“How we remember, what we remember and why we remember form the most personal map of our individuality.” ~Christina Baldwin
I tend to be a forgetful person. To try to remedy this, my dad and I put in a four foot by eight foot whiteboard just inside the front door to my house. Yet somehow I managed to ignore a three foot tall note reminding me to email my professor for the better part of a week. I guess I still have some work to do on heeding my reminders, or maybe I just need to write bigger.
In any case, I had a bracelet made to help remind me of some of the things I find most important. It is symbolically dense so I won’t get into everything I designed the bracelet to say. Instead, I am going to just try to hit the high points.
On the left side are a crescent moon, nine stars, and a small ceramic teapot. I have always loved science, science fiction, and outer space, but for my purposes here the moon and the stars are just context for that little teapot.
Bertrand Russell was a Twentieth Century philosopher in the fields of philosophy of language and metaphysics. When he would debate people, some of them would argue “You cannot disprove such and such a supposition so you must admit that it is possible that I’m right.”
Russell would agree that of course it was possible that they were right, but that does not mean their idea is worthy of respect.
His counterargument was by way of a thought experiment. “Imagine,” he would say, “that I posit that orbiting the sun between Earth and Mars is a small ceramic teapot. Imagine further that I posit that the teapot is small enough and far enough away and has a low enough albedo and therefore our instruments cannot detect it. You would then have to agree that you cannot disprove my teapot.”
Even though we cannot disprove Russell’s teapot it’s not bloody likely that to be out there. “Not bloody likely” are my words, not Professor Russell’s.
The existence of that teapot is not equiprobable, it is not equally likely to be true as to be false. I have that teapot on my bracelet to remind me to be rational, logical, and skeptical and to make sure that the people I’m listening to and the people that I respect are the same.
On the other side of the bracelet is the Ouroboros—the snake eating its own tail—and a picture of a hydrogen atom. I’d like to focus on one facet of that atom. To me it’s a reminder of the beautiful and humble origins of everything that exists.
Carl Sagan said that “Life is what hydrogen atoms do when given 13.7 billion years.”
For a long time, the only element that existed in the universe was hydrogen. Eventually, enough hydrogen came close enough together that it formed stars, giant burning balls of gas. At the center of these stars was ongoing nuclear fusion.
They were smashing those hydrogen atoms together and making helium, and eventually smashing those together to make lithium and boron and beryllium and carbon and nitrogen and oxygen and all these other heavier elements I can never remember.
Eventually, some of stars get so dense they cannot hold together anymore and they explode. These heavy elements can then proliferate throughout the universe until eventually some of them coalesced into things like planets, like the planet Earth.
I find it beautiful, awesome, and inspiring that each atom in our bodies was forged in the furnace at the heart of a star, and I like that reminder.
Finally, at the center it reads “This too shall pass.” The story of this phrase goes back thousands of years. It goes something like this:
A wise Persian king asked his advisers to bring him something that would make him happy when he was sad and vice versa. They eventually brought the king a ring on which is inscribed “This too shall pass.”
I like both sides of this reminder.
I like being made happy when I’m sad. Before I had to give a speech, I was sitting there, knees knocking, and I saw my bracelet and was reminded that in four to six minutes I would be done no matter what.
The reminder I really like from this phrase, however, is the other side of it: being made sad when I’m happy. This isn’t because I’m melancholic. I’m not Eeyore-esque. I don’t like to sit in the dark wearing black nail polish, dark eyeliner, and crying all the time.
When, for example, I’m getting along swimmingly with my sister—and everyone who has siblings will know that this is not a perpetual occurrence—I like to remember that I won’t always be that way. That we will fight again and that one day one of us is going to die.
I don’t mean to sound morose but for me that realization reminds me that the time we are spending together now, when we’re both happy, is special and meaningful. It is something to be appreciated and treasured.
I think that we all have objects like my bracelet—maybe not something so intentional, or custom-made, but something of one sort or another.
For example, my parents have hanging in their bedroom a plaque that reads “Always kiss me good night.” They are very much in love and I don’t think they need that reminder, but seeing it brings them joy. Yours could be a wedding ring, a necklace, a book, or a chotskie from a trip.
These are the objects that give us cues about what’s important to us. What are some of your objects and of what do they remind you?
Photo by Monica’s Dad

About J.C. Lundberg
J.C. Lundberg holds a B.S. in Mathematics and M.A. in Religious Ethics from the Catholic University of America. While not writing his group's next D&D adventure, he spends his time workings towards a J.D. from the University of Washington.
Thank you for your perspective. I found this a really fresh post and will work to create something of my own as a reminder.
I can relate very much to this post. I often write things in pen on my arm that help me remember certain things about life and living. Unlike a tattoo which one develops sensory adaptation to, writing in pen forces you to write over and over again that which you wish to remember and helps to keep it at the forefront of one’s mind every day.
Every year when I make my new years resolutions I write them on a little piece of paper and put it in my wallet. If I don’t accomplish it, it stays for the next year, throughout the year I take it out and read it as a regular reminder.
Very much enjoyed this. I myself have a body full of tattoo’d reminders (symbols, words, phrases, scenes described in books, etc etc) to remind me of these things. Loved hearing about your view on the bracelet. “This too shall pass”, is definitely one of the things I try to remember. That along with always trying to be the highest and best version of myself.
That we were all “forged in the heart of a star” is also one of those very profound thoughts.
Cheers, hope you’re having an awesome day.
I love this. So beautiful. And I like Matt’s writing in pen so that you write it daily, but I don’t think tattoos lose that. Every single time I look down at my arm and see my lotus tattoo, I am reminded how I want to live my life.
I agree. Even though I use pen I still think tattoos are wonderful and often beautiful reminders:)
Thank you! A lovely post.
Lori, I just ordered your new book. I’m really excited and I look forward to reading to my heart’s content! I think I just got in under the deadline for the extra goodies.
Sal
I like your idea of putting symbols to memorable sayings and stories…much more personal that way! I like the story of “this too shall pass,” thank you for sharing!
Love this…I have a bracelet I had made at Disneyland for $8 and it is truly priceless. On it reads Philippians 4:13 which is the bible verse “I can do ALL things through Christ who gives me strength” Every time I see it, I smile in my heart and soul. It reminds me that with God I can do anything and the possibilities of this lifetime are truly endless. What an amazing thought…ANYTHING 🙂
I rarely comment, but I loved this entry. I, too, find solace in the notion that life was brought forth through one of the most destructive and violent acts in the universe: the supernova.
I like this idea. I’m still not sure how I feel about new year’s resolutions but I may be stealing this for a couple goals I have set recently.
I recently bought a new mug …on it reads ” Life is wonderful”. I used it everyday at work and I’m so glad it always reminds me how wonderful Life is despite whatever’s happening around.:-)
I have a buddha in my room and it reminds me to be happy and grateful and ironically that all things good or bad come to pass. I bought it when I was really down and it brought me comfort just touching and hugging it.
I greatly enjoyed this piece – it’s quite different from what’s been featured here in the past and I loved such a “new” perspective!
I can relate to giving greater personal meaning to seemingly every day objects. So many mundane symbols/items have extreme significance to me. It’s nice to find something so “deep” in an otherwise boring object. That means reminders are everywhere. 🙂
I hope to see more of your writing featured here! Thanks for sharing this piece.
my snuffles bears. reminds me i’m loved. always! by my friends who’ve given them to me 🙂
Noch Noch