At first, diligent student that I was, I wrote every day as if it were another homework assignment, mostly about minutiae that seems laughable now: how my piano lesson went, what boys I liked, what I ate for dinner (hm, maybe I'm still writing about the minutiae). Sometimes I would draw in it. Gradually, I became less faithful. There were too many other things to do, or maybe I just didn't feel moved to write.
And yet, I continued to journal sporadically over the years, collecting a few books, and a few volumes of poetry, most of the latter the angsty adolescent sort of work that makes real poets cringe. Those books have moved with me clear across the continent and back, never exactly displayed in a place of prominence, but never exactly hidden away, either.
Until the other day. When I was trying to remember something about my childhood, and wished that I had the same ability to do research on myself as I could on any other subject. And then realized that I had my past -- in snippets, anyway, from the perspective of an unreliable narrator -- at my fingertips. I took a deep breath, and prepared myself to go back in time.
As I opened the first book, revealing a clumsy, loopy handwriting I hardly recognized as my own, a scrap of paper fell from the inside front cover. Written in a more mature hand, it read:
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photo courtesy of flickr user St_A_Sh, via Creative Commons license |
here, in this nowNot just the
We speak the names of our dead children, and they live on, loved by a community: Molly. Micah. Thomas. Lillian. Blobby. (and so many others). We speak the name of our cancers, so the enemy we fight has a shape and a face, and we raise our armies of support, the loved ones who rally around us as we stand at the front lines. We even set virtual tables, willing our guests to break real bread, thousands of miles, and possibly many years, away.
Maybe the stories are not always beautiful. Maybe sometimes they are difficult to hear. Maybe sometimes we can speak only in half-truths. But the telling is a powerful thing. Because it means that you, yes you, are here. You are witness. And for that, we are grateful.
Have you ever kept a journal? When was the last time you went back to read it, and what did you discover?
Have you ever kept a journal? When was the last time you went back to read it, and what did you discover?
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