The taste and smell of a madeleine cake dipped in tea
We all have memories we’d rather forget—wounds that sting when touched, regrets that still echo, mistakes we’d pay dearly to undo. And every so often, a story or film captures that longing perfectly. A character walks into a clinic or signs a consent form or swallows a pill, and just like that, the painful memory is gone. It’s the premise of Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, where a couple, desperate to un-love each other, erases the past. It’s in Severance, where workers split their minds in two—one for work, one for life—so the burdens of one world can’t spill into the other. Jennifer Egan’s The Candy House takes it even further: you can upload your entire memory and choose when, or whether, to look back at all. These stories raise a question most of us carry quietly: wouldn’t it be easier if we could forget? Wouldn’t we be freer, lighter, more at peace if we could excise the hard parts—the guilt, the sorrow, the failure? But each of these stories arrives at the same unsettling ...