Monday, January 5, 2026

Years and years ago-so many years it makes me squint- my dad sent me an email.

K, Just found these John Prine lyrics. Immediately thought of you.

Blow up your T.V., throw away your paper

Go to the country, build you a home

Plant a little garden, eat a lot of peaches

Try and find Jesus on your own.  

(Naturally, I disagree with him on one point: You should RECYCLE your paper.)

Love, D

Like all of Dad's emails, it was short, sweet, and I saved it without knowing quite why. Hmmm, I thought. There's a good name for a blog in there somewhere.

Not too long after, I started writing here, a tiny corner of the internet I named after a snippet of a song that my father knew I would like. I was nineteen and living abroad for the first time in my life, spending a breathtakingly strange and lonely semester in Paris. It was a place that could not have been more different from the West Texas town I'd grown up in, and every day I felt a little more insubstantial, as I was swept along the metro, breathing the scent of flowers and raw sewage mingling after the rain, tagging along after the chatter of French I never quite caught in time. 

I wanted to feel like I existed again, so I started to write. Sometimes I wrote more, and sometimes I wrote less. There was a really hard year or two where I wrote not at all. But still, eighteen years ago, I planted this small garden, and no matter how overgrown it became, I always returned. Whatever else it was, it was mine.

It's the longest I've ever done anything at all. This blog is older than any job I've had, older than my marriage, older than even my now-ancient dog (to be fair, only by a few months.) I've had it longer than I was ever in school, longer than I've lived in any particular place other than my hometown. This blog has, somehow, even outlived my father. 

Dad once told me, Whatever else you are, you're a writer. It's a blessing and a curse. I've thought about that so many times over the years, how the root of my writing has always been my loneliness. When you can't figure out how to talk with anyone about the things you wonder at, worry over, think about, writing is a conversation that's always waiting for you. 

Only twice have I written for a paycheck, once an accident, the next an act of desperation. After that, I knew I'd never write for anyone else ever again. It's one of the only things I have that's just for me, that I don't have to do the way anyone else thinks I should. It's the only thing in my life that's just for myself. I don't need it to be anything more than that.

This summer, I thought about deleting the blog. My father died years ago, and had forgotten how to find this blog or read anything at all for years before that, and writing it without him has always made me sad in a strange and specific way. Even the idea of a blog seems quaint these days. Over the years, the ones I used to read slowly dropped off or became inactive, or private. Even I only post every month, or two, or three. 

But I just couldn't do it. I didn't realize how much it meant to me until I sat with my finger hovering over the mouse, about to hit delete. It feels like one of the only things I've made that I truly care about.

It's enough for it to just be here. A link from me to him, through time and memory. A link to anyone who ever read it and felt a little less alone. A link to myself at all those other ages, a teenager far away from home, a twenty-something flailing from state to state, a thirty-something mourning and celebrating all the new turns life has taken.

I'd like for it to still be here when I'm forty, and fifty, and beyond. I'm a pretty private person, but this is a small but true window I've given into my inner life, for whatever it's worth. Every time I've found a view into someone else's world, I've treasured it, so maybe this is my way of giving back to the many writers who have shared their lives too. Maybe some element of it will still exist on the eternal internet after I'm gone. A tiny echo of one small, happily lived life, one unruly garden among many.

Who's to say. If you can read this, Dad- I made it. I'm off to write a little, kiss my husband, chase my daughter, walk in the dusk of early winter to point at the last holdouts for Christmas lights. Settle down on the couch to feel my second daughter's small fluttering kicks, run my hand along my old dog's sleek back. I'll dream of summer, when I'll be holding our other little girl, and thinking of more things to write. 

If I'm lucky, there might even be peaches.

Saturday, November 29, 2025

novel unbegun

half-loaf rising

lighthouse northward

and anchor south.

[rachel richardson]

It's a perfect afternoon. The second day we know of you. I'm walking home from the art center, pushing your older sister ahead of us. She hefts a crinkled plastic cup up and over the edge of the stroller, chuckles her intoxicating baby laugh, flings the cup up and away. I wheel around, grab the cup, hand it back to her, and we begin again. 

We fly down the sidewalk to the music of her giggling, the late afternoon fall sun dappling the sidewalk, a talon of marigold cutting through the trees to land across her cornsilk hair. I am thinking of you, and thinking of her, wondering how the two of you will be together, trying to imagine the reality of you here with us in just a handful of months, by late spring or early summer. 

