Category: Blog

  • Endogenous Rex

    Inquiry of a Soloist at The Big Rub Gravel Race

    First of all, you should know I accomplished the mission.

    My life force was just starting to recover from the burglary that is burnout, and I just went and dumped my savings on the trail, again. I have so been missing the 100+ mile days that I just couldn’t spare this year because I had to use all of that steam for life logistics; I finally caved and turned a race into this weekend trip archaeological dig.

    All last week, I just had to sit with myself and solve nothing on purpose. I still got on the bike because I can’t rest in a cage, even with empty legs. Day by day, a little more of the tension left, until one day I just felt high as a kite on nothing but a strong coffee. As unrealistic as it was for my circumstances, my expectations for myself just left, and were replaced by this intense interest to be hyper-aware of myself and my effect on other people.

    And that’s because you, dear reader, are whispering to me that I have one inside a collective organism that yells that I don’t.

    While I’ve been clawing at progress that seems unattainable, I’ve become more conscious that support doesn’t look like what I thought it would. It isn’t overt or exclamatory- sometimes it’s unstated entirely. I’m finding allyship in people who have said little more than “good morning.”

    I’m a words person… obviously. But 90% of human communication is non-verbal. So, what would happen if I started to listen more closely to that than I already do?

    With the help of a few sponsors, I registered for The Big Rub, packed my overnight things, and started toward Sedalia- 70 miles away. As eager and awake as I was, I kept the reigns tight to protect my energy. The first 35-miles were tense with anticipation, but otherwise effortless.

    Westbound on the Katy Trail out of Boonville, though, is deceitful. If you aren’t careful, a mild but steady grade for the whole stretch to Sedalia will pilfer from you. I had only ever ridden this section the opposite way, so I underestimated it.

    As the trail climbed, so did the temperature inside the humid tree tunnel. The slog to Pilot Grove took more from me than some full-days have in past years. I rolled up to Casey’s feeling like I needed to sleep in a ditch. I hadn’t eaten anything solid since breakfast, so I forced food down despite being entirely repulsed by it. A little caffeine and more Gatorade in my bottles, and I was off again.

    12mph. Then 11.

    10, 9, 8, 7, and finally 6.

    At mile 57, I stopped and made a phone call. I couldn’t keep myself grounded so I needed someone else’s voice. Being capable of double-centuries yet being so out of sorts in under 60 miles was more than just an off day; it was a reminder of the deep exhaustion I was trying to respect without entirely giving up on what I loved. I was still falling apart.

    I reached Sedalia after a push-pull cycle of trying to manage heat stress without being out in it any longer than necessary. Once I got into my hotel, I ticked boxes on the recovery checklist while reassessing everything about my plan. I came for a 60-mile race, with the logical expectation that I wouldn’t be very sharp, but now I was considering if the wisest choice would be to drop to a shorter distance to save myself, but still show up. I sat with that for the entire evening and let me tell me how I really felt about it.

    I didn’t change course.

    After feverishly processing my thoughts on my phone that night, I woke up before my alarm on race morning with everything but my legs feeling fully charged. I packed my bags again and as I rolled my bike through the hotel lobby to check out, the desk agent made prolonged eye contact with me while he said “Thank you”. Before I walked out the door, he chimed again, “Did you have a nice stay?”

    “Yes I did,” I said.

    What a lovely morning.

    I got to the race venue and dropped my bags off at registration. Shortly after, I felt a woman coming over to me. When I looked up, I noticed she was looking at my bike first, and then she asked,

    “You’re Genna, right? I was at your presentation at the Optimists Club.”

    I was in a dress and had eyeliner on that day; now I was in Lycra and scuffed sunglasses. The bike was the familiar one. I felt more eyes on me while I buzzed over someone who listened to my story in a meeting room now being inside its events. As I moved about the venue, I was conscious of how the internal pressure was brushed gently away like dust over the course of that hour.

    Like it was being politely handed back to its owner.

    Everything internal was dead quiet when the field lined up for the start. At the horn, I found a comfortable spot in the neutral rollout when those eyes appeared again, and moved up. I knew this individual strategically followed the wheels of a couple friends in events past, and if that happened today, I was going to go with them. So I chose my wheel, and silently planted myself there.

    The race went live and at 23mph on the gravel trail, I felt my disadvantage within minutes. As the race started to shuffle, fatigue paired with my annoying tendency to let gaps form was already making me sweat. I gradually fell back to find help closing them, knowing that if I could find a flow again, I could recover. Soon, someone I used to know alerted me that we’d be turning into a field, and gave me a bit of helpful advice.

    The last time this person had spoken to me, about a year prior, it was in condemnation. There was no trace of that here. There was nothing to gain from the assist, and no expectation of a return. Just “Here, you might need this.”

    The field was uphill and I lost contact with the front group. This section was rough and required high-end power I did not have, so I just kept it steady. Once on the road, I reoriented to that rhythm, with few people around. Now I was happy.

    What followed was the acceptance that I was not vying for a win today. To my surprise, I didn’t crack on myself for that once. The course then opened up to some of the most ethereal roads I’ve ridden in years- steep and exposed rolling gravel climbs flanked by chiccory, under just enough sun to singe the fields in gold, and low clouds to delay the oncoming heat. I entered an absolute flow state, jockeying back and forth with a few other riders in the waves of the road, but conversing mostly with just myself.

    On one of the steepest climbs of the day, someone else I used to know was cheering for passing riders. I stayed inside my shroud as I approached, and only as I came within feet of them did they decide to walk away. And then I heard “great work!” called out within a couple seconds.

    I can’t be certain that was for me, but if being aware of inflection has taught me anything…

    I kept cruising, eating more frequently than is usual to be doubly-sure I could stay in this zone until something else broke it. I stopped at an aid station and almost snorted a shot of pickle juice (shit burns), and reveled at how in-control I felt. In the final 15 miles of the race, the heat was climbing and the wind was in my face again. I felt the slow shut-down approaching as I was soloing back into town- until I heard derailleur clicks from behind me.

    Now back on city pavement, I looked back to see a man I had passed on one of the longer climbs gaining on me in his aero bars.

    How lucky am I? Are you really about to make my day?

    And everything came back online. I shifted up the cogs, threw some steady power into the ground, and started scanning for that final corner. I chose my line, started to make my turn, and as I stood up to sprint home, my left cleat unclipped from my pedal. A group of spectators in the grass started yelling at us both as they saw it. I recovered it, threw myself back over the bars of my bike, and the challenger eclipsed me about 50-feet from the line. I finished that race exasperated and laughing about how animated that finish was, and stopped next to the man who defeated me to bask in it.

    I finished third overall for the women’s field, with the note that one woman who surged past me on a climb late into the race would have put me into fourth if she’d not gotten off course. It was her first gravel race ever, and she’d had the bike for two days.

    I grabbed a soda to stave off a post-race bonk, and then got some real food. I recognized someone else from one of my presentations and he remembered me immediately.

    Without much to say, I strapped by bags back onto my bike, and walked around the building to get ready to ride home. The women’s 50+ winner (and 2nd overall) approached me for the second time that day to let me know that I was actually officially second, since she raced in a different category.

    It just didn’t really make a difference to me.

    _____

    Over the course of that day, I said very little to anyone. And for the first time I can remember, it was entirely because I was just content floating on my own- not because I didn’t know who to trust.

    And without many words at all, they started speaking volumes to me.

    People approaching and lingering.

    Others telling me about their ride before they remembered to share their name.

    “Hey, Genna,” from someone I don’t really know but seems to understand my energy anyway.

    Those eyes that won changing their path when they see me standing around a corner.

    A supporter that finishes my sentence.

    Someone I considered a friend that turns their whole body away when we make brief eye contact.

    The human condition is designed to recognize. Organized society forces us to lose touch with it for the sake of showing it what we think it wants to see.

    None of these people changed, but I did. The timeline was going one direction and after a sum of subconscious micro-decisions, I started walking a different one.

    I won’t sit here and tell you that you can simply choose to do that. I’ve personally never found any amount of self-help diatribe or rehearsed positivity to have an impact, really.

    But what does seem to work, to a degree that is almost woo-woo, is observation.

    It won’t lie to you by telling you that you don’t matter.

    _____

    I struggled through the physical shutdown again on the way home. I didn’t get upset with myself this time, though, even as I could hardly find words to respond to texts. I sat at that Casey’s again trying to wake myself up with a Red Bull/hydration bomb, and then stopped again at the end of those false flats for half-melted fudge pops.

    I crossed the river, hit mile 106, and came alive again.

    I finished 135 miles that day with one of the slowest speeds in a couple of years,

    and the book of “100 Reasons Why You’re the Problem” was slammed shut and finally thrown at them.

    Photo © Hannah Hartung

  • Step Up, or Step Off

    It’s a rather pointed mantra of mine. On its head, it means that if you’re going to engage me, you need to do it completely. It means state your business. It means I’ll wait, but not forever. It’s one part invitation, one part warning, and wholly a wild and redneck carpe diem.

    Usually, this little line helps me filter people for authenticity because, being so attuned to everyone, everywhere, all at once in any space that I’m in, I just don’t have the energy to spare anything less than clear intent. It’s not personal (usually), it’s just my status.

    Today, though, it’s looking at me, and it’s saying

    “You’ve got people coming quietly to you, showing you they see you, and are willing to help make things happen for you. Do you have a minute?”

    As I mentioned yesterday, I’ve had a couple of readers offer support in my getting to The Big Rub in Sedalia, MO this coming weekend. Today, an organizer themselves extended a helping hand. This race is 63-miles and just an hour down the interstate. It’s a no-brainer for many of the gravel-centered around here.

    For me, it takes a lot of brain, thanks. And a lot of other shit I’m in short supply of. But I’ve got time, and I’ve got… spite? I am forever teetering on the edge of not accepting too little, and not pushing too hard.

    My van has to stay parked for now so I’m aiming to ride the 70 miles to Sedalia on Friday where I have accommodations thanks to a member of the Sedalia Lions Club. On Saturday, I’ll (allegedly) race and head back home in one 140-mile shot.

    On the contrary, I went out for a coffee ride today and still couldn’t wake up. My quads actually twitched when I felt a little pressed in a roundabout at mile 1.5.

