Jodi Hills

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


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Second foot off the ground…

There was a magic to the North End of VanDyke Road — not because I knew, but because I wasn’t certain at all. 

Of course I was allowed to ride my banana seat bike down the gravel hill to Norton’s house. I did it in numbers higher than I could count. Racing with an excitement of pedals missed and handlebars rattling, I scattered pebbles behind my back tire from sun’s first light, until I got the porch call to come in for dinner. 

I inched my way past Norton’s, one turn of the wheel further each day. Even with all the stories of fright circled in childish whispers, I knew one day I would have to go into this unhoused, untamed — into the wild.  

It was about six months after my fifth birthday (the days when we gathered in halves as fast as we could, so eager to get to the next year). School had just started. Winter would follow. My bike would have to hang in the garage. I balanced the banana seat between my thighs. Held tight to the rubber coated handlebars. I had asked my mom early in the week if I could go down the second hill. If I could enter the North End. I wanted her to hesitate a little longer, but she said sure, and I knew I would have to go. I lifted one foot off the gravel to the top pedal. Wiped my sweaty hands one at a time on the last shorts I would wear that year. I gripped tightly. Held my breath. Released my second foot and began racing down the hill. I gave the pedal brake a couple of short taps to slow my decision, a decision that could not be reversed. 

I don’t remember how long I stayed. There is a part of me that still remains in the conquered fear of North End’s open gate. I was so happy. So relieved. Neither pushed nor prevented, I had entered the unknown and survived. 

This is the joyful knowledge I pocket and roll around in my nervous fingers as I face today’s unknown. I smile. Second foot off the ground…


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Dancing between alarms.

I’m not sure any of us believed there would ever be a fire. Still, when the blare of the alarm sounded, pencils shot across worksheets, books fell from desks, shoes that dangled from heels were shoved back on, and we all jumped to attention. We lined up at the door and serpentined down our designated hallways, our feet moving twice as fast as the group itself. The front doors of Washington Elementary were flung open. We sniffed the air and scanned the streets for big red trucks. When the threat was certained to be just a drill, the thrill of being outside took over. The air was so fresh on a Tuesday at 1:15 in the afternoon. We jumped and waved our arms in this new found freedom. Maybe we didn’t learn the seriousness of what could happen, and maybe we weren’t supposed to. But I know we appreciated the gift of the unexpected. These moments, ever so brief, when we were released to dance on the sidewalk, two hours ahead of schedule.

The thing is, we think we’re prepared. But in between all the alarms, our shoes still slide from the backs of our heels. We’re surprised when something bad happens. We dance in something good. Needing both, to tell the difference. The only certainty is that the doors, will, and always can be, flung wide open.

Nothing prepares you for this day. Your heart is cracked open. So you cry. The world keeps turning. So you live. No one tells your heart to stop beating. So you love! Nothing prepares you for this beautiful day.


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The welcome.

Of all the beautiful French qualities, being early is not really one of them. So it was more than a surprise when our newest Orsolini made his appearance six weeks early. But I suppose for little Charlie, he was right on time.

We spend so much time in our lives moving from box to box as we check off the numbers on the forms. It’s funny then that the two things which come to mind when describing humans as special have nothing to do with numbers at all, or even the age of the body. For the very young, when they do something remarkable we say, “they have an old soul.” And for the special moments of the aged we declare them “young at heart.” I suppose it’s because these hearts and souls are all we really have within our grasp. Certainly not time. We can chase it. Try to save it, speed it up, slow it down. Yet we remain unsuccessful. So then we try to gain its affection by giving it power — saying it heals — but it doesn’t. 

It’s all about what we do within the precious time we’re given. And it is so very precious. The love in our hearts and the hope in our minds, at any time, can heal, create, inspire and change almost anything, if we choose to see the possibilities within all of us. 

It often takes special occasions for us to stop and see it. But what if we could welcome a random Tuesday, an apple from the vine, a neighbor’s wave? Give it all the importance it deserves. What if we welcomed each old soul and young heart with the same enthusiasm as a baby Charlie!!! Maybe then, we wouldn’t just be wasting our time. 

Possibilities begin to rise, and so we look up. Welcome, Friday! Welcome sun! Welcome, Charlie!!!!