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Home / home / Elizabeth Hazen Essay Lands in Coachella Review

Jun 08 2022

Elizabeth Hazen Essay Lands in Coachella Review

Elizabeth Hazen's new essay "Click Here to Relive This Memory" explores the warmth and the chill of nostalgia

Click Here to Relive This Memory

" The future brims with uncertainty and violence and harsh colors; it is no surprise that we prefer looking back," writes Elizabeth Hazen in her new essay that contends with a societal and personal obsession with nostalgia. In the course of her essay, she charts her life as a young child devouring handfuls of cereal in front of Saturday morning cartoons, to a young mother mired in a failing marriage, to the struggles and successes of today. Read an excerpt below:

In my inbox, I find the weekly message from Shutterfly: “Your memories from X number of years ago this week.” One click and there is my son, toothless and grinning, face smeared with sweet potato puree. There is a house I no longer inhabit, friends I no longer know, a self I no longer know, a life to which I can never return. The link, “Relive this memory,” a tempting lie.

If I really think about it, though, I must acknowledge the angst and uncertainty of my twenties and thirties, the self-destructive patterns I did not yet recognize, the insecurities that stifled my voice. My nostalgia fades ultimately into more honest reflection on the past, and I fix on what might be a lesson in all this looking back: one day, I will long for the moment I am in right now. I remind myself to pay attention, to savor what I can.

Sometimes I think that, through memory, we build armor, adding layer upon layer like expanding Russian dolls. I see my son’s face hardening, his defenses stronger, and his actions more careful and strategic than they were even a month ago. Sometimes I think the opposite; memory strips us away, like birch bark in a storm, or onion skin, revealing more vulnerable interiors. His face as the Pink Panther dumps laundry soap into the machine, the way his voice changes when he exclaims over pictures of the cat. Likely, it is both, some memories serving to strengthen us and others allowing us to let down our guards and become, if only for a moment, who we once were.

Read the full essay Poetry by Elizabeth Hazen

Live from the Reading Room Episode 4 (THE HISTORIES)

April 28, 2020

In this edition of “Live From the Reading Room”, James J. Patterson reads from three histories, Will and Ariel Durrant’s “The Life of Greece,” Edward Gibbon’s “Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire”, and Leo Damrosch’s “The Club.”

He also reads “The Conjecture Chamber” from his first collection of essays BERMUDA SHORTS

New Review of Scattered Clouds Raves “SC is one I return to again and again”

April 27, 2020

Reuben jackson recieves another glowing review for his collection “Scattered Clouds.”

Rose Reads Episode 4 (Myths and Retellings)

April 24, 2020

In this episode of Rose Reads, poet Rose Solari talks re-telling poems – by Louise Gluck, Derek Walcott, Anne Sexton, and herself.

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