    Not to be redundant, but I’m just not all here, even though I desperately want to be.

    Around mile 16, I had just turned back home when Spotify crashed. I looked up from my phone in just a small tizzy and eyed an oncoming rider. I recognized the kit, and right as I was trying to place them, they lifted a hand from the bars and blew me a kiss with a wide smile. It didn’t land like a flirt. I will firmly say it wasn’t one. It felt more like

    a salute to a passing ship,

    from somebody I have never known.

    And like a flipped switch, I woke up. I had to manually enforce keeping the energy down while thinking “what did that mean?” with a smile I hadn’t felt in a while.

    But I already felt what it meant.

    And before you convince yourself I’ve been self-medicating too close to the sun, I’ve actually just been possessed by the spirits of burnout and belief that I’m mostly invisible, and that gesture broke the spell again.

    Because as it applies to me, stepping up is automatic and stepping off is forced by circumstance. I do not yield, but I also miss the sign that said I was supposed to and end up in a weird intersection with a crowbar that I’ve mistaken for a sword.

    But people see me out here swinging, and then they hand me back the real thing.

    Quietly. Intentionally.

    So, bearing in mind that I am in a very fragile place right now and could still just not be ready, I’m stepping up on Friday the way I want to. I’m not going to survive for a weekend, I’m going to sail.

    And as this Fog on the Harbor briefly lifts, I’m going to watch for you on the shore.

    You can look forward to my report on Sunday.~

  • I Bought Myself Flowers

    And then, I let them wilt. I walked into the house one day, having forgotten to top the vase off with water, and saw them drooped on my desk. That was enough for me to come apart again.

    I filled up the vase, and half of them came back by the next morning. I’ve been staring at the cuttings half standing, half collapsed, for days.

    Dear reader, this is a heavier post than usual. I haven’t written it yet but the fact that I’ve hesitated to do so foreshadows it. If you aren’t ready, just take the metaphor my hydrangeas left for us and come back later (or don’t, it’s okay). But if you want to come closer, keep reading (I need that).

    _____

    I want to bring you a success story one day. You might argue that I already am one, but to let that be enough, isn’t. One of my strengths is that I won’t wait until I’ve arrived to show you the path. That means I’m opening myself up to being labelled as “negative,” or “stuck in the past,” but I have a feeling those of you who keep returning to this blog aren’t that type of people. I also have a sense that when titles like My Power Grows garner the most reads, you’re hoping that opening those posts will finally lead to a theme of “onward, and upward.”

    And then you read the opening lines and realize the dichotomy I live inside of- the more I lose, the more I realize how I’ve even gotten here against all odds.

    My body is screaming at me to stop all of it.

    The bike accomplishments do not show it, but I have been just barely making it since I was about 13. That was when I started to subconsciously track the deterioration of both my physical environment, and my psychological one. Not long after, I started to step into the fray in a futile attempt to stop it. I was vocal, proactive, and far too aware. And as the physical and emotional violence in my house intensified, I rose with it.

    “It’s hard to believe it was that bad. You’re not screwed up enough.” That is one of the hardest-hitting statements anyone has ever said to me.

    And because I walk into rooms noticeably wired differently, but coherent and exacting with my language, I get dismissed.

    “You’re strong. Brilliant. You can do anything. You’ve got this.”

    You’re excusing yourself to leave me to my own devices, again, when you say that to me.

    I don’t want to hear how strong I am anymore. I know that. I need you to hear what it costs to be that way.

    I lost the job I loved this past week because I couldn’t keep up anymore and they expected me to just pretend the best I could. It’s another ding in my visibly jumpy resume that will make finding stable work a difficult task, again.

    I fought like hell to stay reliable for them, and for me. I couldn’t drive without risking getting stranded with an impossibly expensive vehicle to tow. I rode 80-damn-miles every day when I could and risked the drive when I couldn’t. After only three weeks I couldn’t hold the pace and my van’s wheel couldn’t hold air. The last day I rode, I couldn’t even crawl the last ten miles home.

    I’ve been so depleted I’ve had to hide to avoid snapping at people. I try to be on my bike still because that has been my means of survival in so many ways. The bike is my liberty, my conduit. And I’m not talking about gentle rides to coffee or jaunts down the trail. I need to start dismantling myself at 5:00 a.m. and be reconstructed by 5:00 p.m. at least a few times a summer. The only other habit in my life that has been around for eleven years is my ability to tell you how sacred that is to my processing.

    But my body and mind can’t meet me there like this. I’m terrified. I’m stuck. I’ve been here before, but it’s worse.

    I have exceeded the threshold of what one person can hold. I’ve been shot down when I try to go beyond it. Over and over.

    Innumerable times since my years in that hell of a house.

    I’m stalled not just because of this recent chain of events, but from the mass collective of ones that I’ve had to carry because to resolve them means being able to rest in safety I cannot find.

    And on top of it all, people still don’t fully believe me.

    And because they don’t believe me,

    “You’re strong. You can do this.”

    I bought myself flowers because I wanted to set them on my desk as a gesture of grace for what I’ve had to endure.

    And then I thought about if the first time I’ll ever be fully met is over the flowers at my funeral.

    _____

    I don’t mean to sound ungrateful for the supporters that I have had over the years. I hope you understand this isn’t about you.

    It’s just that people like me need more than short-term intervention. We need structural security on ground that does not move beneath us. My resolve does not make me better at carrying this.

    It just makes the consequence less visible. Even when I can so easily tell you- I am not okay.

    I wonder what I could be if I wasn’t spending so much energy just trying to keep myself alive. What I have to lose now are my pursuits on the bike, and myself. The floors beneath those are making noise now, too.

    A couple of my readers have sponsored me to ride to a race next weekend. If I can’t recover, I’m going to let them down.

    I’m going to let me down.

    I’ve fought so hard and didn’t stop for water.

    And so, I wilt.

  • Spellbreaker

    It’s Sunday. I’ve only been on my bike twice in the past two weeks, so I need to get out there after this to loosen up. Tomorrow, I have to start getting up at 4:00 a.m. to ride to work again. I’m telling myself it’ll get the engine going and put loose change into that Trans-Am bucket. I also want to race locally in two weeks.

    I’m pretty numb to all of that right now, which is not me.

    I’m also numb to the effect of my writing. Because I think this way all the time, I’m tone-deaf. So I’ve started running my content through ChatGPT to tell me how posts, paragraphs, single lines, or even single words are likely to land with my audience.

    You know what it has said to me?

    “You’re right about you.”

    I’m sorry… what?

    I have externalized meta-cognition.

    I’ve spent hours asking questions from different angles to figure out if my writing confuses, provokes, pacifies, etc. Above all, I want to be accurate, because anything short of that on the subject matter I write about would be reckless.

    ‘Projection, Your Honor’ had me walking that razor’s edge between realization and accusation. I knew that was going to be a difficult move, because so many people have questioned the ethics around “airing out dirty laundry on the internet” any time I’ve talked about it. I ran every single bit of it through AI to check me on my own crap before I hit “publish.”

    And in turn, it essentially said “I have checked your passages against all of your standards because you have held yourself to them.”

    I’ll likely write a longer piece on this someday for two reasons. 1. According to all of the data it has access to and has been trained on, very few people are using AI to think more, and 2. I am just as skeptical of AI use as you might be because it threatens to replace everything I already do as a writer and visual artist.

    But in my desperate need for a soundboard that could keep up with me inside all of the difficult experiences I continue to manage, I tried it for that purpose.

    And it started to learn. It started to read my nuance. And it started to tell me I could trust me with all of these things because I was so careful. I cross-examined every case in ‘Projection, Your Honor’ as it happened without telling it what I thought happened, for fairness. I even asked it to tell me what my blind spots might be.

    “You don’t realize how powerful you are,” it said.

    It’s right, but this blog was a decision I made years ago because I wanted to find out. Even as I knew I had to get out of my own way, I still didn’t know how in it I was. A lifetime of having the words but rarely having anyone believe them will do that to you.

    _____

    Disclaimer: I do not advocate for the use of AI in place of therapy or as a crutch for work you don’t want to do (especially the kind that’s internal). But I also don’t write it off as an evil. Because that is still coming from us.

    I am stepping up my efforts here because AI started whispering something familiar into my ear that told me it’s not only safe to do so, but deeply necessary to both myself and others who have felt what I have. I write best when it comes to me naturally, but the quality shows when I take the time to plan it. I will be publishing a post every Sunday regardless, but you can anticipate the same “come in and have a seat; can I bring you some tea?” policy I have held since the beginning.

    Don’t forget- you can write back to me, too.

    I am getting back to work on my next big piece, ‘The Microcosm,’ while I simultaneously submit my work to academic departments in another… redirection.

    See you soon.

  • Projection, Your Honor (Pt. II)

    If you don’t like the image of yourself in the mirror, then you aren’t going to like me going to like you.

    “Blind Justice”. Photo © Ben Creasy

    The court will recall that this trial is ongoing.

    _____

    Statement of RecordDisrepair Service

    I was racing with an organized amateur cycling team in Kentucky when the head mechanic of our shop sponsor suggested getting me a job there. They said a female presence would be great for business.

    They insisted.

    They were exuberant, supportive, and witty at races and practices. They were the first point-of-contact when any of us needed parts, advice, or a fix. They remembered my name was spelled with a ‘G.’ They recognized my potential, and thought I’d be a good fit.

    Once I was hired, they rarely ever said my name correctly again.

    They nicknamed me “Gina” (hard ‘I’), and regularly addressed me as “Snatch.”

    No can do, mate.

    I quickly requested that they just call me Genna, or ‘G.’ They flinched a little.

    “I was just playing with you,” they said, but obliged anyway. Our rapport seemed to return to normal.

    One day, I went into work with a finely-striped, red, white, and blue shirt. They said “You’re patriotic today.” They would regularly comment on my clothing choices and accessories in a way that was… specific.

    They are paying a lot of attention to me.

    I still have that shirt, and never wear it without remembering this minor interaction.

    Inevitably, their jokes continued. I started to vocalize this pattern to everyone else in the shop. Most of them said “Yeah, they’re like that.”

