Demystifying Miscreant Memories and Crafting a More Authentic Narrative

Image: an illustration of a young woman's face in profile, in which the outline of her face is clear but the rest of her head and neck dissipates into a swirling cloud against a black background.

Today’s post is by freelance writer and editor Brittany Foster.


Ask me what I ate for breakfast on Tuesday of last week and I won’t be able to tell you. Maybe a bagel? Fruit? Definitely tea. Unless that’s when I ran out…

This isn’t different from most people. Except I happen to be a memoir writer. And if I can’t even tell you that, how can you trust me to accurately recreate scenes from my distant childhood?

I think the answer lies in having a willingness to objectively examine your miscreant memories to determine where—and if—they belong in your story.

Such as this one:

When I was a child, I remember a colorful houseplant in my mother’s room. Green with pink-streaked leaves. Maybe a croton or a rubber plant. Whatever it was, those leaves called to me, the pastel pink so like sugar cookie icing. I couldn’t resist them. I’d eaten vibrant plants before. Peppermint-flavored teaberries and sun-warmed wild strawberries. Surely, this would be just as delightful.

Squatting on the carpeted floor by the bed, I checked to make sure no one was watching before snapping off a leaf and stuffing it into my mouth. I bit into it and balked. It wasn’t sweet. It was caustic and it burned my tongue, coating my mouth in bitter juice.

Just then, my mother turned the corner to catch me cringing with chunks of leaf stuck to my chin.

“SPIT IT OUT! IT COULD BE POISON!”

I spat a wet, green mouthful of half-chewed leaf onto my stepfather’s jeans, which had been carelessly left in a rumpled pile on the floor. My mother ran to me, peered into my open mouth to make sure there was nothing left, and roughly wiped the spit from my face with her sleeve.

Her yell alerted my stepfather, who came into the room after her.

I was terrified of him. Of being caught between the bed and the wall.

With my mother, I moved to the doorway as she told him what had happened. But he wasn’t relieved. He was angry.

I’d had the audacity to spit on his clothes, dirty and wrinkled as they were.

He started to yell. To come toward us.

My mother grabbed me by the arm, hauling me to the front door as his screams followed us out of the house. He wanted to get hold of me—to punish me—but we were running. She threw me into the car and peeled out of the driveway.

We went to my grandmother’s, who sat me down at the kitchen table with a bowl of old-fashioned mixed candies to soften the plant’s aftertaste. They looked like pieces of red and green sea glass and they stuck to my fingers as I picked through them.

The sound of teaspoons swirling in hot mugs of tea is the last thing I remember.

A few months ago, I asked my mother to tell me what she could recall about that day.

“Oh, Brittany,” she said. “I don’t think that happened—I don’t remember it!”

That checked me. Was I wrong? Had it been a dream?

It couldn’t be.

It’s been a part of my history for decades. I can feel the pink, plush carpet beneath my bare feet. The acerbic taste of the leaf on my tongue. I remember my heart pounding and the tackiness of the bright candies.

But if it really did happen, why doesn’t my mother—my only witness—remember it?

It could be because, to her, it was just another day in our life. More yelling. More running. More trauma. Same old.

It could also be because it didn’t happen to her. She was there, yes. But as a witness, not a victim. Multiple studies have been done on the unreliability of eyewitness testimonies. And, although it’s true that trauma can distort memories, and false memories are more likely to surface in those with PTSD (like me), this has been a very clear and distinct memory in my head for a long time. Its remembrance wasn’t triggered by another event or mental probing.

Being a memoir writer, this leaves me in a bit of a pickle. Especially since, as an MFA student in a creative nonfiction program, one of the key messages our instructors pound into our heads is “don’t make s*@t up!”

And I’m not. At least, I don’t think I am.

The truth is that this memory is real to me. But I can’t tell you with complete certainty that it did or didn’t happen.

When I brought it up with my therapist, she assured me that the memory was, in all likelihood, real. She said that the fact that my senses were so entwined with the memory added to its validity because the same part of our brains that is used to process sensory information (the parietal lobe) is associated with memory retrieval and autobiographical memory

So, do I write it as truth when my only witness doesn’t remember it? Or do I leave it out, even if it serves my story?

I’m not alone in asking this. It’s an issue that many memoir writers will face. How do you trust yourself or your sources when memory is so fallible? When your witnesses are unreliable or when you’re trying to dig up questionable childhood memories from thirty years ago?

