Remembering at All Costs

I began forgetting the simplest things.

At first I couldnt recall whether my son liked strawberry or peach yoghurt. Then I lost track of which day his swimming lesson was. Later, as I pulled out of the supermarket car park, I paused for a heartbeat, unable to remember which gear I usually use to get moving.

The sudden stall of the engine set off a panic inside me; I sat there for a few minutes, hands clenched around the steering wheel, terrified to glance at the rearview mirror.

That evening I confessed it to my wife.

Somethings not right with me, I said. Its like a fog has settled over my head.

She placed her hand first on my forehead, then on my cheeka familiar gesture wed shared for ten years.

Youre just exhausted, Ian. Youre not sleeping enough and youre working far too hard, she replied.

I wanted to shout, It isnt tiredness! Its like trying to erase a person piece by piece with a rubber, but I held my tongue. The fear in her eyes was far scarier than my own.

From then on I wrote everything down in a little notebook.

Today is Thursday.
Pick up Max at 5.30pm.
Buy a loaf of wholemeal, not the cheap supermarket one Emily wont eat that.
Call Mum on Sunday at noon. Ask about her blood pressure.

My phone became an extension of me; without it I felt helpless, a body adrift in a familiar world.

One day I truly got lost.

Not in a forest or a foreign city, but in the neighbourhood where Id lived for seven years. I walked the usual route from the tube, lost in thought, looked up and didnt recognise the crossroads. The familiar chemist had vanished, replaced by a brightlit café that had never been there before.

I froze, a cold sweat gathering under my shirt. Strangers passed by as if nothing were amiss, their footsteps indifferent to my bewilderment. The world suddenly felt foreign and cold.

I fumbled for my phone, opened the map, and saw a blue pin blinking on an unknown street. I typed in my home address and followed the mechanical voice, feeling like a child sent alone to the corner shop for the first time. I didnt get back until three hours later.

Emily placed a cup of tea before me in silence. Her quiet was worse than any outburst; I didnt know how to face the shame.

Ive booked you an appointment with a neurologist, she finally said, avoiding my eyes. Wednesday at four. Ill take the afternoon off and go with you.

I nodded, a lump choking my throat. The thought of a hospital, white coats, early signs and agerelated changes filled me with animallike terror. Now I would have to become a patient, spoken of in the third person.

Wednesday morning, while Emily was in the bathroom, I absentmindedly grabbed her phone to check the weather. My own lay on the charger. On the screen were open tabs:

Dementia early symptoms in men over 45
How to cope with a spouse who has memory problems
Support groups for families
Legal steps for guardianship

I flung the phone aside as if it had burned my hand. I sank onto the edge of the bed, breathless. It wasnt just a medical report; it was a verdict on our shared life, on our future. She no longer saw a husband, a partner, a father. She saw a problem, an object to be cared for.

The day at the clinic passed in a soundproof bubble. I answered questions, took tests like Name three words: apple, table, coin. Remember them. The flashlights beam was the only thing I could focus on, while the word guardianship echoed in my mind.

When we left, dusk was falling. Emily took my arm, gripping it hard, almost spasmodically.

Right, she said, her voice oddly chipper. The doctor said its nothing serious just stress. We need more rest. Ill heat up the soup. Youre hungry, I suppose

I watched her profile, her tightly pressed lips, the little furrow of worry at the corner of her eye. She was playing the part of the loving wife who believes everything will be fine. I saw the fear, the exhaustion, the endless line of days ahead where I would become more childlike and she would turn into a caretaker.

She handed me the car keys.

Your turn. You park better.

It was a simple, ruthless test. I turned the key, started the engine, and forgot where the indicators were. My hand hung uselessly, searching for a lever that wasnt there.

I stared at the dashboard, at the familiar buttons that now felt like scattered letters.

I closed my eyes, took a deep breath.