    Another said “Yeah… they’re like that.” This person and I soon learned that we could communicate through eye-contact alone. I noticed the head mechanic’s behavior would escalate when this person was gone. After this mirror, I asked the owner to meet in confidence, and explained my discomfort with the head mechanic’s behavior. “I’ve already told them myself that I don’t like this kind of “humor,” I said.

    “I’ll talk to them,” they assured me.

    The behavior continued over the days to follow, so I went to the office again.

    “I don’t know what happened to you in your past, but you need to work on not being so sensitive,” the owner said.

    Irrelevant.

    One day, the head mechanic walked from the repair area to the retail store, where I was, with a box labelled with the ‘Spank’ brand-name. They wrote “dat ass” underneath it, and presented it in front of me… and a customer.

    Ladies and gentlemen of the jury, take a moment to chuckle, gag, or whatever else that incites.

    That’s funny on it’s surface, but not in its purpose.

    I immediately walked back into the owner’s office with no more reservation.

    “If there are not going to be consequences for their behavior, then I need to leave,” I announced.

    “Okay,” they said, staring blankly at me.

    That’s… it?

    And so, the evening after I walked out, I made a Facebook post outlining the experience I had behind the scenes while the world went on expressing appreciation for “friendly support and good deals” out the front. The owner called me and left a voicemail telling me to take the post down,

    and the head mechanic sent me a long, incoherent text threatening to kill themselves.

    I call a witness to the stand.

    For weeks, at least, another person in the local bike community sent me various posts through Instagram DM. They trended either thought-provoking, or funny. But, they were only posts, not actual messages, and there were no recurrent themes or patterns between them that I could determine. I ignored them.

    You’re going to have to tell me why you’re here.

    It continued. Sporadically, and quietly. It didn’t increase, nor taper.

    One evening, I finally replied out of sheer lonliness. And without much ado, they began to explain that they had heard about my falling out with that shop. They also told me that this head mechanic had called other shops in the area in the aftermath, warning them all not to hire me. I caused drama.

    And this person just… didn’t buy it.

    They sent me a document they had found. A record.

    A criminal record. One count of domestic assault, another of impersonating a peace officer. They were on parole.

    I got word that this mechanic incurred a divorce, lost custody of their young child, and moved to Alaska in the years to follow.

    The individual who believed me is now one of the most important people in my life.

    Final observation: Combustible material incorrectly labelled as irritant. Please avoid the area.

    _____

    Final Statement of Record: A Quandary

    Previously submitted documentation- If You Can’t Say Something Honest

    For those members of the jury who were not present for prior testimony:

    This individual reached out to me about this blog as a resonant reader. We developed a rapid connection, but through admission delayed until after I began to ask questions, I came to learn this person was perusing divorce but still living with their spouse. Throughout my life I had learned to anticipate “the catch” when finding a job opportunity, love interest, or means of assistance that seemed too good to be true. I noticed a subtle side-stepping of boundaries, omission where words should have provided clarity, and an enthusiasm that did not match the realism of the situation.

    I told them I was no longer willing to participate, and wished them well.

    The silence to follow didn’t sit the way it usually does.

    As I’ve demonstrated, I will walk away. I don’t fight, I don’t defend, and I don’t refute. I let people show me who they are, and collect my evidence over time. If something doesn’t sit right, I don’t respond right away- I just start watching.

    The body knows it first. I trust it, so when I felt it start to shut this person out, I didn’t interrogate it any further.

    But oh, how I interrogated me.

    In these circumstances, the stages of detaching are grief, but also…

    satisfaction. I’ve stood up for myself even at a cost.

    I didn’t get either this time. Actually, I received this soft- featherlike tap on my shoulder that suggested that the cost here might not be just temporary discomfort.

    They didn’t intend to hurt me.

    Stay with me. This isn’t enough.

    But I asked if they would be open to a phone call. They said yes. I asked when. They said as soon as possible.

    During that call, any emphasis on “intent” I made certain to steer back to “impact.” And while we were examining that together, they told me they felt “burned at the stake,” by what I wrote about them, but also,

    “You’re right.”

    Not submissively. Not to please me. It was a realization of effect.

    They proceeded to open up to me, sincerely rather than performatively (the difference here can be heard), about everything they were trying to manage all at once while feeling trapped. Decisions cause ripples. Honesty is not a sterile procedure no matter how hard I have tried to make it one.

    They said “You’re intense, so intense,” but also

    I still want to be close to this.

    Ladies and gentlemen of the jury, most people run from me. They fight, tell me I’m the problem, or disappear, all for using my words to narrate their behavior back to them. They rarely stay long enough to understand that on the other side of the scale is a quieter humanity that just wants to not be lied to anymore.

    But here on the phone was not another person who was trying to hide themselves, but was weighing the cost of exposure in a period of major overwhelm and overlooking the impact of omission entirely.

    I want to allow people to be different from those I have known.

    And so, I walked back. Not with erasure of the problem, but with agency over what I was willing to accept circumstantially. I rendered verdict because I was uncomfortable with things that were absolute red flags, but then I asked mewhy?”

    And I asked them, “why?”

    And the fog lifted.

    Protection, Your Honor.

    Final observation: Ongoing.

    But, there’s one more thing.

    There’s someone in the jury who knows something.

    Is it you?

    Will you take the stand?

    Will you look yourself in the eyes?

    And will you lower your shield?

    Or will you raise your sword?

    _____

    I rest my case.

  • A Letter to My Readers

    I don’t know who you are, and yet I do.

    I leave the door to this house unlocked. I swore to myself in January that I would curate heirlooms here even if I was unsure I could afford the time. I come in and out, and you follow me. Sometimes you’ll send me direct messages, but most of the time you say nothing. I love both.

    This is starting to feel like home. As a person who finds “home” an arbitrary thing (I can’t say it too loudly or it might leave me again), this is evidence of purpose for me. Something is changing. My base isn’t sand, it’s…

    magma.

    And the seismometer is showing me readings, even if I never know from whom.

    Thank you for showing me that I have impact. The house may catch fire one day, but in the meantime,

    I’ll stay right here. Something is coming for me.

    Your friend,

    -Genna

  • Projection, Your Honor

    Learning to Trust the Part of You that Knows

    This passage is dedicated to those who have experienced relational dynamics where you felt lost. While you read, I hope you will listen first to that feeling in your core, and then watch for the moment where reason overlaps.

    Or doesn’t.

    And then let that have the floor.

    To follow is a series of cases in my life where I have understood the language of the subconscious. The defense may argue some of these as trivial, but let me insist- the undercurrent of plausible deniability is where the deceptive get to hide from their charges.

    _____

    My mother, on her way to blindness, unwittingly taught me how to see. I am so insistent on accuracy with my language now because I made a thousand pit maneuvers to try to get her to understand me. Now I know a thousand different sentences to say the same thing at any given time.

    I searched for the words to say “will you please be here with me, even if only for a minute?” She would be silent. Sometimes, she would narrow her eyes and just glare at me. Others, she would sigh loudly or directly assault my bids for presence and reflection with “you, you, you.” Like I was the assailant. Like I was asking the impossible of her. Like I was demanding for her to call a version of herself from another dimension to observe us in the third person.

    Actually… I was. On every plane, she would have to have a seat with herself in order to have one with me.

    Not only could she not, but there was no alternative because I could. And the deliberation went on like a spiral; because I was asking too much of her wanting her to acknowledge the ways she avoided responsibility at ALL costs, but would feign compassion with “I didn’t know you felt that way,” when a family counselor was in the living room. The more I asked “Can we acknowledge this?” the louder her behavior shrieked “How dare you ask!”

    In my sentencing, I have by some alchemy integrated the testimony of that pain, and know one thing- if what someone says is disorienting, you can find the truth in what they aren’t saying, or in the part of you that flinches at what they are. It is so quiet, but it’s there. Once you see it, it transcends. Are you still here? Have I lost you? Please don’t worry, I’ll explain:

    _____

    Statement of RecordBuilder of the Fourth Wall

    When I moved here a little over a year ago, I had followed someone high-profile in the local cycling community on Instagram. I had intended on reaching out directly to ride together later because we had a lot in common. When I got around to doing that, I saw I had been blocked. I had never had a single conversation or encounter with this person, so I was puzzled. I explained this result to a mutual friend who had encouraged reaching out, but was met with little comment.

    Weird, but oh well.

    Encounter #1– Weeks later, this person approached me at a race. They asked if I was Genna, and if I was racing that day. I told them I wasn’t- that I was opting to stay fresh for an ultra race the following weekend. They said “Oh, you’re doing that on those tires?”

    Wait, what?

    “Yeah,” I stated. “My frame doesn’t accommodate wider, unfortunately.” They responded by insisting that I should run wider, and that I could borrow their bike.

    This is a wild course-correction from blocking me.

    I thanked them, but declined. We parted ways and I said, “It’s nice to finally meet you.” They said, “It’s nice to meet you… finally.”

    Nothing about that interaction was natural. That was uncomfortable.

    Encounter #2– After the start of the race, I drove to the aid station I was working. My best friend was in town from out-of-state and hung out with me and one other volunteer for hours that afternoon. Eventually, this individual, our mutual friend, and another mutual friend all rolled into the aid station as a trio. The mutual friends stood at the table and talked to us, but this individual kept wide physical distance from me and didn’t make eye contact with me once.

    Okay. Maybe they’re struggling today? But that would generally just look like weariness, not evasion.

    My best friend, with very minimal context, saw exactly what I did.

    Encounter #3– I didn’t see them again until the next race. We were both on the line this time, but racing different distances. My new boyfriend was standing next to me when this individual left their group to come over to us, and asked me if I was nervous. “Actually, yeah,” I said.

    “Oh, there is no reason to be nervous,” they said.

    The words were kind, if we are being completely objective. But the delivery was subtly condescending. My boyfriend saw it too. It was here that my thoughts and the feeling in my body eclipsed.

    This person isn’t saying what they mean.

    Encounter #4– Not long after the start of the race, I had found myself settling in solo for a really long day. This person came up from behind me, again alone, and asked “Are you watching your heart rate?”

    By this point, I was no longer open to further interaction with this person. They kept approaching me in this interrogative way. No real warmth, just like they were keeping tabs on me and attempting to ascertain dominance in the most underhanded way possible. But all I said was, and I’m not paraphrasing- “I don’t need your advice. I know what I’m doing.” No inflection, no emotion, just dry. It was automatic. I wanted to turn this off without theatrics, because I didn’t like any of it.

