Jodi Hills

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


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Inside her painting.

I didn’t speak of such things when I was little. I suppose I didn’t have the words, nor the audience. But I felt it — this sensation of walking into a painting. Whenever I made my way up the three entry stairs into my grandma’s kitchen, the first thing I saw was the man leaning his head on folded hands over a simple dinner. Grace. I knew many had the replica of this painting. It was in fact extremely popular. But what they didn’t have was this kitchen. The coats hanging on pegs. The table with unsteady legs. The tractor seat made into a chair that rested beneath the long corded wall telephone. The dishes in the sink. The pots on the stove. The apple trees waving behind the windows. The tied rugs on the floor, made by my grandmother’s hands. How magical, I thought, to step inside her “painting.” To really see her. To know her. I took off my grass stained shoes and placed them by the door, as not to disturb the canvas.

It wasn’t until college that I was exposed to the technique of a painting with a painting. I smiled as the professor talked about the technique that began to show up regularly during the Italian Renaissance. These images of people in their homes, with paintings on the wall. Telling the stories of the lives inside the painting. I smiled. Maybe I hadn’t learned it, but I had already lived it.

Recently I painted the woman reading in front of her painted canvas. Finished, she has taken it off from the easel that rests behind her, and she immerses herself into the words. Without resembling my face, this is indeed a self portrait. I see this image every morning at the breakfast table. And each meal that follows. It calms my heart with unspoken magic.

I sat at the kitchen table having a cup of tea with my brother-in-law. He asked what I was painting now. I showed him this woman. “Oh, a painting in a painting,” he said. Just like that, he stepped inside my story, and I was seen, I was home. I think this is the grace within which we all want to live.


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The Italian.


I found the laminated card that my mom kept in her purse. It listed of all my surgeries. She grew tired of remembering and writing them down for insurance purposes, so she typed up a card and handed it to them. There were over twenty. Joint by joint.

She was the first to sign each plaster cast. I don’t know which number surgery we were on, (I suppose I could check the list)…but it was a full length cast on my left leg — she wrote in big blue sharpie — “Nurse Linda.” “Who’s that?” I asked, still in a bit of an anesthetized fog. “Me,” she said proudly, “If I’m going to be playing nurse all the time, I should be able to pick my own name.” I smiled. She struck a pose at the side of my hospital bed. We laughed until I threw up in the plastic bean beside me. She wiped my face with a warm washcloth. “Thank you, Linda.”

She had to use vacation days from work to be with me. She brushed it off, while I apologized. “Nurse Linda doesn’t care. It’s part of her job.” She made everything easier. With just those two words — Nurse LInda — she made even my plaster covered existence lighter. Trips to the hospital became vacation. Vacation from the norm. Vacation from reality. She did, in fact, have the power to heal me.

I had just started this recent painting. I emailed the beginnings to a friend of mine. “Is it a nurse?” she asked. I hadn’t thought about it yet, but of course it was — she was. This beautiful Italian woman appearing on my canvas was healing me. Taking me to a different time, a different place. A vacation for my heart and mind.

My mother’s name would change from time to time as needed. From Linda, she went to Goober, to Sparkle, Little Sister, Gilbert, (and now, she is “The Italian.”) We changed and grew. Adapted. Healed. And most of all, we had FUN — the greatest healer of all, I suppose. And even though none of this may continue, make no mistake about it – it is permanent! A love written in Sharpie. A love laminated on my heart.