Jodi Hills

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


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In the flour.

I had time to think about it while I painted the individual seeds on top of the loaves of bread. The chalk board behind her in the boulangerie displayed the menu and the prices. It didn’t feel in the spirit of the painting. But what would I put on it? Leaving it blank didn’t seem right either. So I kept painting. Seed by seed. Trusting the answer would come. I was many loaves in, but by the third shelf, I knew.

It’s always the case, but it’s a lesson I have to keep learning. I, we, are in such a hurry to get to the answer. Wanting to bypass the process. The work. But that’s not how life happens. The only way out is through. So I take it seed by seed. Thought by thought. Step by step. Feeling by feeling. Trusting that I will get there. Aaaah, trust, that ‘ol show stopper — it can be a tough one, but every day I’m letting it in, just a little more.

I decided on the words from the old French song, “Les Mains d’une femme dans la farine” The chorus, in translation, sings that nothing is more beautiful than a woman’s hands in the flour. It is perfect, not only because it celebrates the work, but it also connects to our French cousins who co-own the bakery. I’m probably no more or nor less related to any of them, this lovely woman, or the husband of Dominique’s second cousin whom she works with, but I feel connected to all of them. And who’s to say we’re not related? Once our hands are all elbow deep in the flour, in the joyful work of this living, we all become the same.

We do the work. We trust the letting in. We are family.


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Grist for the mill.

Standing inside the Mill City Museum, you can see the Guthrie Theatre from the window, reflecting the history of all those who worked the mill, and never saw a play. 

I learned more about the history of the Minneapolis flour mill in that ten minute Flour Tower ride, than I had bothered to learn in the decades I lived here. Oh sure, I had taken the photos, but never really the time. Hearing the voices of those who worked there — those who dared the danger of the whipping wide-open belts, those who never really got the white dust from their clothing or lungs, those who thought maybe, just maybe, if they could work long enough to climb the ladder to get to $25 a week pay, that they would live like kings, but never did — the history, the story, came to life. And it became so clear, that there would be no Guthrie theatre — a place that I did get to learn, to see, to love — without the people who created this city, day by day, hour by hour, milling it to life. 

I suppose that’s why I tell you of my grandparents, my mother, my teachers. There will be no tour to visit, to learn, so I write. I show you their reflections as you look into my daily world. And you see them, in each word, in each stroke of paint. They are the ones that milled my world to life. Gave me the opportunity to do what I do, do what I love. A history that will never be erased from my hands. Nor my heart. Their love, a continuous grist for my life’s mill.