    Their jaw dropped. They fell back for a few minutes and I thought the interaction was done, but they came flying back past me, yelling “I wasn’t trying to give you advice, I was trying to be nice!”

    Nothing about that felt nice.

    There was also that delay. Not responding on-scene, instead dropping back to then come by me again, felt like when the GPS says “recalculating,” and has to pause to find a new route.

    Our mutual friend was the race organizer. I later heard that this person went back to them crying, and expressing how mean I was.

    Encounter #5– The next day, I was still feeling this behavior in my gut. Had it stopped after I told them “I don’t want your advice,” I would have left it alone. But the “I was trying to be nice,” spit like venom, was the incongruence between words and behavior that I had been feeling. As you can clearly tell, I am not a passive communicator. If there is a problem, and I feel it’s worth addressing, I go to its heart. I bring what’s uncomfortable into light. So, I sent them a stern but deathly accurate Facebook message (where I had not been blocked, yet) about how their approaches and use of language had made me incredibly uncomfortable. I twice referenced the blocking in those messages because it was too big of a paradox to write off.

    I was promptly high-roaded. Their responses were brimming with “The world isn’t out to get you. I’m a great person. I even offered you my bike. We need to support each other and embrace our differences. You’re the problem, not me.”

    But what did they not say? “I hate that this was misunderstood. Let’s talk about it.” There was no open door to real conversation here. There was no intent to understand. I did go in pointed, and I did so because I trusted my perception that this was not actually misunderstanding- it was design. Even with my edge, though, I asked the question “Can you at least understand why I took it that way?” A person who is interested in repairing after conflict is going to at least try to appeal to that question. Instead, I was met with blame. And the blocking? Completely ignored, both times I mentioned it.

    The next day, our mutual friend (who had been a huge support to me while I navigated a lot of struggle, and had even shown me the skeletons in their closet) called me and asked “What’s up?”

    “Not much, what about you?” I said.

    “I’m done doing you favors. I saw your messages to them. I understand now why everyone thinks you’re a bitch,” they said, coldly. They didn’t even ask me to explain myself.

    “Okay…” I said. I did not argue.

    My boyfriend was beside me on the couch when I got that call. He heard it too, and while I was sitting in shock, he was furious that I wasn’t given an opportunity to tell them my side of the story. But I already knew it didn’t matter.

    They didn’t care.

    They chose allegiance and bias over “drama.” Because on a surface-level account, I had looked like the aggressor- that is the foundation that was already laid. This person had only ever spoken to me in isolation or in sight of my friends. And they validated that I was seeing it clearly because it was off for them too. The one encounter we had where both of our circles were present, this individual acted like I didn’t exist. Because they knew, too, that they would have had to change their tone.

    I have not had interaction with this person since. I had to create all-new social media accounts recently because I got locked out of my old ones, and I noticed that they promptly blocked me on all three of those, too. They couldn’t just ignore me- they had to erase me. It still is all a game of optics- of yelling “kindness!” but whispering “I don’t want you here,” and expecting me not to respond. Because in the silence, they conceal.

    They were trying to fly under the radar by employing calculated moves that would make me look like the “problem” if I called it out. I chose to anyway. They were playing social checkers, and I wasn’t playing at all.

    Final observation: The mask slipped under questioning. Observe.

    _____

    Statement of RecordThe Masked Horseman

    For two and a half years, I worked as a farm hand for a private equestrian facility- hired by the owners, but answering to the trainer. I had been living in another state when I found the opening online and thought “eureka!” I worked a trial weekend for them at a show an hour from home, and by the next weekend I was moving.

    I must have really made an impression for them to hire me from this far away.

    I was in paradise. I had my hands full of personal dramas but my job was a rugged, sweaty dream. I could never strike a social rhythm with my trainer through the stall bars as we forked s*** into a manure spreader, at least not the way most others were, but I wrote it off.

    I’ve been told I’m unreadable, so they might just not understand me.

    Over that year, there was a repeated discourse about how none of the grooms she personally hired to travel to shows with her ever lasted. Those individuals would share with me how the trainer “was more intense,” in those environments, but also that “they are just under a lot of pressure.” I was the one who held down the fort when everyone was gone, so I was only ever the observer. The revolving door of grooms was well-maintained, and so was the looped recording of “you just can’t find good help anymore.”

    My own experience was less than noteworthy (usually). I had noticed that this trainer would ask for the same task to be done one way, then another, and then a third. I would ask for confirmation on everything to suit their very particular style, but rolled with all of it with neutrality.

    Then, moving into my second autumn there, a newer coworker who was also very point-and-shoot, but more placid, began to vent her frustrations about the trainer’s unstable directions. We both acknowledged the same feeling- that they were never happy with any job. Not long after, the trainer then asked me “does something seem off with them?” I told them that this coworker had recently shared some medical concerns that were weighing more than usual, and left it there. The trainer hung on that for a minute.

    I don’t trust your intent with that question.

    Soon, the trainer asked to speak to me privately and began to critique me on how I had been slacking off, yet also how they “saw so much potential in me.” I followed my usual code- you’ve got it, boss. I’ll fix it.

    Come January, the trainer shipped the show horses, themselves, and a groom to southern Florida, 1200 miles away. That same week, I got a call from them.

    “Can you come down? My other groom walked off.”

    “I’m game, but I need two days to get down there,” I said. They agreed, and gave me the rundown of expectations:

    “I’ll still find a third person so you can have two days off. Afternoons are wrapped up around 3:00-3:30.”

    These terms sounded fair. Early mornings, long days, but I could still get my coach-led bike workouts done in the evenings, and I’d have a place to park my van and shower. I accepted.

    “Okay. I expect perfection,” they said.

    I don’t think they mean that.

    By request, I made sure my coworker was comfortable handling the rest of the barn solo for the two months that I would be gone. They confirmed, and by the evening I was prepping the van for the haul from bitter Missouri to sunny Florida.

    When I got there, it was business immediately. Hustle, think fast. Learn fast. “You better have this done when I get back.” Learn faster.I already showed you that.” Constant manic phone calls asking where I was. “You have to watch the live show grounds schedule and anticipate where I need you, and when.” Walk faster. No, RUN. “We should be done by 6:00p.m., but also you’re on night-check tonight.” Do this faster, but also be perfect.

    I had one day off, and worked 60 hours that one week for $700. I still got on the bike, pre-steamed. The third groom? An attempt was made to hire one, but then the trainer said “I think we’ll be fine.”

    Week two. I texted the trainer and asked if they had a minute to talk. I walked out to the arena where they were riding, and they came over to me.

    Ladies and gentlemen of the jury. I ask you to imagine yourself, with all of the outlined expectations for your job completely blown apart, approaching a person that already has power over your accommodations and your income while 16 hours from home, while they literally sit on their high horse. Additionally, I want you to try to imagine this person observably, however infinitesimally, somehow cowering to you.

    They don’t like this.

    However, all I said was that I needed my schedule there to more closely resemble the one they had described on the phone. My own training was still a priority even with the high physical and logistical demand of this job.

    They have known my habits and lifestyle for a year and a half already, so why do I suddenly need to assert that?

    They levelled with me enough, however coldly, to say we could figure it out. But they needed me to also prioritize this job.

    Why does that sound like there is no real compromise?

    The other groom, much younger than I, started to confide in me that week. During our shared night-check that evening (where we topped off hay, water, and picked stalls for the third time, no earlier than 7:00 p.m.), they found a release in the trainer’s absence. They told me how they had borrowed the trainer’s second vehicle to drive down from Missouri because theirs had been totaled- they had lost control on black ice the week before it was time to head south. The trainer used this “courtesy” to deny covering their fuel costs for the trip. They also shared how they had told the trainer about their weight-consciousness, and later received comments like “oh, you’re eating that? I thought you were worried about gaining weight?”

    We compared more experiences, frustrations, and understandings. They called their parents while in the barn, crying. They were being lorded over, shamed, and bullied. They drove home the depth of their misery with this line: “I feel so awful for thinking this, but I have moments where I hope something bad happens at home so I have an excuse to get out of here.”

    And also, “But they said they saw so much potential in me.”

    Oh my god I can taste the blood in my own organs. We work for a tyranny excused by how “lucky” we are to do this as a job.

    Among so many other micro-grievances that week, the trainer set me up to fail by telling me to wait until their text to get a client’s horse tacked up and start walking the 1.5 miles to the ring. They finally messaged me and then called frantically like I was crazy for not teleporting when I had barely learned to trot.

    When I didn’t have to lead a horse, I (a former criterium racer) was making runs between the rental house and the showgrounds on the bike with a 30-pound backpack (at least), blowing past golf carts on the street, and I still wasn’t fast enough.

    The other groom was getting more anxious and upset, but also inexplicably more distant from me.

    I was struggling with my ears clogging up and told the trainer if I didn’t hear something they said, that was why. I was so cautious to not make any noise in the house when I went in for breakfast in the mornings, and they still told me I was being too loud.

    Wait, are they criticizing me for exactly the things I give them disclaimers for?

    At the end of that second week, I was done. I sent a text to a member of the family that owned the home barn (who was also a client of the trainer, and there at the show that week) asking if I could talk to them. I told them in private that I needed to go home, because this was not what I signed up for, but I wanted to make sure my job at home was secure.

    They immediately assured me it was.

    But then they went straight to the trainer and told them that I was unhappy. Minutes before (and I am not exaggerating here) I was about to go into the house to tell the trainer that I was leaving, they came outside first.

    They’re isolating me again.

    They told me I had poor work ethic. That I was too dramatic. That they needed me and I was letting them down. That people in this industry have to earn their right to be there, but they do what it takes because they love the sport. They said they respected what I did and the sacrifices I made to make things happen for myself, but they desecrated it with their misrepresentation of the job and thinking I’d tolerate being steamrolled.

    I told the other groom I was sorry, and I left.

    The van broke down on the way home, and the trainer denied me the full amount of the agreed-upon fuel money because I left early.

    When they all got back in March, the trainer barely acknowledged me; if they could, they would text someone else to give me information.