I owe it to my readers to tell them the truth. But what do I do when the truth isn’t black and white? When the only facts I have are based on my memory and they conflict with someone else’s?

The key is to understand how multifaceted truth can be. We only need to look back to the infamous dress or the green needle/brainstorm audio clip to see that reality and truth are intricately tied to perception—both physiologically and psychologically. And if our perspective is wholly unique, the only truth we ever really have beyond blatant fact is our own.

But let me be clear: this doesn’t mean you should serve muddled or unverified memories to your readers as hard truths. Instead, use your skill and experience as a writer to tell them exactly what it is they’re reading. And learn how to work through misty memories.

Some authors do this using footnotes, like Tara Westover. Others, like Caitlin Doughty, distinguish between what she remembers and what was most likely to have happened in scene. Many writers address this in their notes on sources.

And for others, like me, it means putting in the time and work to analyze a questionable childhood memory from a psychological perspective and deciding whether or not it deserves to be part of my narrative. For example, because this particular memory is hard to verify, and I have others that are easier to confirm and that serve the narrative in the same way, I decided not to include it in my book.

However you approach it, just don’t try to pass off murky, half-memories as full-on facts. Your readers aren’t going to expect you to remember every single detail from your life. But what they do expect is honesty. And being upfront about what you do—and don’t—remember is what will give your narrative authority and authenticity.

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Ronda Wells

I don’t doubt it happened, from what you describe. The sensory details alone! Your mom probably didn’t register it -adults have so many memories, they crowd each other. Whereas to a child, it’s formative. I remember where, when, and how my mom scared me to death about a fellow drowning because he got caught in a pool drain. To this day, I can barely swim over one! It became a neurosis. And I love to swim. My memory of my uncle molesting me is clear down to the slightest detail. Emotional things imprint deep. Appreciate this article!

Brittany Foster

Thanks for reading, Ronda! You’re right, as a bystander to that memory, it’s more likely it was just another day for my mother, whereas I was the main character. That’s what’s so interesting (and so challenging) about memoir — it’s both fallible and unique. And when it comes to trauma, it can impact your memory in a whole different way. For some, making it sharper, and for others, causing lapses in what they can recall.

Lisa Baker

Reminds me of Unamuno, who felt that all autobiography was, in some way, fictional.

Brittany Foster

I think that’s true, whether it’s intentional or not. It’s impossible to recreate scenes and events with complete accuracy unless they’ve been documented. Especially when our memories are influenced by so many outside factors.

Stephanie Kay Literature

Hi Brittany, I just finished my (third) but most personal trans-generational mental health thriller memoir. There is a scene, where I’m asking my mother, don’t you remember? and as I was writing the scene it literally unfolded in utmost detail once I let that drawer fly open. My mother? She just stared into blank space. I believe it has to do with selective memory. Meanwhile, my sons also have memories I cannot remember, but I would never doubt this didn’t happen. If anything, I worry how I could not remember! But I’d never make my mother the living proof of anything, especially dysfunctional family memories. What we remember is certainly a part of our reality. Not even siblings in the same family grow up with the “same” childhood. Thank you for this opportunity to express my thoughts!

Brittany Foster

All very true. Memory is tricky, and even when we have witnesses, their version of events doesn’t necessarily negate or even prove our own. But I do think we have a responsibility as writers to serve our readers the most authentic and truthful memories that we have, so it’s important to find a balance. For me, that’s been relying on the memories I feel the most certain of. We all just need to figure out what our comfort zones are and go from there!

Marie-Claude Arnott

You address an important issue with memoir, which is a work of creative nonfiction. My first book is about to be released, and I dwelled on everything you mentioned. That’s why my Author’s Note addresses the extent of my memories’ authenticity. One can only recreate dialogues, for example, to the best of one’s recollection. It’s the essence of what was said or conveyed that matters. When my memory was muddled, I used various techniques to let the reader know about it, yet stood firm that it happened, as in your vibrant recollection of the awful taste of that plant. About other people’s recollection, let’s remember that it’s OUR story, so we write it from OUR perspective only.

Brittany Foster

Thanks for reading my piece, Marie-Claude! And congratulations on your memoir! That’s a very important point — in a memoir, it’s essential to focus on our story, and not someone else’s. Although, it’s sometimes easier said than done since our lives (and memories) are often intertwined with others’. I think that’s where writing craft and discipline really come into play.