Memory is a very powerful thing. It can access long stored information in an instance.
Last week my wife, Lily, and I were in Toronto celebrating our wedding anniversary. We checked into our hotel, and when we got to our room, we found it overlooked City Hall.
Our vantage from the 33rd floor allowed us to survey a large portion of real estate below.
As we gazed out the window, my eyes gravitated to a spot just behind City Hall. From what I could see, it looked very different than I remembered.
“See that street down there?” I said to Lily. “I think it’s Elizabeth Street. When I was a kid we would eat there at the Nanking Restaurant on Saturday nights.”
It was the first restaurant I ever ate in. I believe I was just a month or two old when my parents took me for my first Chinese dinner.
I’m sure I didn’t taste a delicious egg roll directly, but I definitely got it second hand.
Lily wanted to go down to the street and take a picture of the huge “TORONTO” sign that was a remnant of the Pan Am Games held there just a month ago.
After we got down to street level and Lily had her picture taken sitting in the “O” of “TORONTO”, I kind of wanted to see if I was correct on that street I spied from our hotel window.
We walked around to the back of City Hall and sure enough, it was Elizabeth Street. When my family started eating at the Nanking, City Hall wasn’t even there. But now everything has completely changed.
The Nanking wasn’t there and it seemed like there was no trace of anything that I remembered. There was no Lichee Gardens on the other side of the street – just all new buildings.
But I wondered about the building where the Nanking was. It looked different. It was a government office now … the department of environment or something.
I was trying to figure out if it was the same building, but Lily thought the outside looked too new to be 60 plus years old.
I was still curious. I walked through one of the doorways, and my memory was pricked; it was foreign yet there was something that seemed to fit.
I motioned to Lily, “I’m not so sure this is a new building. I think the entrance was here and you could either go to the right into a smaller lounge or to the left into the large dining room” … which probably wasn’t as large as I remembered as a child.
Lil didn’t think I was right. There was a stucco kind of treatment on the building that gave it a 70’s look.
But as we walked past, down the side street, and turned to look at the back of the building, sure enough you could tell by the back, where there was no updated exterior facade, that this building was old.
Just as I remembered! I hadn’t accessed that information in years, hadn’t been on that street for 45 years, yet I could recall it all. Amazing memories we have!
Here’s the thing: Your memory of how God has worked in your life can encourage you, give you hope that He will continue – even give you determination. But don’t rest on just those memories, only use them to fuel knew adventures with God. Don’t get stuck in the past.
That’s Life!
Paul
Question: What past memory has kept you from moving forward? Leave your comment below.