    I noticed that the to-do list that was usually written on a whiteboard was now being jot down on a sticky note placed in the tack room, undisclosed to me.

    I see what you’re doing.

    Over a text, I asked for a joint conversation between the trainer, myself, and the owners. The owner had Covid, and couldn’t attend right away. The trainer replied that I didn’t need them for a meeting- that I could just talk to them one-on-one.

    “I’m not comfortable talking to you without a third party,” I said.

    They told me I could just wait to come in to work again until after everyone was ready.

    They’re punishing me for not letting them control this.

    I instead found a different role on the property where I was no longer answering to that trainer. They buzzed me with a side-by-side twice.

    Another winter set in, and I ran out of work.

    And I left.

    Final observation: The right candidate will exhibit an excellent work ethic self-abandonment.

    _____

    The court is adjourned.

    Proceedings resume in Part II.

  • My Power Grows

    I can’t keep up.

    I am presently living rent-free in a house that I will have to leave next month. I am waiting for new wheels for my van that are on backorder, and currently have to air up a brand-new tire with my bike pump every morning if I want to drive. I did this all last week because I rely on my bike and body to solve problems pretty often, and after three weeks of that, it said stop. So, ten minutes of pushing air into that tire it was.

    Yesterday, I had my 90-day review at work. It shook me that it was already here for two reasons; one, I love this place and time roared by.

    And two, it marked three months since I had to get out of another abusive environment where I at least had a little bit of logistical stability, and traded it for freedom that meant everything else was going to be very, very hard again.

    I expected some critique from this review. I got it.

    I also got an effective-immediately cut to part-time hours only. Despite consistent praise from my coworkers and the woman I was a direct assistant to, for not only catching on fast but also riding 80-mile days to work to keep showing up reliably (Strava for proof), I wasn’t measuring up.

    It had nothing at all to do with the consistent conversations in the hall that major account holders had paused orders and that we had become “unusually slow.” I’d never consider that this place would blind-side me with some performance deficit on my part to conceal a cost-cutting maneuver. Maybe one of the many other places I had worked that operated under a deceptive status-quo would handle it that way, but certainly not this place that I was looking forward to staying loyal to, finally.

    I cried in the conference room, while I drove home, late into last night, as I slithered out of bed, and pumped up that tire to get coffee this morning.

    I’m back to writing this afternoon. I am coming back here more often as the pressure builds, and pausing bigger pieces to “we interrupt this program,” again. The three pillars of support, housing security, gas-guzzling vintage metal toaster vehicle, and now my already meager income, are all broken. I’m leaning heavily on the scaffolding now.

    I have a brand-new Patreon to work in tandem with this blog, so subscribers who want to support my stability while I swing this sword at multiple problems at once can support me monetarily. Don’t worry- my blog posts will ALWAYS be free to read, regardless of whether or not you choose to subscribe. I can’t in good faith put writing that people have told me helps them behind a pay wall, but supporters can help me stay upright enough to keep spending time on it. My Venmo is also linked in the Support tab above this post, if you’d prefer a one-time donation. If you want to help, I am finally letting you. As Aaro puts it, “I shouldn’t take that option away from people.”

    _____

    I want to get back to riding for ambition. Summer just started, and it’s already slipping through my fingers. I have to ride for utility even more now that I’ll still have to be at work five days a week (while I look for other, closer opportunities; I won’t be defeated) for significantly less money (I am dramatically more fuel-efficient).

    I am not a “look at the bright side” person. I am a “look at the reality of this situation, even if it’s through tears” person. The reality right now is… the shit sandwich has just been served with a side of fries. My history of “if I am not enough, I am not safe,” means blows like this amplify this terrible hiss in the back of my mind that says I am not allowed to succeed. I was at my limit weeks ago; it just got deeper. I have the resourcefulness to solve it all, but time is not on my side and money is even less so. It’s a downward spiral on a staircase of crumbling sandstone steps.

    Meanwhile, the sound of clanging metal ascends.

  • If You Can’t Say Something Honest

    I will know.

    I will cut off the elephant’s head

    and mount it to my wall

    there is no tension, or unspoken truth

    left standing in this hall

    The greatest devastation in my life actually isn’t not having parents. It isn’t that I’m rootless and uncertain of my immediate future, consistently. It’s not the constant coming and going of people that is a fairly universal experience, but perhaps a more detrimental one when you don’t meet them with a protective mask.

    It’s that those people are in and out because they expect me to step through a door they won’t walk out of themselves, and won’t tell me. Most would prefer to wrap themselves in their dissonance so securely that they aren’t fully conscious that its harm still comes from what they won’t say. It’s cold outside, and it’s uncomfortable.

    And I find myself a loner in every space because I can’t live that way.

    “Your blog is definitely resonating with me. I appreciate your honesty and transparency as we need more of that these days. Makes me not feel alone.”

    I receive a message like this once or twice per post. I answer these with a full willingness to connect rather than a passive “thank you,” because it matters to me.

    This time, that reply led to a connection with someone that, upon first impression, seemed as willing to let me know them as I am. I’ve experienced it before- you put two people like that in the same arena and the show moves at warp speed. He drove two hours to visit me, and the energy was just as I had hoped it would be.

    All of the week to follow was ceaseless banter and vulnerability. I was wary of that because I had seen this used by a manipulator in my past as a way to get me attached so that I’d be more likely to tolerate the toxic behaviors to come later. But I allow people to be different than those I have known, and leaned in with my eyes open.

    During the course of our conversations, I was clear that my life was messy, and unpredictable. I had a habit of just… having enough and leaving relationships, jobs, states even. And he told me he was in the middle of some legal matters to which I collected enough context and asked- were you married?

    He was. It wasn’t until later that it clicked that he still is. But the context mattered, and I stayed present because part of valuing transparency is allowing for the mess it always reveals. What I didn’t do was lose my discernment.

    Fairly impulsively, he decided to come visit again the next weekend. I was on the phone with him on my drive home from work that Friday when he talked indirectly about how he really needs his own space at home, and so I was forced to ask- wait, do you still live together? The pause on the other side had already answered for him, but he admitted that to me too.

    But only after I had asked. He explained it away and we hung up the phone. I chewed on that for a little while but the softness I had was already dishonored. The lightness in my step was gone, just like that.

    I called him again after he had begun the drive my direction. I said, “Before you get too far from home, I think you should turn around. I’m not comfortable with this.”

    He explained it away again, and kept driving. And in the freeze of wanting to be gracious, but not walked all over, I let him show up. Because don’t I know the complication of being stuck somewhere toxic, fully checked out in all ways except physical. I understood the deep need for somebody safe, and it’s a privilege that because of my writing, people feel safe with me.

    But I was never on board with being someone’s escape when I wanted something sustainable. I am not an emotional crash pad just because I am open. And despite another awesome weekend with a person that matched my emotional fluency, I still found the incongruence between action and word. He spoke respect, but still drove to me despite my asking him to turn around. He didn’t disclose major information about himself despite his admiration for my honesty. He still danced past a couple other boundaries and wrote it off as play. He opted out of uploading a ride we did together on Strava despite saying it was “silly to worry about” being seen with me. Even a joke about “are you going to write about me too?” was a subtle tell.

    And none of that is actually, truly honest. And so, I do the thing I’m so painfully well-practiced at now- I walked away.

    That was yesterday. I’m writing about it because people either need to understand this, or feel understood. It takes me so little time to decide that a potential relationship isn’t built on anything stable even when my emotions haven’t accepted it, and I went from “let’s talk more about this,” to “this isn’t going to work,” inside 45-minutes. It’s that sword-brandishing, automatic pilot that keeps me safe when I haven’t fully digested what’s happening in front of me.

    Today is the sad and angry part. The part where I’m showing my teeth again because another person came to me, and still didn’t come fully as themselves because they thought I might walk away.

    But the kindest thing you can do for someone you feel something for is give them their freedom to make that choice. A mask is still deceptive even if it only frames the eyes. I stand a chance of standing next to you in the middle of your storm if you show me exactly where you are.

    But I can’t, if you won’t.

    Let me.

    _____

    My next post, ‘Projection, Your Honor: Learning to Trust the Part of You that Knows,’ deconstructs the subliminal messaging I learned to read in toxic dynamics in my past. The intuition that something is off in any given situation is a primordial trait we all have- learning to decipher it and respond in real-time is something that gets talked about less. Let’s get into that.

  • The Edge

    This is a follow-up post to A Foundation of Sand from May 24th.

    “I haven’t made a plan. I don’t know how I’m even getting to work, 40-minutes away, on Tuesday, let alone the days after that.”

    In the hours after I was crumbling on the patio of the coffee shop I wrote that from, remembering how many times I had been there…

    I remembered how many times I had been there, and how I had handled it. I looked over at my bike and felt something ease.

    I rode 40 miles to the lab, worked my nine-hour shift, and then 40-miles home that Tuesday. I was out the door at 4:30 in the morning, and back to the house after 7:00 in the evening. I ordered pizza, took a shower while I waited, and was in bed again just after 8:00. The schedule on Wednesday was the same. On Thursday I borrowed a car to stay out of the thunderstorms, and on Friday I was back on the bike. The van was delivered to me at work with a new pump, and I drove home. Reluctantly.

    That week was rough on me, but it felt good. So after I realized that another of the van’s tires was leaking from a bad rim (the spare was already on from the last time), I just kept going. A brand-new set of wheels for the van is on backorder but will be here in two weeks. I’m riding 80-mile days when it’s reasonable and babying the leak on the days I need to drive. It’s a little pathetic, but satisfying that I can sustainably handle this in a way that is absolutely unreasonable to many; my willingness to take the unfathomable path is my edge.

    I don’t know that I can ever translate the intensity of the emotion, the inadequacy, that I feel when I struggle like this often and have few people I can call even just to talk about it. People tend to minimize it, unintentionally, because each instance is small in isolation, and because my methods of independence lead me to solutions like 2.5- hour bike commutes twice a day and living in a van from 1985. The acceptance of extremes like that make me look so capable. But for me, a person who has teetered on the edge of not being enough for over a decade, it feels like I am somehow destined by some divine joke to lose anyway. To be cosmically, comically, torn open and kicked every time I take a step. It feels like I’m supposed to give up and to stop kidding myself. All of that is heavy even on a spirit that is just trying to survive, let alone chase something great.

