Princeton University
Safeguarding Memories
Common Application: Topic of Your Choice
Leaping over crooked crevices in the sidewalk, my childhood self hopped a few yards ahead of my grandfather. As I paused to scrutinize a colorful candy wrapper, the smell of melting sugar drifted from a small blue cart where an old woman flipped flat buns on a pan. Grandpa always bought two buns: one for him and one for me.
Not long before my fourteenth birthday, my grandfather was diagnosed with a severe case of Alzheimer’s, and shortly afterwards, he moved into a nursing home. Upon entering his room, I shouted “Hi Grandpa!”
Grandpa murmured, “Who are you?”
The next day, I bought two of the sweet buns Grandpa and I had enjoyed.
“Grandpa, do you want one of these?”
He paused, then said, “No. Who are you?”
Leaving the buns in the paper bag, I replied, “I’m Rachael, your granddaughter.”
Eyes widening, he gasped, “You have to get out of here; the communists are guarding this place!”
I explained, “No, the Korean War is over! You’re safe in America.” With a small sigh, I returned home for the day.
Now, after more than three years, Grandpa recognizes me when I step into his room. However, he cannot connect the round-faced child beside the bun cart to the person I am today. Once a memory slides past the grip of his mind, it can never...
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