Yes, but only to the extent that I want to be able to still 'carry it internally' when I'm not there. If that makes any sense.
Bearing in mind that I'm predominantly rock art fixated ( a product more of geography than anything else I hasten to add), I get mildly tetchy if I don't get up to the Till valley in Northumberland at least once every couple of months. Some sites like Ketley Crag draw me back again and again, but even when I'm not there, I still often find myself sitting at work staring vacantly northwards, picturing it in my mind's eye, and trying to imagine what it's like there at that particular moment. Are the badgers out, is there bracken yet, what lies beneath the turf a few yards away etc... I find it's easier to do that with ancient sites than with newer stuff, probably because of the sense of permanence and the general evocativeness of some of these places.
So I guess for me, it's not really as much about carrying it internally, as it is about trying to fix it externally. Or making a mental bridge between the two. Or summat. Maybe it's just about skiving off at work.