The due date calculator I pulled up, still in shock when holding Miriam for a nap and realizing I was late, told me you would be incoming at the end of May, the same month I was born. Maybe early June, if you drag your feet like your sister. A Gemini, to complete our quartet. Your father is a Leo, I am a Taurus, your sister is a cavorting Cancer crab. Fire, earth, water, and now air.

Seeing the second line darken on the test- just a shade deeper than nothing- it mended me. Made me a penitent, a mystic, a prophet feasting on locusts. I was Moses, walking away from the burning bush. I was Joan of Arc, falling to the floor after her vision. I was certain I would never get pregnant without medical intervention, had given up on ever having a surprise this sweet. And here you were anyway, not knowing any of this.

The day we found out about you, your father was in shock. But late that night he wrapped his arms around me, put a hand over you, kissed my belly where you grew, and said We love you, little bug. We would love to meet you. 

Not even my dreams tipped me off to your existence. It was my lack of pain that let me know. I realized that this was the first day I was supposed to be hurting, and baby, I didn't hurt. Your gift to me, your annunciation, bringing the good news of yourself. 

When your father first found out, he said, Here we go again. His eyes widened, nervous. 

I felt only joy. 

The week after my first appointment, I heard the ding on my phone and got up, walked to the kitchen in the predawn dark. I had sworn I would wait til Ivan woke up before opening the lab report, but instead I clicked on it, one last secret to savor in those few minutes alone. I knew already, felt it in my bones the moment I first suspected you were with me, but I smiled anyway when I saw Female. One second daughter recognizing another. 

The day we first found out about you, I drove to your grandmother's house. I wasn't ready to tell anyone yet, but something about a positive pregnancy test pulls you towards your mother like the tide rising toward the moon. 

When we pulled onto her street, I saw a doe leaping lightly off her lawn. I hefted Miriam out of the car and watched her face, thrilled when she pointed. I assumed she was only seeing the deer, but when I looked back I saw the two small fawns just stepping carefully out of the dappled tree-shadow, following her into the light.

See you in the spring, little one. We're waiting for you.

Love, Mom

Tuesday, September 30, 2025

Rapunzel

I forgot

I forgot that you don't steal from the witch's garden and 

I stole from the witch's garden

There were dreams I'd had before but never remembered- 

The one where my father chased me around the side of the house and I fell, waking as he reached for me

The one where I found a three-posted door and inside was my perfect life

The one where a beast lived in the backyard and no one knew its name but me.

And still further back. 

Blood-smell, the chittering of rat laughter, the shape of not-yet things. I couldn't look at those. 

I ducked under their tangles and dusted the earth from my knees

And further back still-

Right up against the edge of her house, under the window where she waits and watches, was what I craved. Was all I wanted. 

That is what I took. 

In the dream I ate my fill and when I awoke, I knew.

But the witch knows too.

She knows.

I hear her tapping a finger on my window when I wake in the middle of the night

She says The child is mine in a voice darker and heavier than grave dirt 

Her nature is never to lie

Every child is hers, both the living and the dead 

She bellows like the ocean must have at the very beginning of the world 

She tells me the name of what I stole, over and over again, 

until it begins to sound like my name too

Monday, September 22, 2025

to forget time

to forgive life

to be at peace.

[oscar wilde]

My grandmother died in the early hours of my birthday, just after the middle of the night. Given another month and a half, she would have turned a hundred and two years old. It was not a good death, said the nursing assistant when she called my uncle in the morning. He'd been a doctor for over forty years, and apparently didn't need to ask what that meant. 

My mother and sister and I were having lunch together when Mom got the call. Afterwards, we kept eating, quietly. It was tricky. Mom didn't cry, and neither did we. It felt like when you close a hollow core door with a little too much force. You think it should weigh more, but it just doesn't.

On my grandmother's hundred and first birthday, my daughter was born. They never knew each other but shared almost one full year together, a wondrous thing for three generations of women who had daughters well into their thirties. Four generations of late bloomers, briefly under the same sky. 

The funeral was on on my mother's birthday. We flew to my sister's and my hometown in the heart of West Texas, then drove further west to my mother's hometown, then drove even further west to my grandmother's hometown, little more than an abandoned fort next to the rolling San Saba River. 