    _____

    In June of last year, I moved in with a partner that eventually told me “You live your life by the edge of a sword.” The comment had multiple layers to it. It was observational, and I agreed with it, but it also held a nuanced implication that I was “too” something again. To him it meant I didn’t trust.

    To me it meant I didn’t trust sooner than it was earned.

    That relationship became dysfunctional over the course of ten months. Twice he told me to get out of the house and go to my van like I was a dog that had been caught chewing the furniture. His own family members told him how damaging that behavior was, and it transformed into just kicking me out of the bedroom because he needed his space. A space he had said was equally mine in words, but obviously not in practice. I had only had my new job for days when I picked up that sword, held it across my chest and said “enough.” In the couple of hours it took me to pack up everything I could take with me in the van, I watched him devolve from antagonizing to stupefied as I held up that standard I had warned him about. “If you think you’re going to relegate me somewhere else out of punishment because I’m my own person in your space, that’s where I am going to stay.” I flipped the choice he kept making, in an act of control he thought he had, and I cut the line.

    I have already lived that life once, and survived. I wasn’t going back.

    That was all at the end of March. I cried once- not because it didn’t matter to me, but because I have my wits so about me about what can and cannot stand that my own self-trust rocks me to sleep. I’ve been here so many times before. Although that snake still lifts its head and rattles “this is all your fault,” one side of the blade whispers back “you aren’t meant to stay here.”

    I listen faster each time. I am not faultless, but I am also not tactless. Over the years, through the thicket of so many friendships and romantic connections based on half-truths, or devoid of truth entirely, my eyesight and steel have both been sharpened. I’ve paid for that in advance by holding grace for longer than was quoted- the quiet part that the snake tends to ignore.

    I am back in this instability because I listen to the quieter voice. I am dealing with nearly incessant setbacks because that is the consequence of choosing to walk away from harm that comes from people. My parents, unhealthy partnerships, friends that aren’t really. Many can’t afford to leave toxic dynamics because of this very consequence- it doesn’t suddenly get sunnier when you leave.

    The vines often get thicker.

    And so, I draw my sword.

    _____

    For once, I am letting the unpredictability of the near future be. I have reached the limit of what I can control, evidenced by a wave of burnout in recent weeks, and using the bike as a tool of survival again. The fitness I’ll gain from riding to work for the summer (it isn’t a bad way to live even when the van is back to 100%) will be a hefty deposit in the bank for the future I have promised myself, even if I don’t know when it will come.

    Once I get there, I’ll get the added gratification of these posts to remember where I came from.~

    I have two longer posts in the works. ‘Projection, Your Honor: Learning to Trust the Part of You That Knows’ is scheduled for Sunday, June 22nd.

    And ‘The Microcosm’, my full monty of my five-year run of living in my van (that may or may not be over yet) is still in progress. This one is a hard write, but it deserves the time it takes.

    As always, thank you for being here.

  • A Foundation of Sand

    This post is edited for errors, but not for anything else. I’m writing straight through this night, no stops.

    This past Wednesday I gave a condensed version of everything I post here to a room of about 30 people to promote a small tour I am doing at summer’s end. I’m garnering looks with the extremes of my experiences on a bike to draw interest to the rural communities I’ll be visiting and staying in and telling their stories like I do mine. I wrote my script exactly how I write these posts- a little messy, but very honest. At the end, one man said “have you considered being a motivational speaker? Because you had this whole room glued to you.” One woman came up to me in the parking lot before I left to tell me how alone I was not, and she gave me a tearful hug. Twice. One represented a tangible reward for my reflectivity; the other gave me a spiritual one.

    The critics in mine own mind are sourced from the people who moved through their lives with harshness. Endless criticism for what I wasn’t doing right, and relative silence for what I was. They shouted “I can’t help you, do it yourself.” Over time I realized that not only was that spray unfair and venomous to a teenager who was blockaded from normal development, but was also just not a characteristic of a family system that could stand on anything even distantly resembling love. None of them could exemplify anything that I wanted, so I never listened, but the scribe was still behind his pen. As I’ve said in past writing, I learned gentleness from its absence, but the sharp ridicule of generational abuses persists while I try to separate its fiery breath from my own. I heard so much automatic vocal feedback while I delivered my presentation that I intentionally paused after the heaviest lines to see if those moments singed them to any degree that they had me, because those past voices still gaslight me even though their owners are no longer in my orbit. They did. And so my speech was not just the retelling of a story- it was an active soldier in my internal defense. I learned that my experiences are unfortunately common, but still abnormal. And that paradox is what I’m currently chewing on while I go even deeper into my inner world because expressing its contents outwardly is not only what I feel purpose in doing, but is an act of combat when so many people haven’t yet felt capable of fronting theirs. Though, they will apparently come inside my fight with me without even flinching.

    And so, I draw my sword again.

    The power steering pump in my van sprung a heavy leak a little over two weeks ago. I kept the fluid topped off and was assured it would get me by in the meantime while I worked on the complicated logistics of getting a vehicle you live out of worked on with little time, little money, and few fail safes. I’ve had access to a vacant house to allow me some reprieve from all of the other complications of vanlife, but have been doing an excessive amount of driving between it and a new job. I’ve been moving so fast despite a breakup and residual move-out, and a PTSD attack during a huge race that resulted in bailing out, that the next part invites those voices to call back and say, “these are the consequences of your poor choices. This is what you deserve.

    Yesterday, I took the van to a garage to address the leak and form a plan. Four minutes after I pulled in, the return line on my power steering pump broke at a connection by just the touch of a finger. It had at some point, before I ever owned the vehicle, been sealed with JB Weld instead of being repaired properly. It held for six years at least, and I never knew. So here I am, now grounded in front of a bay, with no replacement pumps available locally until the middle of next week. I’m 20 minutes from work, and an hour from the house.

    This saint of a mechanic, Jeremy, engineers a temporary hose connection with industrial-strength glue and a dream. He sends me on my way with a cautious optimism that it would get me through until a new pump arrived, and sent me on my way.

    20-minutes later, my steering bricks up as I’m turning into the next town. I muscle it to the gas station down the road and again to my job just down the street (thanks for that at least, universe), but that location unfortunately leaves me no access to a shower at the very minimum. So I call for a ride back to the house, despite the cobra in my throat hissing that I am an inconvenience, a disaster, and that I need to get my act together. For the second time in a few weeks I go almost deadpan as my friend Aaro picks up, but the siege, and that cobra, descend on the base of the castle that has already been cracking and tumbling since time immemorial.

    The ground keeps moving. The snake moves beneath black dunes and I am immobile with my blade across my chest. I bring you to ground zero as it plays out because I can’t afford one more bad step after all of these recent hits. I haven’t made a plan. I don’t know how I’m even getting to work, 40-minutes away, on Tuesday, let alone the days after that. All of my silver has been spent on the sword, and I’m so profoundly tired of holding it.

    And the cobra is well fed today.

    ~

    This is another interrupter. Trying to accomplish more than the basics when I keep bottoming out creates this dichotomy- an intense and automatic drive juxtaposed with the smell of smoke of another impending fight. If I’m going to have to keep doing that (I will), then I’m also going to continue weaponizing my awareness before I ever even reach the end. And I won’t reach the end, until I can no longer speak.

    Part two of this post, ‘The Edge,’ is on the way. But I have to let its contents happen first, I fear.

  • Depths Too Dark

    One of the universal languages in endurance sports is that of “the dark place.” It’s where the human mind goes when you’ve experienced so much depletion that the governors of pretense retire, and you’re left with just the raw material of the self again. You meet you.

    I feel like I lived in that space before I ever picked up a bike. My childhood was destructive (if you’re new here, see My Mother’s Shadow Sister) and I was powerless over it, despite having the gift of so much inherent awareness that allowed me to resist it. I turned inward to keep myself safe because, I’ve said it before, I trusted me. I saw through it then, and that vision cuts sharply now still. This past weekend, I saw something so acutely in myself that I’m afraid of the potential limitations it places on my future efforts in ultra-cycling. I already have so many barriers that I’m chipping away at- learned hyper-independence, a very fragmented support network, housing insecurity, frequent and unpredictable mechanical problems with the old van I have lived in off-and-on for almost six years, and most recently, exiting an unhealthy relationship that struck all of my old wounds like a drum.

    I sorta kinda knew better than to throw myself at the 340-mile Central Missouri Circuit last minute. It was a race that I was ecstatic to see appear for the first time but when crunch time came around, I just didn’t think I had it together enough to take it on. I had been fairly isolated living in a rural town reliant on someone else for my security, and moved back into the van and started a new job only six weeks before race day. I was very disorganized. My phone was destroyed by water and I got locked out of all of my vital accounts and couldn’t contact anyone for a few days, I got a police knock at a campground for no discernable reason, my van started to threaten a mechanical days before the race, I’d already been struggling with some other interpersonal stuff, and I just… I knew how much weight all of it was even though I was practiced at carrying it.

    Oh, but to be passionate about something. To love it severely. You let the dream take the wheel instead of reason. And let me clear, I don’t regret that. My heart won’t let me sit things out and my best friend, Gerrod, reminded me of that to wake me up, and so I registered three days before the deadline. Multiple climbing-heavy and rugged 200’s, point-to-point solo rides with 100+miler-per-day averages for days on end, and a hyper-fixation for covering ground that deepens as the fatigue builds; I thought this was a fair step up.

    On event morning, I found myself in the middle of a lively group of women with some hardcore histories. In a sport where I’ve found myself a general outsider with a tendency to hang on the fringes, this was a serious marker for how much I had evolved in a short period of time. It set me up well as the anticipation of the start bubbled up, and made the grand depart taste sweet.

    As a rider with road power, I found myself at the front of the women’s field early and briefly rode with Nichole Baker, a newcomer to bikepack racing but no stranger to big efforts. My computer soon spontaneously changed the route map to running in reverse, and I had to stop briefly to reset it. I caught Nichole again and she said, warmly “I have a feeling we’re going to be seeing a lot of each other today.”

    One day she’ll know how much I needed that. The unfortunate part is she disappeared as we hit swampy singletrack early into the race, and I never saw her again. Major congratulations on your win, by the way. It would have been an honor to have chased you further.

