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Throughout our lives, we spend a lot of time and even more money engineering pleasant experiences.
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We book airline tickets, visit beaches, admire glaciers, say hello to penguins, watch elephants drinking,
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and so on.
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In all this, the emphasis is almost always on the experience itself,
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which lasts a certain amount of time and then is over.
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The idea of making a big deal of revisiting an experience in memory sounds a little strange or simply sad.
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We are not assiduous or devoted cultivators of our past experiences
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We shove all the nice things that have happened to us at the back of the cupboard of our minds
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and don't particularly expect to see them ever again.
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They happen, and then we're done with them.
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They do sometimes come back to us, unbidden.
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We may be on a boring train ride to work but suddenly, an image of a beach at dusk comes to life.
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Or, while we're having a bath we remember climbing a flower-covered mountain with a friend a decade before.
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But little attention tends to get paid to such moments.
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We don't engineer regular encounters with them.
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We may feel we have to dismiss them as daydreaming or thinking about nothing.
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But what if we were to alter the hierarchy of prestige a little,
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and argue that regular immersion in our memories is a critical part of what can sustain and console us.
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And not least, is perhaps the cheapest and most flexible form of entertainment.
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We should learn, regularly, to travel around our minds and think it almost as prestigious to sit at home
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and reflect on a trip we once took to an island as to trek to this island encased in our cumbersome bodies.
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In our neglect of our memories, we are spoiled children who squeeze only a portion of the pleasure from our experiences,
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and then toss them aside to seek new thrills.
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Part of why we feel the need for so many new experiences may simply be
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that we're so bad at absorbing the ones we've had.
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To help us focus more on our memories, we need nothing technical.
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We certainly don't need a camera.
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There is a camera in our minds already that is always on. It takes everything we've ever seen.
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Huge chunks of experience are still there in our heads, intact and vivid, just waiting for us to ask ourselves
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leading questions like, 'Where did we go after we landed?' or, 'What was the first breakfast like?'
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When we can't sleep, when there is no wifi, we should always think of going on memory journeys.
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Our experiences have not disappeared just because they're no longer unfolding right in-front of our eyes.
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We can remain in touch with so much of what made them pleasurable, simply through the art of evocation.
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We talk endlessly of virtual reality, yet we don't need gadgets
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we have the finest virtual reality machines already in our own heads.
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We can, right now, shut our eyes and travel into and linger amongst the very best and most consoling
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and life-enhancing bits of our past.