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.