Jodi Hills

So this is who I am – a writer that paints, a painter that writes…


Leave a comment

Heart maps.

The Great Gatsby is now being celebrated at MIA for its 100th year. It’s no surprise, as someone whose first perspective drawing in art class was completely backwards, I did enter the exhibition from the second room. But as always, it was the right door for me. Maybe it was the giant farm land picture, next to the clippings of French fashion, that whispered “over here,” or the script from the book that said, maybe we would always be westerners, but I knew I was home. 

I suppose the universe will always let you know if you’re on the right path. 

For me it’s always been books and art, and a dash of fashion. My maps. So I say to those who ask, “Can’t you read a map?” — “Of course I can, just not yours.”

Late that same afternoon, I drove to the Barnes and Noble in the area. Emptied and dark, I began to panic. It’s never just a book store. I ran to the store next door. She didn’t know much, but something about “moving to an Office Max, maybe open, or going to,” — she didn’t know. I knew of two abandoned office supply stores in the area, one a former Office Depot and the other a Staples. I asked her if it was by the Trader Joe’s, or the Whole Foods. She didn’t know. “I only get off the freeway and come to work,” she said. (We all have our own maps.) 

I didn’t need more books. My suitcase already full. But I did need to know that it was ok. That the books were living on. So I drove to the first one — no. I drove to the second location I had in mind, and there it was – signed and open – calling once again, “over here.” I wandered in the words until I was secure. My heart map folded, fitting perfectly behind my mother’s blouse, once again, still, I am home. 

You are part of my story and it is beautiful.


Leave a comment

Will not fade.

It was our first book connection. The fact that we were even exchanging notes of literature was a good sign. My Antonia. His in French, mine in English, but the story was the same. And we were linked. 

I suppose it’s like how some will save ticket stubs from a concert, or flowers dried in a box, to serve as reminders. It’s the same for me in a bookstore. I saw it on the shelf yesterday. I picked it up and held it towards him. We both smiled. On the back of the jacket it read, “Antonia had always been one to leave images in the mind that did not fade.” The Antonia of my heart did, does, the same. 

People always ask me, “how do you remember?”  I guess it’s love that leaves the images. And if I feel the slip, I race to paper or pen, to computer or sketchbook, and gather them in. Is every detail perfect? I can’t be sure. But I know it doesn’t have to be. I’m not making a map. I don’t need to travel back, only travel with. And those images, those feelings, they are secure. They will not fade. 


Leave a comment

Bruised and joyful.

It wasn’t hidden. I just hadn’t needed it yet.

I suppose that’s the way with living. We don’t know we have the tools until we desperately need to use them. 

Until recently, I haven’t used the desk that we inherited from Dominique’s mother. It holds up the picture of my grandfather. Displays some books, but I never really sat at it and worked. But I started writing the daily blog here. And the more time I spent, the more I wanted to use it. It’s more of a vanity really. My morning crossed legs don’t fit under it, so I sit at an angle. My top knee hitting what I thought was a panel. I dropped my apple pen on the floor. No place to put it. Bending over to pick it up, my hand hit against the front panel, and it moved. I gave a little pull on the handle-less wood, and out came a drawer. I put my pen inside. How silly you might think, to not know, and yet…

I have to smile, because it’s usually in this position, bent over, perhaps on my knees, that I find the hidden drawers of my heart. The places where I store what’s needed to get through. The extra courage. The extra will. Always another collection of love. I have accessed it again and again, and it always provides. 

I learn it frequently, as I clumsily bang my knees on the journey. But eventually, I find my way — bruised and joyful.