I knew her so little. I knew her mother was the postmaster at Fort McKavett. I knew she had a stillbirth, a child who would have been younger than my uncle and my mother. I knew she liked to brew whole pots of coffee or tea, or both, and drink them down over the course of a day, reveling in her stack of library books, windows and doors closed against the blazing Texas heat outside. I knew she liked a clean house but never had one during my lifetime, mostly due to my wild dogpile of cousins and their affection for animals of all sorts, including reptiles and roosters, which they happily sneaked inside behind her back.

I think she was often lonely, but she never seemed sad when we all tumbled out her door and she waved us off from the porch. She loved her peace and quiet. Grandpa died twenty-five years before she did, and even though they were married for fifty years, she lived so long that she was technically single longer than she was bound to him, or anyone. She was a creature of solitude at her core. 

She appeared frail, but time would eventually reveal the truth- that she was stronger than almost everyone, the last one standing out of all the others who shared her world. 

She lost her eye in an accident as a child and she wore a glass one almost her whole life, which I never got used to. It was hard to remember which one to look at. The only way you could tell was the false one never looked at you, but that didn't help because her real one was usually never looking at you either. Her eyes, both the real and the not-real, were brown.

She was tall, and had great style once, and had a whip-quick sense of humor, but all her long years didn't seem to give her compassion or much wisdom, or not as far as I could tell. She was genial to strangers but brutal in combat with family. I remember some of the things she said to my mother's face, right in front of me, and they still make me angry. She needed Mom desperately as she grew old and infirm and couldn't seem to stop punishing her for it. 

My other grandmother had lobbed similar insults at my father while I was growing up. His weight and his receding hairline were favorite targets, so-called friendly fire that he sat through quietly. I knew those were the two things he was most devastated about, the Rogaine in the bathroom cabinet, the days he went without eating anything but a single Clif bar in the middle of the day. I imagined telling her that it wasn't funny, but I knew I would be the only one in trouble afterwards. 

Once, after my grandmother had picked yet another fight with Mom about politics and the idiotic stew fed to her by too much television, after another night listening to Mom cry, I'd had it with grandmothers torturing my parents. I called Grandma and told her I would not permit her to speak to my mother like that again. I never forgot how her voice changed. You're the one who makes her sad, she hissed. You moved home, and now she has to take care of you, too. You should be ashamed. 

Jesus. When I hung up the phone, I thought back to the time I looked up what her name, Edith, meant. Prosperous in war. 

Maybe it's too much to expect someone to be exceptionally strong and also kind. Maybe it took everything she had to just survive, her suffering and forbearance paving the way for gentler generations.

The day my daughter was born was my grandmother's last birthday. On an odd impulse, I saved their horoscope from that Sunday, for two women born exactly one hundred and one years apart. It said those born on that day would meet an interesting stranger in the coming year. 

I wonder what Grandma thought of in that last span of months, weeks, minutes. The porch of her mother's house at Fort McKavett, the lazy San Saba winding, those days when she was a willowy girl riding horses. Her first night away at college in Alpine, when she leaned over to blow out the electric lamp at her bedside table and her roommates never let her forget it. The way my grandfather called her Baby. She blamed herself for his dying, even though that made no sense, even though she never seemed to blame herself for much else. 

Did she ever think of the little one she'd lost? Did she ever wonder if she would see them, on the other side? 

My last memory of her was from her hundredth birthday party in Fort Worth. I had a whole conversation with her and was still reflecting on how nice it had been when I heard her turn to my mother and loudly whisper Who is that?

It's your granddaughter, Mom said, which must have been the strangest thing in the world to hear, the absolute last thing she would expect the answer to be. In that moment I thought of my father, deep in the fog of dementia, his polite bewilderment when I reached for his hand to help guide it through his shirt sleeve. 

I hope she met an interesting stranger in the end. I didn't see her that last year, so it wouldn't have been me. I kept gnawing on this while we flew through the sky and the forests gave way to desert, a koan I turned over and over. Was it God? Her baby who didn't make it? Maybe as she flew past dying stars exploding, she only met herself. 

I'll never know that or much else, other than how the towels in her house smelled kind of musty in a nice way, the way the plum tree out back withered from neglect in the years after Grandpa died. All I have of her was what I gleaned from the ground, the pieces she forgot to pick up and tuck away. She never told me a thing. 

When I said goodbye to her at that birthday party she squeezed my hand hard, twice in a row, her knuckles shiny and round like river stones. Out of habit, I glanced from one eye to the other, then back again, trying to see which one tracked me and which one stayed still, but it was no use. By that time she was blind in both, tracking nothing at all, and it shouldn't have mattered, but it haunted me anyway. How I never knew what parts she could see, and which parts she couldn't. How there had never been a day in my whole life when I could tell the real from the not-real. 

