If I Could Save Time in a Bottle

By | May 29, 2025

 

If I Could Save Time in a Bottle

“If I could save time in a bottle
The first thing that I’d like to do
Is to save every day till eternity passes away
Just to spend them with you…” (Jim Croce)

The other day, my youngest son sent me a picture of my granddaughter taking a hike with him on a beautiful woodland hiking trail. Anyone who saw the smile on her face could tell that she was having a great time stomping around in the woods with her dad. Memories are being made that will be cherished for a lifetime.

Looking at that picture, I had this unrequited yearning. It seems like a million years ago, and it seems like yesterday when my son and I took hikes every Sunday, during the autumn and winter, in the forests near our home.

If I could save time in a bottle…

When this kind of yearning wells up inside, I can’t wish it away, I can’t turn a blind eye to it, I can’t pretend it’s nothing. This yearning is a bittersweet feeling, but it is also a feeling of helplessness. I can’t go back. You can’t save those moments. I can’t put those times in a bottle and save them up for the future. You cannot relive those times again. I can never be what I once was.

So many days I’ve spent doing things with my two boys from coaching baseball, to attending school plays, watching football and sharing a pizza, hiking in a brightly colored forest on a crisp, cool, clear October day, or stomping through knee-high snow on cold and blustery winter day… and now all I have left are the memories. I can’t go back and I can’t ever feel those feelings quite the same way ever again.

If I could save time in a bottle…

I have photographs in boxes, and color slides, and even a cassette tape of my youngest son’s voice pre- and post-tonsillectomy. My son is singing “Daddy’s Whiskers”. I have photographs of my sons’ baseball games, our hikes together, high school graduations – photographs now in shoeboxes, old photo albums, computers, and smartphones– all are just images printed on paper or now digital ones. They are all images of moments frozen forever in time.

“…Faded photographs, covered now with lines and creases
Tickets torn in half, memories in bits and pieces… ” (Classics IV “Traces”)

It’s an uncomfortable feeling knowing that I can’t go back. I can’t change what has happened. I can’t make bad things better, and I can’t bring good times back. Time is a river that can’t be dammed and flows in one direction only.

Memories can be comforting, and they also can be disturbing reminders that I am where I am on the river of life, and I am either where I wanted to be or not. It would be wonderful to go back and spend a day in the woods with each of my sons when they were boys. Yet, I know that even if I could, those moments would never be the same as the ones I remember.

For me, the river of life keeps flowing faster and faster – and the closer I get to the end of the river, the faster the water flows. The ride gets harder as the rapids get wilder and the water becomes more menacing. But I can’t turn back. This river flows only one way.

We all travel the same river. The rich, the poor, the good, the great, the weak, the humble, the powerful, the bold, the brave, the fearful, the bad, the evil, the sick, the healthy, the maimed, the handicapped, the beautiful, the ugly, the ordinary, the exceptional, the white, the black, the yellow, the red, the brown – all of us travel the same river and none of us can turn around and paddle against the current. Not one of us can stop the swift flow of the river of life.

We can’t save time in a bottle.

My son sent me a photo of my granddaughter on her “hike” in the woods with her daddy. And I was touched to know that something I used to share with my son, my son now shares with his daughter. I know that I may not have done a lot of things right, but there is one thing I did right that was important in the life of my son, and in turn, I will be important in the life of my granddaughter.

When I received the picture by email, I wrote my son:

Enjoy these times. They fade away so fast. I can remember our Sunday afternoons together. It seems like yesterday and it seems like a million years ago as well.

It’s too bad there isn’t any way to savor and save the best moments of our lives. Somehow, looking back at old pictures only makes me sad now.

Every moment you have with your daughter is precious and I know you know that. The things you do with her today she’ll do with her own children, just like you’re doing the things with her now that we once did together. Thank you for that. It makes me feel good to know that those times mean as much to you as theydo to me.

And always remember this: The best memories are not planned, they just happen. And I’m very glad you’re giving them plenty of opportunities to happen.

Maybe it’s just me. Maybe memories make others happy, too. Memories don’t make me sad exactly, they make me yearn, they make me remember, and they remind me that I can never go back. The river of life is flowing faster and faster and fast. I’m helpless to change the river, and I can’t paddle upstream.

Memories remind me that I can’t ever go back and relive the best and happiest moments of my life. 

If we’re lucky, we get old – lucky we didn’t die before our time.  The longer we live, the mor memories we have.  All of a sudden, one day we wake up and we’re old and we realize that memories are just about all we have left… and memories are all that we are.

Through our memories, we can relive the best times of our lives, but how I wish I could have saved all those special times in a bottle.

3 thoughts on “If I Could Save Time in a Bottle

  1. enis mcisaac

    I always love the essays!! In this case I also happen to love the song! I am a Canadian. I have been helped by you guys a few times. Hmmm, I am now 79 years old and I hate all the changes… And, I resent that the Business’s of the world expect everyone in the world to be able to use a PC for Bill payment, Medical appointments, Lab results and on it goes. I am a retired R.N., many years to interpret what the heck a Physician meant when he wrote ggoblydok…
    Always appreciate your postings!

    Reply
  2. Richard Raszkiewicz

    Talk about the “River of Life” carrying you downstream in a hurry, and not being able to “paddle” upstream, I am the OLDEST living member of my family (both maternally and paternally) as I will be 89 y.o. later this year.

    In my “weakened old age, I can, and still do, send out “My Daily Meditations to 160+ email friends, plus posting them on my FB page and the pages of 5 “Groups” that I have on FB.

    I do have many “happy” memories from my “past” life, and I’m sure I will still remember them when The Good Shepherd calls me to “rest” beside His Restful Waters for ALL ETERNITY WITH HIM.

    Fr. Rich⛪🙏🙏🙏

    Reply
  3. DaveC

    Look up on YouTube the Time in A Bottle song from the Muppet show. Also quite poignant.

    Reply

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