Jodi Hills

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


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What’s carved into you.

My grandfather wasn’t the lap you ran to. He was rarely sitting until the end of the day. Oh, we knew he cared, of course, that was undeniable, but his “safe place to land,” was often not a landing at all, but a continuing through. A fall from the apple tree was not hugged away. Knees would be brushed off, and signaled on. He wasn’t as crude to say shake it off, if we were already shook by the electric fence, but a gentle leading hand to the back told us an open field still lay ahead. He didn’t suffer squabbles between cousins. Had no time for whining. And it was on this very farm, just outside of Alexandria, Minnesota that I learned, it takes strength to be gentle and kind. 

Standing at the edge of the vast opening of earth in Canyonlands National Park, my eyes wind their way through the Green River. I can feel the support of the ground beneath me. I can hear his voice echo through the canyon. Wasn’t it after a fall from my cousin’s bike? A bike too big for me. A bike I was warned against. A bike I climbed upon anyway, never reaching the seat, only bobbing my head above the handlebars as my feet pumped furiously. A bike whose pedal would scar my knee before throwing me to the ground. And wasn’t it my grandfather who wiped the blood on his sleeve? (No need for the coveted band-aid.) “You’re only as deep as what’s carved into you,” he smiled, taking my hand, walking me to a new project in the shed. 

The river has been harsh at times, with its carving. But I don’t stand before it afraid. Nor alone. It is beautiful. And I have felt every curve to my core. Always have, always will. But that has never made me weak. I hope that it makes me kind. I run off toward today’s shed, there’s so much to do, so much to learn.

It takes strength to be gentle and kind.


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Never ending Dixie.

Driving through Bryce Canyon and the Dixie National Forest is a process not unlike one step forward and two steps back — only it’s more one drive left, one drive right and a tiny bit ahead. Traversing the landscape, all be it gorgeous, was truly a test on my already fragile equilibrium. 

As someone who travels a good deal, you probably wouldn’t imagine that I often struggle with motion sickness. To put it in perspective, even parking ramps can take a minimal toll. It is a battle of wills. My stomach eagerly works its way up past my heart on its journey to my throat. “You still have the wheel,” my brain tells my heart. And the words of Georgia O’Keeffe, are on continuous replay, “ I’ve been absolutely terrified every moment of my life – and I’ve never let it keep me from doing a single thing I wanted to do.”  And we inch forward, passing yet another sign for Dixie.That may sound a bit dramatic. I’m not actually terrified of the mountains, the road, the curves, but more of my reaction to them. Oh, I have to read that again — “but more of my reaction to them.” It wasn’t exactly where I thought this was going, but there it is.  I suppose that’s always the way, isn’t it? Our reactions. A battle of wills. We are thrown curve after curve in this life. They come and go, but it’s how we react that can be ever so lasting. So lasting that when we finally get to the glorious straight and easy path, we are still going over it. Oh, for the love of Dixie! — please let me have the sense to let things go. To not clog one day’s journey with the last. 
With Georgia still on my mind, I think that today, no matter the view, I will create something beautiful! 


And on this journey, this fabulous drive, maybe your “last chance Texaco” is really just another chance. You fill up, pull out, and go. And you can go. You can always go. You go on. You live. Always another chance. Where did you learn that? Maybe those loving arms that you call home. The same ones that let you go. And hold you now.