Emily my voice cracked, I cant

In the quiet of the car my words sounded like a final sentence. I expected rebuke, tears, maybe some comforting words. Emily simply opened her door, walked around the passenger side, placed a gentle hand on my shoulder.

Shift over.

I obeyed, sliding into the passenger seat. She slipped into the drivers seat, buckled up, and eased forward, eyes fixed on the road. At a traffic light she brushed the back of her hand against her cheek in a swift, almost reflexive gesture.

The city lights flickered past the window. I realised I wasnt just forgetting the way home; I was losing the way back to myself. Emily, once my wife, was becoming a kind, tired stranger ferrying a helpless passenger somewhere unknown.

The silence in her eyes was the scariest thing of all she seemed to have accepted this route.

A quiet war began: me against the illness, me against myself, and the fragments of the family we once were.

Emily introduced a new system. She hung a large calendar on the fridge with bold entries: Blood tests, Neurologist, Physio. She stuck notes on cupboard doors describing their contents. She bought a pillbox and arranged each mornings vitamins, nootropics, and the occasional calming tablet.

She called every hour, monitoring my movements, activities, medication, even my thoughts.

Our tenyearold son, Max, sensed the tension before he understood its cause. He grew unusually quiet.

One afternoon, while I was helping him with maths, I froze at a simple equation. Numbers danced, refusing to form a picture. Max looked at me, then at Emily, eyes wide with worry.

Emily stepped in quickly. Dads just tired, let me Max nodded, but kept his distance. In his gaze was a new caution, as if his father had become a fragile, unpredictable object.

Our arguments faded. Before we could shout over a pile of dirty dishes or slam a door, we would hug an hour later and laugh at our silliness. Now Emily merely sighed and washed the plates in silence. Her patience seemed a prison guards virtue immaculate and lethal.

I caught myself waiting for her breakdown, for the moment shed scream, When will this end? or break down from helplessness. That would be honest. It would mean she was still here, in the same boat, even if halffilled with water.

She held on, and that terrified me more than anything else.

One evening, after Id asked for the fifth time in an hour whether the iron was off, Emily could no longer contain herself. She didnt shout. She looked past me and said softly, Ian, Im so tired Im scared Ill fall asleep at the wheel taking Max to school.

There was no blame in her voice, just a plain statement of fact. Its simplicity made the weight on my chest even heavier.

At some point I began recording everything about Emily so I wouldnt forget.

Beside buy a loaf of wholemeal appeared notes like:

Emily laughs, head thrown back, when something truly amuses her.
She has a tiny starshaped mole on her left collarbone, which she hides.
When shes exhausted she wrinkles her nose, even in sleep.
She loves coffee with a dash of cinnamon.
She cherishes her old cardigan.

I gathered these fragments like a drowning sailor snatching at wreckage, fearing I might lose not only the route home but also the reason this house felt like home, the reason I loved this woman. I wrote to keep her within reach. Paradoxically, the frantic documentation sparked a faint, sharp tenderness for the details Id once ignored.

Emily saw the notebook one day, watched me scribble furiously. She flipped through it, read about my notes on her laugh, her mole, her crinkled nose, and she wept not from fatigue or despair, but from a piercing, undeniable recognition.

That night she didnt reheat dinner. She took my hand not the clinical grip of a hospital visit, but a hesitant, uncertain one and suggested, Lets go to that pizza place we went to after our first date, if you remember which one you ordered.

I looked at her, and for a split second, beyond the fear and the meds, a spark flickered. Not memory, but something else.

Ham and mushrooms, I whispered. And youll have the veggie with pineapple you called it exotic then.

She squeezed my hand and nodded, words failing her.

It wasnt a cure. The disease hadnt vanished. Tomorrow I might forget how to tie my shoes. Max might drift away again. Emily might snap.

But that evening, at a bright, noisy pizzeria with neon signs and blaring music, we were briefly just Ian and Emily, lost lovers who found each other again in a quiet between words.