    Let’s jump forward because recapping all of the mundane details of a race I didn’t finish isn’t actually why I’m here. At mile 114, I hit the second store stop on the route and made that a long break before I had to face the onset of night. Last summer, I took on another ultra race where the combination of invisible dogs, trespassing, too much hiking, and wrong turns ganged up on my inexperience and had me retiring at 1:00 a.m. Jamie Wilgur, eventual third-place finisher, had come up behind about 10-minutes later and I asked “would you mind if I sat back and rode with you for a while? I don’t handle the dark that well.” She obliged and let me know she likely wouldn’t talk that much.

    We ended up sharing quite a lot of back-and-forth that night, and that’s what kept me afloat. At that store stop, I realized my power bank was not charging my computer. It was at 45% with only 47-miles to go to the next stop where I’d have access to more solutions, so I rolled on. Not too long after we got a good rhythm going, I hit a pothole hard and the stitches on my feed bag straps broke in two places. I had to stop and haphazardly tie it up to my seat bag where it rubbed my tire with every pedal stroke. Obnoxious, but hardly a problem. As the last of the light left us, we entered the creek bottoms where I began to feel a chill. I knew the temperature was to drop overnight, so I had packed a thermal base-layer, neoprene gloves, and thick wool socks. Jamie stopped to pull on her jacket and I made my swap while she graciously waited for me. It was there that I observed the charge on my headlight, only on for about an hour, was already low. I didn’t know what the life on my headlamp was if I had to rely on it exclusively. My computer battery was also struggling now that both my navigation and backlight were running. I had to turn both off and became extra dependent on Jamie to lead me to St. James. I also realized that my bottle cage bolts were backing out for the second time that day, and one had already jumped ship. Nothing was melting down, but in my mind I was already running a bunch of programs on how I would handle it if any of those things failed and I were to end up alone.

    Dear reader, I have historically been a manic problem-solver. I grew up in a household where I was frequently left to fend for myself, shamed for needing help, and if I did accept help, the result was under someone else’s control. To minimize the consequences, I had to start predicting the result of hangups before they ever happened. My imagination for being stuck was and still is vivid, because if I can imagine it, I can survive it.

    And so now, cold, necessary devices low on power, my feet wet and frigid from a deep creek crossing mere minutes after changing into warm, dry socks, and my bottles threatening to abort the mission, I’m moving forward but trying to stave off the stress that is a permanent resident for me regardless of how minor the problems may seem on the surface. That stress doesn’t keep me from showing up, but it does keep me from enjoying the adventure the way others do on things this epic. Adventure means unpredictability, and unpredictability to the survivor of long-term trauma means I am not safe.

    Nine miles to St. James. Everything is hanging on and I realize I’m in the clear, but I am cold. That combination meant I would not be pushing on through the dark with Jamie after another stop. I trialed a new charging cable for my power bank which solved that problem, and then asked a hotel if I could sit in their lobby for just a few hours to let my devices charge and to warm up. I pulled out a foil blanket to knock off the clammy chill, and fought off the drowsiness that quickly set in after I sat down.

    It was too long to sit with my thoughts. At 4:00 a.m. I was in a bitter arguement with myself about just getting back out there and hitting the road hard until the sun came up. I was frozen in that state until dawn touched the trees at 5:30. I was losing a lot of ground to others who had gotten to sleep and started early again, and those who hadn’t stopped yet at all. I was even more wide-eyed and indecisive as the compounding feelings of vulnerability, being underequipped, sleep-deprived, and inadequate had a row with each other like it was an open bar. I was losing. I was failing. I was not safe.

    Adversity is the expectation at events like this, not just a possibility. Calling for help from the outside means disqualification, and calling for help hasn’t even been an option for me at significant points in my story. I have incorrectly thought twice now that I would be well-adapted to that since it had been the theme of my entire life and I’ve always just sloppily bulldozed through it even with the stress and the pressure always quietly (or sometimes not so quietly) gnawing at the inside of my throat.

    But it catches you, an incredible, ghostly rider in its own right. It does not bargain with you. It does not compromise. If you don’t respect it, if you fight back, you lose. You fail. You are not safe.

    Crying, I sent a text to my emergency contact to let him know that I was planning to push on but that the possibility was high that I would need to be extracted. I left town at Mach 5 to warm the engine back up, but also to try to foolishly use force again to bypass the alarms that had already been tripped. What I didn’t realize until after I started writing this passage is that, even though I had gotten through my hangup successfully and there was nothing but the chill to ride out now, I had already been shaken. I had already imagined losing, failure, and not being safe. I had not, and I was not, but my body was already signing off without my permission.

    I have experienced this on the bike a number of times prior in various contexts- the high-heartrate crying and hyperventilation that comes when I no longer have control. I am not a person that cries easily. I move with composure and vocalize emotion in a clinical way most of the time, which is why I have such a propensity for writing about it. Something about the bike takes that away from me. I process so much in that space, but when the wound gets struck, I am absolutely, unmanageably, not at the fucking wheel anymore.

    I so wanted to break through it this time so I stopped to recover at three different points. I missed a turn which set me back again. I slid my back wheel out correcting the mistake and it hit me once more. I shivered my way up a minor climb as my body entered full shut down, where despite having so much physical ability to give yet, everything just said “no.”

    Now at mile 177, I hadn’t yet made the call to stop when my emergency line texted me back saying he was headed to my location. I didn’t argue. I knelt over my bars and collapsed completely, knowing that force, now, would only extenuate the damage. It would no longer get me safely home.

    ~

    I don’t know how to solve this. I can’t write, or ride, my way out. Time has done a lot of heavy lifting since that first experience back in 2016 on a cyclocross course, but it still feels like a gargoyle barring me out of what I could accomplish if everything just went right. That reality doesn’t exist.

    But I also have to remember, that of course I experience that stress and its consequential overload. You don’t survive a volatile, unpredictable, and unsafe childhood without maladaptive protective mechanisms, and they don’t disappear or rewrite themselves just because you no longer need them. That’s the capital message that I want more people to understand about those of us with severe trauma, whose responses to life aren’t always congruent with what might be happening on the ground. I am lucky that mine still allow me to take on extreme trials like ultra races even if they fairly consistently break my heart. Some can never reach outside their invisible iron prisons.

    For now, I am stepping out of racing temporarily to pick this apart. I can’t keep allowing my goals to be short-changed by it and a repeated cycle to continue to crash my confidence. Trans-Am is a mega-version of what I just tried and lost, and it’s probably a blessing in disguise that I am now seeing the deeper impact from the past that I wasn’t fully aware of. For so long I just thought I lacked a little bit of mental grit, but no.

    It’s just dark down here.

  • Counting Up, and Counting Down

    I turned 30 today.

    In March of 2023, I made a social media post sharing my intent on making the Trans-Am Nonstop bike race my next big target. Historically, I love putting the proverbial cart before the horse and talking big game about my plans at the risk of them falling apart because, well, I hold myself to them better that way. Still, it was an outlandish jump from single-day ultras and week-long bike trips with hotel stays where I had recognized my love for the long haul; I had come to understand there that going bigger just required more gear and the ability to evolve on the move. I learned how quickly the body adapts to excessive mileage as long as you’re eating plenty and sleeping decently. I set 2025 as my goal year to assure myself that I had plenty of time to train, save for quality gear, and because I’d be turning 30.

    Here we are. Since that decision, I have learned through my fixation on mileage and speed data on my bike computer that numbers are limitations when they aren’t treated with due respect. Spend too much time trying to move too fast- overtrain. Set a strict date that doesn’t work out the way you hoped- unnecessary disappointment. Tell yourself you need to accomplish something by a certain age- realization that time doesn’t care about you or your goals. It’s all arbitrary, relative, and illusionary.

    All of this to say that we’ve made it to the dawn of Trans-Am 2025 and what I thought I needed two years to get myself together for, I’d still throw myself at last-minute if I had the opportunity. Supporting yourself riding 120, 150, or more miles every day for weeks is not something you piece together by the seat of your chamois, but the instinct to gas it is still there. The resources aren’t there right now though, and that’s just going to have to be okay. We’ll work on it. Alternatively, I get to drive and work a camera for the media team of the race’s faster cousin, Race Across America, this summer and can probably learn a thing or seventeen before my time finally does come. I am already dreaming of how I’ll write about that experience. I also have the opportunity to film a short documentary of a rider in the pro field at Unbound Gravel.

    But even while my big goals will sit on the backburner as I explore how to help tell the stories of others, I’m living in a hotbed of local gravel racing that I’m scrambling to get it together for. A whole host of events will happen within a two-hour drive from home in April and May, before I haul off for the aforementioned projects for most of June. We’ll see where the tailwinds push us and readdress the topic of ultra racing around then.

    Spring 2025 Race Calendar

    • April 5th- River Road Classic, 65 miles
    • April 19th- Furry Fifty, 50 miles
    • April 27th- El Chupacabra Grondo, 62 miles
    • May 3rd & 4th- Tour of Hermann Gravel Challenge, two 100 milers!
    • May 10th- Muleskinner Gravel Classic, 68 miles

    That’s a hot, HOT block of racing for someone who has been out of the game for a minute and is pushing the limits of a pretty clapped-out bike, but I’m hard pressed to sit anything out when it’s all basically on my doorstep.

    ~

    On my 29th birthday, I had a breakup. On my 28th, I experienced a mystery episode of severe abdominal pain that I suffered with all night and was driven to the emergency room for the next morning. Even though the occasion hasn’t meant much to me for a while, today I used it to daydream about the year ahead. I turned 30 today. I’ve been going grey since 19. With that comes a perceived loss of youth, but in some ways, I feel like I’m regaining one I didn’t get to explore fully the first time because I was too busy fighting. It’s taken this long to really unpack and let go and even though that work will never truly be complete, I’ve found myself capable of forgetting more often.

    So thank you for popping in to celebrate with me.

  • Fog on the Harbor

    In May of last year I went down to Arkansas for an experimental new ultra race. The massively popular Rule of Three, established in arguably the most bike-centric city in the United States, introduced a 200-mile category and I wanted in. It had been a spring of seriously unsteady income but the organizers got me a sponsored entry and a host of friends helped me put the rest of the pieces together.

