Memories
in sentence
1003 examples of Memories in a sentence
This is a guy called Ed Cook, who had come over from England, where he had one of the best-trained
memories.
And he was this incredibly tragic figure, but he was a window into the extent to which our
memories
make us who we are.
Once upon a time, people invested in their memories, in laboriously furnishing their minds.
It is entirely untethered from all of the other
memories
floating around in your skull.
What Simonides figured out at that moment, is something that I think we all kind of intuitively know, which is that, as bad as we are at remembering names and phone numbers, and word-for-word instructions from our colleagues, we have really exceptional visual and spatial
memories.
We often talk about people with great
memories
as though it were some sort of an innate gift, but that is not the case.
Great
memories
are learned.
And I think if there's one thing that I want to leave you with, it's what E.P., the amnesic who couldn't even remember he had a memory problem, left me with, which is the notion that our lives are the sum of our
memories.
The future states that there is no time other than the collapsation of that sensation of the mirror of the
memories
in which we are living.
Well it's not completely inconceivable that someday you'll be able to download your own memories, maybe into a new body.
And maybe you can upload other people's
memories
as well.
And what I discovered is, because of the nature of the footage and the fact that we're doing this film, there was an emotion that was built into it and our collective
memories
of what this launch meant to us and all these various things.
So this is what we created for "Apollo 13." (Launch noises) So literally what you're seeing now is the confluence of a bunch of different people, a bunch of different memories, including my own, of taking a little bit of liberty with the subject matter.
Human time, industrial time, tested against the time of the tides, in which these
memories
of a particular body, that could be any body, multiplied as in the time of mechanical reproduction, many times, placed over three square miles, a mile out to sea, disappearing, in different conditions of day and night.
How can we share more
memories
of our abandoned buildings, and gain a better understanding of our landscape?
I keep it with me to remind me of the ties that tie me to the young women I wrote about, ties that are not economic but personal in nature, measured not in money but in
memories.
It's called reconstructed
memories.
The other one that I want to suggest, the caution that all of us have to have, I constantly have to remind myself, about just how accurate are the
memories
that we know are true, that we believe in?
All our
memories
are reconstructed
memories.
They're volatile, and as a result, we all need to remember to be cautious, that the accuracy of our
memories
is not measured in how vivid they are nor how certain you are that they're correct.
And one of the side effects of having major massive blood loss is you get tunnel vision, so I remember being on the stretcher and having a little nickel-sized cone of vision, and I was moving my head around and we got to St. Vincent's, and we're racing down this hallway, and I see the lights going, and it's a peculiar effect of
memories
like that.
They don't really go to the usual place that
memories
go.
So sometimes, remembering them, it's like, it's not like any other kind of
memories.
(Cello music starts) You found me, you found me under a pile of broken
memories
with your steady, steady love.
(Cello music continues) (Taps rhythmically) You found me, you found me under a pile of broken
memories
with your steady, your steady, steady love.
And it hit me: One of the most important things we all make are
memories.
So I want to share the idea of taking an active role in consciously creating
memories.
Because, if you don't know yet, everything that we use to define what human nature is comes from these storms, comes from these storms that roll over the hills and valleys of our brains and define our memories, our beliefs, our feelings, our plans for the future.
Your
memories
and associations and so on.
LB: This one is about 9/11
memories.
Back
Next
Related words
Movie
Which
Their
Childhood
Years
Would
There
People
Brings
Brought
About
Other
Brain
Could
Still
Great
Really
After
Watching
Remember