friend! I loved this piece of yours and how you were able to sort through it all and discover it is the women. 💕 I miss sounds of youth too and smile when I hear trains in the distance. I miss fireflies - they don’t live here but I’ve discovered others. I could not write for this challenge, so I again congratulate you on another beautifully crated piece.

  • JBazabout a month ago

    John, I missed this the first time round and that is my loss. I cannot express how emotional this made me reading your words. So open and honest and then your final lines hit with the most powerful of emotions. 'Love' Congratulations on such a well deserved win.

  • Pōlani Monderen 2 months ago

    Beautiful share and dedication to the connection between you and those that have helped reflect beauty back to you in this life time.

  • Wooohooooo congratulations on your win! 🎉💖🎊🎉💖🎊

  • Heather Hubler2 months ago

    So incredibly thought provoking and liberating in its own way, John!! And I did tear up when you so eloquently and humbly recognized the role of the amazing women in your life. Congratulations on this richly deserved win :)

  • Imola Tóth2 months ago

    Congrats on your win, John!🎉This is an incredible story.

  • Paul Stewart2 months ago

    I applaud you sir..so glad Vocal are finally giving my fellow curmudgeon the praise and accolades he deserves especially when he delivers such unrivalled writing and in your own way paying respects to those who went before you and your philosophical equal in your awesome wife. Just is always an experience, thoughtful and thoughtprovoking and fully human. Absolutely loved this.

  • Sara Wilson2 months ago

    Congrats on your win!!!

  • Tim Carmichael2 months ago

    Congratulations John, well deserved!

  • Lamar Wiggins2 months ago

    This was a deep journey through your experience as John Cox. (do you have a middle name?) I couldn't stop reading even if I wanted to. This work affected me in ways I didn't see coming. I used to spend excessive amounts of time wondering about beginnings and how they relate to our conscious selves. As souls on this plane, we are trained to believe that everything has a beginning. We can even trace them (some of them), but we may never know why we begun. Being here is a miracle. The self is not an illusion and the interaction with others is a crucial part in determining who we are; an ongoing test that ultimately helps us realize universal lessons. I really appreciated the part with the 'wooly brother', and how this circled back to the women who gave birth to everyone on this planet. You are a deep thinker. And it makes sense. Those deep thoughts come out in some of the stories you tell. Best of luck, my friend. And God bless.

  • Caitlin Charlton2 months ago

    🍽️ It makes me so happy to read you talking about your wife and what she taught you. 'it means something more than simply being awake' 🤔 I really do like the time and thought, that went into the where —why — and the how, of what the wooly bear was doing. 🍽️ 'No wiser than a caterpillar' 👌🏾 'till memory awakens meaning, I not they am the one held captive' I am in awe of how deep you went, in your writing. Especially here. 🍽️ Oh that was fascinating. Through taste and smell — one cannot commune with a memory forgotten — but with obsessive and persistent writing, it can be done. The dream you had after your dad's death, was so heartbreaking to read... 🍽️ 'Those who carried the emotional burden that we mentioned could not be bothered to bear' This is why I will always remember this piece. One of the many reasons why... I will. Okay. Now that I've reached the end. I will try not to cry. This was outstanding, deeply moving. 👏🏾🤗❤️🖤

  • So many memories and thoughts here. Well written.

  • C. Rommial Butler2 months ago

    Well-wrought, John! Consciousness, it seems to me, is the manifestation, whereas many take it as the source. In my own experiences, I found that I appreciated such manifestations more upon coming to this realization.

  • Hannah Moore2 months ago

    A winding path, and so rich to follow.

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