I asked Mom late one night if the eye would have been cremated with her, or if it was somewhere else, and if so, where, and Mom said good Lord, who knows, and I thought wildly for the rest of that night and part of the next morning that maybe I should try to find it. I felt such a sudden and sharp longing for this bizarre artifact, the part of her I could finally have a handle on, the part I could know best, the part I could know for certain wasn't real, which made it the realest piece of her I would ever have. 

Wednesday, June 25, 2025

You're like a little wild thing

that was never sent to school.

[mary oliver]

You turned sixteen today. The only person in my life who does not know this is you. 

When we walk to the park, people pause to pet you, and I blurt out She's sixteen! I bring it up out of nowhere with coworkers, with people standing next to me in the line at the coffee shop, with family at brunch. 

I texted it to the friend group chat, I wrote it in my journal, I whispered it to my eleven-month-old daughter when she tried to pull your ears. I say it mostly just to hear it said out loud. It shocks me every time.

I remember the day we met. I needed some volunteer hours for my job at the time, so I went to the Coconino Humane Association with my now-husband but then-friend. When we walked through the doors, it smelled like ammonia, dog food, distress. I made him swear not to let me leave with an animal of any kind. 

Then, I saw you. First cage to the right. 

How is it possible that the thread tying our futures together was that thin? I could have just as easily not gone. The thought makes me shiver.

The file pinned to the front of your kennel just said you were a rez dog, that your name was Claire. But when I bent to reach into your cage and you laid your head in my hand, your name came to me clear as day. When Mom was young, she had Eleanor. And now I had you. Your real name was Norah, and your real life was going to be with me. 

On the car ride home, you were so afraid you peed in the passenger seat. When we got to the apartment, everything was so quiet. During the hubbub earlier in the day this hadn't seemed to matter, but all the sudden it was obvious that you didn't know me, and I didn't know you, and yet, now we lived together. 

I knew that things had happened that only you would ever know about. That one of your ribs felt like it had been broken, then healed, jutting out at a strange angle. That you were terrified of men, of trash cans, of people laughing or running. You wouldn't eat from your bowl unless I was in front of you with my back turned, so you could watch my every move without me watching you.

That night, I fluffed up your bed while you circled three times and slowly lowered yourself to the ground across the room, warily watching me until I turned out the light. I could see the streetlamps reflected in your eyes. When the train keened its long lonely whistle, I heard you get up and stand still, listening.

In my room, I sat cross-legged in my bed with my head in my hands. What had I done? I knew nothing about what my life would look like in a month, let alone in a year, five years, ten. All I now knew was that whatever happened, you would be there too. I will still have this dog when I am in my mid-thirties! I remember thinking wildly. I couldn't fathom such a thing.

And somehow, here we are. You and me.

Now, we're like an old married couple. I know how you like your breakfast, which paths through the park are your favorite, that you prefer chin scratches to back strokes. Do you think she loves me? I asked my husband once. He thought for a moment, then said, I think she'd be lost without you. 

You are the one who taught me how to nurture someone who depends on me. The futility of trying to control one that you love. How to live in the moment and let time pass without forever looking over my shoulder, watching it unspool.  

But most of all, you are the truest friend I've known. Part wild thing, part home. We know how each other smells in the morning. We don't flinch when we touch accidentally. You have witnessed such private despair, so many small joys. You have definitely seen me naked more than anyone else. 

And the best times in your life- I remember them, store them up against the long years when you won't be here. The time we lived in Boulder with a woman who had a stable, how you loved to fling horse manure straight up in the air and snap at the clods as they broke apart and rained on your head. Hikes where you blew past me, ran like the wind, mouth wide open in a dog laugh. The white flag of your tail bobbing before me just at the edge of my headlamp as we scouted for a campsite in the dark. The time you found that dead bird on the Oregon coast and I thought your small sturdy heart would explode from the sheer joy of it. 

What a singular intimacy. My mother, my husband, my sister, even these people have been close or far at different times since I was twenty-one, but not you. We have been together, no matter what. Arizona, Texas, Colorado, Oregon. Young, then young-ish, then older. Then older still.

The best things in my life have all come to me by chance, I heard a woman say once, and what I thought about was you. Little mystery, little stranger, who knows me better than anyone.

Happy birthday, old friend. I'd be lost without you.