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We Are Running Out of Photographs

Alicia CookAlicia Cook June 16, 2020
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Three nights ago I had a dream that my cousin Jessica sat down next to me at Starbucks. She told me she couldn’t stay long but she wanted to tell me she was healthy and happy. Then she said she had to go, but that’d we’d talk again soon. It was so nice to hear her voice again. In the dream, she was wearing the same jacket in this photo (above), which was taken one of the last years I remember her truly being happy and healthy. That must mean something.

When Jess died on this day 12 years ago, cameras were still “in addition to” our cell phones, which flipped open and close. We were still lugging around clunky digital cameras, still developing film, still using 1-hour-photo for our disposable cameras. We didn’t take hundreds of photos because film ran out, memory cards filled up, and honestly, our minds weren’t yet conditioned to document every moment of our lives.

Social media was there, but had yet to become the fluid time capsule it is today. A frustrating component of grieving someone who existed before the cloud is that when I miss her, I can’t search the internet for an endless amount of photos and videos of us. I have to go to my parents’, and scour photo albums with sticky pages that smell as old as they are.

Most of the photos of Jessica and I were taken by family members. So they aren’t directly our memories, but another’s perception of what was going on in that moment, one person removed. All the photos are physical photos, in frames and albums. Some are so old they are discolored. Some are blurry, uncentered, or have someone’s finger in the top corner. Some are bent or torn, from my holding them or folding them. Some have ink stains on them. I’ve lost some, and there is no digital backup. Those photos are gone forever if they don’t turn up on their own again.

In the last two years of her life, we hardly took any photos at all, because during times we were together, we were busy pretending nothing changed; but knew everything had changed. We spent most of our last hangouts in my bedroom, flipping through magazines that I had always saved for her visits, ignoring the elephant in the room. Our focus was on the scary reality of her disease and Jess stopped wanting to be in photos altogether. I think I have two photos with her the last 18 months of her life and those aren’t photos I want to share, because they remind me of a terrible time, and that’s not how I want to remember Jess.

And now, 12 years later, because we did not live in the age of infinite pictures, I’ve realized we have officially run out of photographs. I’ve seen them all, there are no new photos to uncover. And in a strange, even tangible way, it feels like I am losing her all over again because it’s as though I’ve reached this weird “end of the road” moment with my cousin. All we have is all we had and time keeps moving for

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