The menu was unfamiliar. The Ham & Mushrooms pizza was listed under a different name. I fumbled.

Pick whatever you want, Emily said softly, her voice free of irritation, full of understanding a hardwon, exhausted understanding.

I pointed at the first picture that caught my eye. She ordered the veggie. When the pizza arrived, I took a bite and stopped.

Not right, I muttered. Its not the same.

Different taste? she asked.

No. I cant remember the taste, I replied, placing the slice back down, my eyes hollow, and her heart clenched.

It wasnt the recipe that hurt; it was the loss of that firstdate memory sweet, warm, smelling of yeast and hope that slipped away. All that remained was a vague shadow and a notebook entry: We were there. We were happy.

I pushed the plate away.

Lets just sit, I suggested.

For the first time in months it sounded not like a surrender but a request from an equal simply to sit together.

Emily reached over, placed her palm gently on my hand, not gripping, just touching.

After that nothing truly changed. The fridge calendar still hung, the pillbox still filled. But now, before handing me my morning tablets, Emily asked, Did you sleep well? Any headache? She asked like a lover, not a nurse.

I answered not with a nod but with a small confession, Strange dreams. Like Im in a glass house, all rooms visible, but there are no doors.

She listened, nodded, and in those moments the illness became a shared burden, not a secret enemy.

Max became our barometer. He noticed that Emily no longer flinched when I forgot something, that I sometimes asked, Max, could you remind me? without any shame. One day he brought a school drawing of the three of us holding hands under a bright sun, captioned, My family. Were strong. I taped it above the medication chart.

The disease never left. It kept pulling back, offering false hope, then striking where we least expected.

One morning I woke and didnt recognise Emily. She lay beside me, and a cold terror of incomprehension seized me. Who was she? Why was she in my bed?

Panic rose in my throat. I recoiled against the wall.

Emily opened her eyes, saw my wild stare, and understood without a word. Her heart sank, but panic didnt flare. A weary, endless sorrow settled.

Ian, she whispered, staying still so as not to startle me further. Its me. Emily. Your wife.

He breathed shallowly, a thin veil of sound.

You have a note about a starshaped mole, dont you? Want me to show it?

He nodded slowly. She gently lifted her shirt, revealed the tiny mark on her collarbone. He looked at it, then at the notebook that always sat on the bedside table, comparing. The fog in his eyes cleared, replaced by shame and a helpless grief that broke her.

Im sorry, he croaked. Im sorry, I

No need, she cut in, still not meeting his gaze. Just just lie down. Everythings fine.

She got up, made coffee, her hands trembling. It wasnt fine. It was a new level of lossforgetting the way home, forgetting her face, forgetting the love of his life. Their truce, those tender evenings, were not remission; they were merely a pause in a long, descending spiral.

She returned with two mugs. He was at the edge of the bed, scribbling rapidly in his notebook.

What are you writing? she asked, setting the coffee down.

He showed her hurried, crooked letters:

Morning. Woke up. Scared. Saw the star on her collarbone. Recognised. Its Emily. My beloved. Remember at any cost.

He didnt write wife. He wrote beloved.

Emily took a sip of the scalding coffee, trying to clear the lump in her throat. Tears were useless. Anger was useless.

All that remained were his desperate notes and her silent presence beside him.

She settled next to him, shoulder to shoulder.

The coffee will cool, she said simply.

He, still pale and shaking, nodded, took his mug, clasped her hand, seeking warmth, a tether to reality.

Many mornings lay ahead, full of small and large losses. Perhaps the notebook would cease to help Ian. Perhaps Max would grow up remembering a father who slowly vanished into the world around him. Perhaps Emily would eventually break under the weight.

But in that sunrise, light spilling onto the crooked lines of the notebook, they were together. Not in the past slipping away, nor in a frightening future, but in the presentfragile, broken, imperfectthe only thing they still possessed.

