Reminiscing about the past can provide personal and social benefits. On an individual level, recalling life experiences and sharing memories can help form a sense of identity and provide meaning. Socially, reminiscing involves sharing stories and interpretations of the past, which shapes cultural and personal understandings of history. Different types of reminiscence like sharing accomplishments or problem-solving with past experiences can be useful for individuals and groups. Overall, reminiscing connects our choices and challenges across life to discover insights that can inform working and planning for the future.
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Five Slides on Reminiscing
for the Future
Olivier Serrat
2016
2. Wanting the Past
You are today where
your thoughts have
brought you; you will
be tomorrow where
your thoughts take
you.—James Allen
To look backward for a
while is to refresh the
eye, to restore it, and
to render it the more
fit for its prime
function of looking
forward.—Margaret
Fairless Barber, The
Roadmender
Everybody needs his
memories. They keep
the wolf of
insignificance from the
door.—Saul Bellow, Mr.
Sammler's Planet
The past is never dead.
It's not even past.—
William Faulkner,
Requiem for a Nun
Only a good-for-
nothing is not
interested in his past.—
Sigmund Freud
The two offices of
memory are collection
and distribution.—
Samuel Johnson
3. Wanting the Past, Cont'd
We do not remember
days, we remember
moments.—Cesare
Pavese
Things that were hard
to bear are sweet to
remember.—Seneca
Oh, call back yesterday,
bid time return.—
William Shakespeare,
Richard II, 3.2
But just wait until now
becomes then. You'll
see how happy we
were.—Susan Sontag, I,
etcetera
Memory, my dear
Cecily, is the diary that
we all carry about with
us.—Oscar Wilde, The
Importance of Being
Earnest
4. Recalling Yesterday
In psychology, memory refers
to the processes used to
acquire, store, retain, and
later retrieve information.
Voluntary memory, the
deliberate effort to remember
things past, is the binary
opposite of involuntary
memory, aka flashback.
Even if man is by nature a social
animal, we see ourselves as unique
individuals. Hence, the recollection of
experience through storytelling
satisfies our lifelong need to also be
recognized as such by others. Consider
what happens when you make friends
or engage in a community: you spend
time sharing life histories.
By recalling the past, celebrating accomplishments and—as necessary—
coming to terms with disappointments, individuals can achieve a heightened
sense of personal identity and self-continuity, notably in their social
relationships. At the confluence of voluntary memory and events,
circumstances, and experience, they can find meaning and coherence in life
and work.
5. Sharing Life Histories
Reminiscence has self-positive
and self-negative functions:
identity exploration, problem
solving, and death
preparation are served by the
first and bitterness revival,
boredom reduction, and
intimacy maintenance by the
second.
Outside medicine, psychology, and
social care, social sciences such as
management find benefits to social
reminiscing on behalf of user groups.
There is particular interest in three or
four of the six types of reminiscence
mentioned earlier more frequently
referred to as integrative,
instrumental, transmissive, narrative,
escapist, and obsessive.
For example, instrumental reminiscence looks to past experience to solve
problems in the present; transmissive reminiscence communicates cultural
and personal knowledge of earlier times; narrative reminiscence uses
storytelling, with conversational and interactional properties, to convey
anecdotal evidence of (usually) positive stories and positive emotions.
6. Acting Today, Shaping Tomorrow
Memory is created and recreated
in social interactions in which
moments and, above all, their
interpretations at multiple levels
of individual and cultural analysis
are highlighted, shared,
contested, negotiated, enriched,
and confirmed. This leads to
dynamic, fluid, and historical
representations and evaluations
that define selves, others, and
the world.
If memories are both shaped by
and shape our understanding of
history, and if meaning is created
by how we link choices,
achievements, and challenges in
our lives, social reminiscing can
help individuals, groups, and
organizations discover, dream,
design, and deliver for tomorrow.
From this perspective,
instrumental, transmissive, and
narrative reminiscence can be
considered a gain in performance
without practice.