When a picture evokes painful memories

A trip down the memory lane may lead to confronting details best left avoided. However, the way we train our minds can make a difference in mitigating the effect

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A trip down the memory lane may lead to confronting details best left avoided. However, the way we train our minds can make a difference in mitigating the effect

Our memories have a way of getting triggered. Sometimes all it takes is a photo or song, or even a whiff of rain—then comes the deluge. Long-forgotten events, and characters come back to life; full-fledged reenactments follow, right down to the minutest detail, no matter how painful or joyful.

Take the case of 66-year-old Sahana Ramakrishnan, a filmmaker and creative communications professional from Chennai, who came upon an old family photograph of her, her older siblings and their parents. Three of them had by then passed away. A flood of memories bubbled up, and with it a host of questions. Why didn’t her father and sibling enjoy a more harmonious relationship? What made their arguments always escalate into a slanging match accompanied by door slamming and throwing of things?

She remembered finding out about how it all started from her mother. A minor incident between her brother and an employee of their father had snowballed. The brother, a young boy at the time, had taken the lady’s pencil without permission, in response to which she called him a thief. How much was meant in jest is anyone’s guess but the brother, greatly offended, told her to shut up. The father thought the son should learn to watch his words and gave him a thrashing. Visiting relatives soon got involved with the incident and most took the boy's side. Sahana adopted much of her brother’s resentment at the perceived injustice and absorbed similar judgments. Over the years, the matter was forgotten but it only took a glimpse at an old photo to bring back the same emotions she felt then. How could it be that such an innocuous object could have the power to turn back time?

The answer, it turns out, lies in our own minds. Says Dr. Ennapadam S. Krishnamoorthy, senior consultant of behavioral neurology and neuropsychiatry, and founder of the Buddhi Clinic in Chennai, “It is very important that we work through the emotions that objects (su...

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