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Remembering at All Costs
No Fixed Abode Lydia never could stand the word “homeless.” To her, it sounded harsh and faceless. She was not homeless—she was a person who had lost her address. Someone erased from the city map, as if she were an unwanted pencil mark wiped away with a rubber. Her old life now seemed distant and alien—a state children’s home that always smelled of boiled cabbage, the predictable path to the engineering works, first as an apprentice, then as an operator on the assembly line. The machines, the rhythmic hum, the oil on her hands that never quite washed off. Her first love, Colin, died at the same plant, caught under a trailer. The cold November funeral leeched all colour out of the world. She survived years alone in the factory dormitory, until Stephen came into her life. Middle-aged, soft-spoken, calloused hands and warm, tired eyes. He was her quiet, long-awaited lull. They found solace in each other, just two lonely islands joining into their own small archipelago. He never spoke of marriage: “We don’t need a stamp, Lydia,” he’d say as he poured her tea in the evenings, “We’re family—closer than any bit of paper.” Starved for ordinary warmth, she believed him so completely shed come to see the whole notion of a marriage license as nothing but bureaucracy. They lived at Stephen’s, a little cottage right at the edge of the tracks, scented with smoke, mugwort, and freedom. They fixed the roof, painted the walls, planted lilac under the window, tended the garden. They lived for work and motion—up at dawn, home at dark, in a house that always smelled of soup and warm bread. It was her fortress, her hard-won, miniature universe. Until the black, relentless shadow appeared in Stephen’s chest. He withered before her over six long months, growing quieter, staring into space. The doctors were helpless. She nursed him, brought the bedpan, boiled broths he could no longer eat. And then he was gone. Only the stubborn smell of medicine remained, the silence so absolute not even the thunder of passing trains could break it. It was in that silence she heard the knock—brisk, urgent knuckles rapping peeling paint. On the threshold: his nephew, a young man in a shiny new jacket, and his wife, all tight curls and cold eyes. They smelled of a different world—urban, perfumed, foreign. At first, they almost behaved: helped with the funeral, brought groceries. Lydia, numb with grief, accepted it as a final tribute to Stephen. A week later, they returned—with papers. Printout, wobbly signature at the bottom—it wasn’t his handwriting. “The will,” the nephew said, not meeting her eyes. “Uncle left it all to us. He understood you—well, you weren’t family.” Lydia said nothing. All her words were stuck deep inside. She glanced at the photo on the dresser, the two of them laughing together in front of the lilacs. The nephew’s wife scoffed: “Photos don’t count. By law, you’re nothing here. Just a stranger in a stranger’s home.” She was given three days. She slept those nights in a dreamlike, mechanical trance, not crying—her orphanage had taught her tears changed nothing. Into her battered old hold-all went the essentials: documents, that photo in its frame, clean underwear, the wool shawl Stephen had given her for her birthday, and his favourite mug with the peeling bear. Everything else—furniture, curtains she’d sewn herself—no longer belonged to her. It was a house full of ghosts. On the third day, they arrived with a car, put her bag on the step. The nephew wouldn’t look at her—staring at his phone. “You understand, Auntie Lydia…,” he mumbled, “We need somewhere to live too…” His wife cut in, businesslike: “Keys. All of them. Please.” Lydia put the keys on the step and walked away, bag in hand, not looking back. She heard the lock click—no slammed door, just the final snick as her old life was sealed behind her. No one drove her to the edge of town; no one made a scene. She walked herself, by the only road she knew, heading instinctively for the railway station—the only place she could think of. It wasn’t a stroll, but a slow, heavy exile, each step widening the gulf between herself and the life she’d called her own. She walked beside the steel tracks. It was a bleak autumn day, cold, prickly rain falling. She stopped at a fence to watch a commuter train rattling citywards—windows bright, silhouettes