Terence Conran, the interior design guru, writes in his book “EASY LIVING” (1999), that we should collect in our home objects, which could “help to unlock the memory bank and identify what makes us feel good.” So on my sideboard you can see a banjo, a clock, a little king, an old typewriter. Aged 14 I started to play banjo and looking back: music often in my lifetime helped me to feel free. Aged 16 I started to write daily: a big support to identify, what I am living for. The clock: A remembrance to the clock we saw in the Central Station in Manhattan. The king? An ironical gift by my wife. Featuring me, she said. Making the reality test, paradoxically she is the king (I say). P.S.: Do you have some objects surrounding you, which help, to unlock your memory bank???
photo by Frizztext – click on the image to enter his flickr photo collection…
Related articles
- Sir Terence Conran (u4art.com)
- St. Louis Banjo Club performs historical songs dating back to the 1920s (digitaljournalism2600.com)
- Music therapy: a key to unlocking the diseased brain. (babyboomersandmore.com)
- Remembering Earl Scruggs (therealcanadianmusicblog.wordpress.com)
Very nice, frizztext!! Love this… π
LikeLike
lovely idea
nice works
have a fine weekl my friend
LikeLike
Very good! I enjoyed the music. You are very talented.
LikeLike
thanks, Ineke / scrapydo, but I’m not talented, but listen on the other hand to some players I enjoyed in a meeting of an Irish Pub in Germany, I felt well there:
+
LikeLike
I could not resist to make the video for my youtube channel, as he played THE WORLD IS WAITING FOR THE SUNRISE – I was deeply heart-touched because I remembered, that a friend of mine played that in the sixties – and then was killed by a car accident …
he drove this sporty car
(high speed under a military truck – worked like a guillotine)
+
LikeLike
thought provoking post!
LikeLike
Several Frizztext! Just might borrow your idea and make a post of it π
LikeLike
go on, I would like to see …
LikeLike
Wonderful, F.T.!
Sometimes I think that nothing can help my memory bank…
the vault might be rusted shut, so to speak!
π
LikeLike
I love your collection of aide memoires, particularly against that brilliant red wall! Thank you for the peek into your well-deserved Kingdom!
LikeLike
Stunning photo Frizz and I love listening to you playing your banjo. Excellent! Thanks for sharing your lovely talent. π
*hugs*
LikeLike
Sometimes i feel like parts of my memory bank are inaccessible…probably locked forever if I can’t find the keys. It would be nice to “defragment” our memory like a computer hard drive.
LikeLike
Frizz, I have so many objects surrounding me to unlock my memory bank–I have to rotate them to keep them from taking over the house! But my favorites are the dried flower arrangements I have made from the many lovely FTD floral gifts sent me from family members! Love your collection, especailly the banjo and the typewriter, which represent so many years of work in my life (with me, the piano–but still making music, you see.)
LikeLike
hi granbee / Rose: I like your statement:
“I have so many objects surrounding me to unlock my memory bank:
I have to rotate them to keep them from taking over the house!”
+
Terence Conran’s advice: at first carry all the things out off your house, put them in the garden or on the street just before your house – and then decide very carefully what to bring back inside again.
LikeLike