Jodi Hills

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


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An actual rally.

The guaranteed impermanence of both the net and our interest, allowed us to put up the badminton game in our grandma’s front yard. No matter how far we stretched the poles, there was a permanent sag in the middle, which ultimately worked to our advantage. Each shuttlecock, or birdie as we called it, was worn down to the nubs, either by racket or grandpa’s truck that drove over them. We swung with exuberance, hitting mostly only summer farm breezes. We struggled to keep score — the real “wins” coming in the few moments we could strike up an actual rally. 

When I see them play badminton at the Olympic level, I have to laugh. It is not the same game. I mention it only because I’m reminded how we do this in our daily lives — compare our experiences. When someone tells us of a certain struggle or situation, we are often so quick to say, “Oh, I’ve been through that, it’s not so hard”… or “Here’s what you should do…” or “just get over it…” The thing is, we’re not playing the same game. What might be a swing in a summer breeze to you, may be an international struggle for someone else. Neither right nor wrong. Just different. The best we can do, I suppose, is to sag the net a little and help each other rally. Maybe in doing so, we can all get back to the comfort of a summer breeze, in our time and in our way, and we could all win.

Perhaps it’s just an Olympic size dream raised up from the barefooted grass of my grandparent’s farm, but I owe it to myself, we owe it to ourselves, to keep swinging!


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Shoes of our humanity.

Sometimes I find myself in a hurry for no particular reason at all. Returning home in my good shoes, I have to fight the inclination to simply throw them in the closet and change quickly into my “around the house” gear. Then I see the paper forms that the shoes were originally packed in — and I pick up my mother’s torch. I place the forms back in the shoes. Toes and heels. Safe. Cared for. Wrap them in the larger sheet of tissue paper, and place them gently in their space. 

It’s always about the torches. These things that were carried, through all kinds of inclement weather, tumbled down hills, and struggled up mountains, with tired grips and hopeful hearts, excited grins that reached through outstretched arms to say, this is important, this is who I am, who we are, the best of what I could be, the start of what you can become!!!!

The athletes gather in my adopted country, under one flame, lit by millions of sparks. Passed on from mothers and fathers. Grandparents and teachers. Coaches and companions. Tiny flames that say it all matters. We all matter. And we have to care. We have to take the time to place the forms back into the shoes of our humanity, and keep them strong, keep them alive, and walk proudly on, farther, further, into the best that we can be.