inside: someone reading, someone dozing, someone laughing. They were all heading home, to their families—to addresses. All she carried was her bag, in which Stephen’s mug thudded dully with each step. Just a woman at the lineside. Just a person without an address. The station greeted her with echo, smoke, dust and metal. Lights too bright, voices too sharp, throngs of people with suitcases moving through a strange, unending ritual that held no place for her. She slumped in the shadow of a great pillar, hugging her bag. That first night she slept half-sitting on a hard bench, head on her woollen scarf, waking at every sound or the police’s heavy tread. Her heart thudded, but no one bothered the grey-haired woman and her bundle. There were dozens like her. The second night she found a tucked-away corner by broken chairs at the end of the waiting room. Not so exposed. Wrapped in her shawl, she faded into anxious, shallow dozes—Stephen’s face, the click of the lock, the cold shine of the rails spinning in her mind. She caught herself reaching for house keys that no longer existed. By the third morning, the survival instinct from the orphanage began to resurface. Something had to be done. And then, like a flicker in the darkness, the thought: the old dormitory, the one from her factory days before Stephen. At least there the walls were familiar. She walked for hours through changed neighbourhoods until she reached the grey tower block, unchanged in the years gone by. A young security woman, false lashes and phone in hand, guard the entrance. “Hello,” Lydia said quietly. “I used to live here—worked at the plant. Could I—could I stay a night or two? Just a place for a bit?” The woman looked her up and down, unimpressed. “Only current staff, love. Access cards, you know. Pensioner, are you? Try social services.” “But I—” Lydia stammered, then fell silent. What could she say? “I gave my whole life to this place”? To this girl in a bright jumper, her “whole life” was ancient history, weightless. Lydia turned and left. Across the way stood the old wooden bench, long ago painted green. In the evenings of her girlhood, couples sat there. Now she sat slowly, placed her bag beside her, and closed her eyes. The autumnal sun was feeble, the city’s noise and laughter faded away. Behind her eyelids were only drifting red-gold motes. Inside was nothing but blank silence, louder than the noise of the station. No thoughts of the future. No fear. Just this moment: the hard bench beneath her, and the inescapable, final knowledge—she had nowhere to go. She sat that way for hours as the sun crawled across the sky. Hunger, long forgotten, finally stirred inside—a dull, insistent gnaw. In her battered purse lay a couple of crisp ten-pound notes, leftover from her last pension. She’d guarded them like a thread to her old life—but her body was demanding now. She rose, feeling stiff and sore, afraid to leave her bag. She shuffled to the nearby corner shop—smelled of bread and sugar, as always. She clutched the notes in her sweating hand, bought the simplest bun and a bottle of water, her change added to the tiny collection in her purse. Back to her bench, her patch of earth. She sat and unwrapped her bread so carefully, almost reverently. The scent of fresh crust made her knees weak. She broke off a piece, chewed slowly—tasting the finest thing in the world, washing it down with cold, sharp water. Streetlamps flickered on; windows glowed. It was getting colder. Lydia pulled her scarf tight and huddled in the corner of her bench, resigned to enduring the night. Thoughts stuck on one refrain: “What now? The station? Hot pipes under the old plant?” She’d heard old hands talk of down-and-outs sleeping in service tunnels, where the pipes kept things warm. From the dark, shuffling footsteps approached—the careful drag of a limp. A plump, elderly woman in a woolly scarf and long coat, tugging a shopping trolley behind her, returned from the local shop. As she passed, she glanced at the bench—froze, looked again, and peered through the gloom before drawing nearer. “Lydia? My God—Lydia Smith? Is that you?” The voice was gravelly from age, but achingly familiar. Lydia slowly raised her head, and in the glow of the streetlamp she saw her face: older, fuller, but those same kind wrinkles and olive skin. Silver hair neatly tucked under her scarf. Zina Parker. Old Zina from the assembly line—they’d done twenty years together, swapped sandwiches, gossiped. She’d retired early through illness, and Lydia hadn’t seen her for a decade. Lydia tried to speak, but her voice caught. She nodded, clutching the last crust, while her dry, shriveled eyes unexpectedly filled with tears. Zina didn’t ask questions. She hefted herself onto the bench, shoulder to shoulder. “Oh Lyd… how on earth did you end up here?” Lydia was silent, fighting a trembling jaw, afraid sobs would burst forth. Zina didn’t need explanations. She saw the battered bag, the bun, the hopeless look. She read trouble like an old book—they were of the same world, from the same works. “Right, enough of this moping,” Zina said with the old factory firmness, rising. She took Lydia’s arm, helping her stand—a grip still strong despite the years. “You’re freezing! And no proper food—come on, let’s get you a cuppa.” “Zina…” Lydia whispered, embarrassed. “None of that, now! We did twenty years together—shared everything, happy or hard. Now come on. I rattle round that place alone. My boy’s in Glasgow and hardly comes home. You’ll keep me company, that’s all.” There was no drama, just practical kindness. She put Lydia’s bag on her trolley and led her away—didn’t demand explanations, didn’t look for tears. Just took her home, as if it was the natural thing—two old friends after a shift. They walked in silence through the familiar blocks. Zina lived next door, in a ground floor flat, redolent of cabbage and bay leaf, like Lydia’s old home. Zina hung up Lydia’s coat, lent her her spare slippers, sat her in the warm kitchen, and reheated a pot of soup, slicing black bread and brewing tea. Only when Lydia was fed and warm did Zina quietly ask, “Stephen—he’s gone?” Lydia nodded, unable to speak. Then after a long moment, managed, “Yes…and the house…his relatives…” “Ah, I see,” Zina sighed, waving off further explanation. “It happens. We’ll sort it out later. Sleep first. You’ll have the sofa—can’t guarantee it’s not lumpy, but it’s clean.” So, without fuss but with unyielding solidity, Zina took her in. Into the warm, soup-fragrant flat—where a TV muttered all day but there was always a meal and clean sheets. It wasn’t the end. It was landfall after shipwreck. A haven named Zina. A week passed. Lydia still woke at seven, listening to Zina potter about the kitchen, watching the light grow strong. The smell of instant coffee—the warmth was the main thing. Not just heat in the pipes, but in the “Good morning,” in the oatmeal on the table, in Zina’s grumbles about prices. Zina never pressed for details, but acted like a skilled forewoman—seeing a broken mechanism, not dwelling on failures, just figuring out what worked, and how to piece things together. “Your paperwork,” she said one morning, putting a folder on the table. “We’ll get you on the register for this address. Then switch your pension over here.” Lydia nodded. Her world, shrunk to a bench, now expanded, inch by inch, from the sofa to the kitchen, to the hallway, then into the street for groceries, clutching Zina’s list—feeling a strange pride at her errand. One evening, watching Zina knit before the TV, Lydia murmured, “I thought it was all over. I felt hollow—just rubbish to be thrown away.” Zina didn’t look up. “A hollow shell, eh? We used to chuck scrap down at the works. You’re not scrap, Lyd. You can break, yes, but you can mend too—as long as someone’s got the tools to do it. You’re not a machine!” In those plain words was the whole answer. The state, the rules, the forms—great, unfeeling machines that can drop you overboard if you don’t have the right label. But there’s another side—made up of Zinas everywhere. People who don’t think “ex-colleague” or “neighbour” is just a word. Not out of politeness, but understanding—in this world, today you, tomorrow maybe me. Lydia looked at her friend and knew—Zina didn’t rescue her out of pity. She restored her. Restored her to the world she’d been wrenched from—restored her as a person, with a right to a pension, a roof, a mug at the table. Not a hero—just a person doing the unwritten work of keeping human ties intact, when all the official bonds have snapped. Her path back would be long, but the first, hardest step was done—not in some office, but on a battered green bench, when one pensioner recognised in another not a burden—not a problem—but just old Lyd. And simply said: “Come on then, let’s go.”