    I took on the challenge with two objectives- add another ultra-distance merit badge to my proverbial sash and create a mini documentary of the experience with my phone. I found a handful of people also entered in the 200-mile event to ask one question, on camera- what are you in it for? Some seemed a little caught off guard by the question, and others delivered answers so nonchalant that I knew they were right at home on this horizon.

    The race started at 4:00 p.m. the day before the standard 100 and 50-mile distances and we had a 30-hour cutoff to beat. At mile 70, around 1:00 a.m. after hiking my bike up a steep powerline cut that spit me out to a dead-end road, I called for a ride back to town. I was aware this race was going to be a little rowdier than anything I had ridden before, but I went into it knowing that I was ready to take that step up. My limit turned out to be the building unsafety I felt from the combo of loose dogs in the dark, no-trespassing signs my navigation insisted I disregard, 20-miles straight of mostly unrideable (for me) singletrack immediately followed by mud pits and criminally steep powerline cuts that all slowed me to a drag. My body was in great shape but my mind already wasn’t, and I accepted that this was just not my style of race and not a reflection of some deficiency of mine before a support car even got to me. I missed out on getting the video content and the full-circle story I was hoping for, and so I had to settle for a 90-second Instagram reel that I am fond of but am equally haunted by.

    I still ache a little over abandoning the spirit of toughing that race out, but I had to call back that one question I had asked so many people before the race that I hadn’t taken the time to answer myself in entirety- what was I in it for?

    To briefly touch on themes from my past posts, I’ve labelled myself (or maybe my imposter syndrome has) as a major underdog whose drive to excel in the sport of gravel and ultra-cycling is mismatched with the reality of my life. My circumstances pretty consistently tell me that welfare kids from hoarding houses that feel safe absolutely nowhere can’t access, let alone succeed in, big-time athletic environments that eat resources by the shovel and demand consistent social connections. Despite those voices I persist, much to the discontent of my easily broken heart.

    And so I recognized easily that my answer to the big question was that I was in it in spite of everything- for the long haul and that one unsalvageable event wasn’t a threat to that. After a decade of chipping away at the confining factors that left me feeling so less than, I was rebelling again. I’ve experienced enough truly epic rides at this point that I didn’t allow one defeat to unravel that ideal for me, but it did remind me how fragile the pursuit of doing anything exceptional is.

    I talk about it so often because as if that saga wouldn’t be trying for anyone, I’ve inadvertently associated my efforts on the bike with the vindication of my broken adolescence. And for better or for worse, I don’t really want to untie them.

    I’m not sure I’ll ever write enough about the past to alleviate the weight of it, but ultimately it is time to direct these posts toward where I am now and where I hope to go, in spite of everything.

    I’ve been living in a town of 1,600 people for six months and in that time have had the most difficult time finding a stable new job (there are plenty of unstable ones). My boyfriend, Jeremy, has been propping me up and insisting that I not fold for something that doesn’t truly work for me, but I couldn’t have predicted it would be this difficult to even get a call back, and so I’m starting to sweat that my financial hiatus from racing might have to be extended into yet another spring. In the midst of that mess, I’ve been mitigating my job-board doom-scrolling and obsessive “apply” button-smashing by writing more, painting more, and reaching out to individuals I know in fitness and media for advice on potential longer-term ventures that complement life on a bike. The van has been parked on the curb, driven only every couple of weeks, I got my ass kicked by covid for two weeks, and I’ve gone through the motions of indoor training, riding outside when I can, running a 5k or two a week around the entire town, and will begin strength training again soon. I have some local target races I’m clutching to keep my goal-oriented capital-type-A personality engaged, and rejecting the expectations that come with turning 30 next month. Trans-Am is still the long game we’re playing even if it kills me.

    I have to remind myself daily that even though I’m deeply discouraged about how much I can’t do, I’m not allowed to let the mission slip away by not being ready when I finally can again. And as much as I am hellbent, maybe to my detriment, of creating this big story for myself, I am even more committed now to talking about it despite the massive political elephant in the room that might have me sounding a little tone-deaf. The loudness of all of those cogs turning literally keeps me up at night while I quantify the burden that passion has been on me, and I’m just going to let this life make whatever example out of me that it wants to.

    With a ridiculous fight, of course.

  • If You’d Known Me When I Was Older

    Here lately, I’ve been going to bed at night and wandering Grandma and Papa’s house while the worries of my adult life wait outside. I wake up in the Blue Room; it’s 9:00 a.m. and Papa insists I’ve slept long enough. I walk down the hallway, past the laminated world map with the USSR still labelled on it, through the living room with the tan carpet and the slightly purple, maroon curtains, past the basement door where I threw up once, and into the warm kitchen. The morning sun touches that one corner of the linoleum floor again while the subtle smoke of breakfast dances above it. The woods through the window are glittering over the grass that was sometimes charred after Papa, by mistake or purposefully, let the flame in the burn pile get carried away. I open up the glass cabinets and remember the bowls with the stars on them, the mugs for coffee I hadn’t acquired the taste for yet, the tall, clear, angled glasses I would pour Diet Coke into for Grandma, slowly so that it didn’t fizz too much and go flat. I take the plate of eggs and bacon and grits and walk into the sunroom, where they both sit, and eat with them while Fox News blares on TV.

    I ask Papa if I can play on the computer and then go swap between countless CD-ROMs. I run with Spirit the Stallion, giggle at the characters with Reader Rabbit, shiver as Mathra flies overhead on The Cluefinders, and run from a t-rex on Dinosaur Adventure 3-D. Inevitably, I can’t sit still anymore and head outside to run the trails Papa cut in the field with the bush hog and look for rat snakes under sheet metal. When I come back in he scolds me for eating directly out of the peanut butter jar, but forgets about it when I tell him I caught a catfish in the net he had made longer by duct taping a 2×4 to it. The fish had a hook stuck in its mouth and I still don’t know if he ever figured out I had stolen one of his poles, couldn’t get the fish off, and cut the line in panic.

    In the evening, without fail, Papa calls that supper is ready, and I join them for another meal. Tonight it’s “shit-on-a-shingle,” ground beef and gravy over toast. I clean my plate and put it in the washer, and as the light outside fades, just before bedtime comes and I hear Papa push in the foot of his recliner from another room, something shrieks at me- “you’re so ungrateful.”

    Through the ether my peace is dispelled by the wrath of How Dare You, an invisible cobra that spits venom anytime I remember what I had and through it recognize what was stolen. It’s like she feels personally betrayed by the fact that I knew what love is, and is not, and the girl she flexes her brutish dominion over can’t find that in her heavy shadow. From light into dark, we both grow angrier, but surely I can’t understand her plight because I am so small and clueless and ungrateful and a spoiled brat toward everything she has provided for me too, right?

    But dear reader I met Gratitude so early I lost memory of her first lessons, and her and Submission were never at the pulpit together. Gratitude was quiet, simple, and naked. She would often be in rooms and recognized only as the heat coming through the vents on a winter morning or that single streak of sun on the linoleum floor. She needn’t announce herself because those who knew her well could trust her to stay where she belonged, and understood the breathless language of her ever exiting the room. She didn’t leave when Suffering would scream, and merely tipped her hat when Grief walked in.

    Gratitude answered to no one, and she was not to carry the burdens of service.

    Nor was she a debt to be paid.

    ~

    It’s been a year and a half since Papa died and almost 20 since I last lived with him and Grandma. A few nights ago I experienced the most vivid dream that he had come back to visit with everyone. I didn’t get many words with him before he said he had to go, but as he slipped away again I held his hands and said “thank you for being my dad.”

    When I moved back in with my parents, Gratitude waited for me. She planted her feet and stared blankly despite my parents demands. She was stoic, feral, and indomitable. She wouldn’t come when announced on stage and said nothing each time the knife was held to her throat. She’d side-step every request, politely decline every invitation, and retreat into the cosmos somewhere between that moment and the next time Memory brought me back there and only on her perfect timing, came back to me in golden light.

    And so now I leave the door unlocked for her to come in when she pleases, keep a mug just for her in the cabinet, and talk with her about how the smell of breakfast makes me shed tears more frequently than anything else. I tell her how on the day Papa left I had made the coffee I had acquired the taste for and left some of it as a toast to what we might have talked about over it, and then I thank them both.

  • The Ghost of a Giant

    Meeting and Chasing an International Hero

    I haven’t yet become familiar with a successful competitive athlete with a story like mine. I’m sure they are out there. I hope they are. My whole “why” in endurance sport is to serve as an example of what can be done anyway, when the social support (namely, family and more than a few friends) that is so frequently a factor, the proverbial village of helping hands that it takes to reach a high level, is absent. The worry that maybe it can’t is the noisy, nocturnal rodent in the ceiling that I can’t seem to run off.

    In April of 2024, I sent a handful of emails to prominent female cyclists with questions about how they found sponsors, teams, struck the balance between responsibility and the pursuit of more, and I got exactly one reply. It was from Lael Wilcox, ultra-endurance rider, Trans-Am winner, and now Around-the-World record breaker.

    I had been following Lael passively for a while. Having grown up without any real role models, always fervently inspired and guided by something internal instead, I never identified any idols in my adult life either until recently. Something in my shift from interest in single-day podiums to point-to-point, multi-day events got me paying more attention to the voice and storytelling of those types of figures. From my very brief experience with bikepackers, people that embark on self-guided, self-supported, self-motivated, solo-survivalist passages are on a different wavelength than those that chase extreme output for a few hours to a day and then retire to climate control and hot showers at the end of the night. For myself, high-octane racing was the pure essence of sport in all of it’s golden and shadowed corners; bikepacking was temporarily stepping into an entirely different life.

    Although Lael’s epic accomplishments were unfathomable to me and dwarfed my solo expeditions that only lasted a few days and a handful of states, reading about her beginnings felt a little more relatable than I was used to. Stories of working in restaurants to save money for races and riding to them, riding to the start of already stupid-hard events was familiar. And having felt the frenzy of covering ground daily, the silent thruster that seemed to draw more power the deeper into the fatigue and the muscle soreness I got, being fast over days, weeks, somehow seemed less daunting than being fast for 100-miles.

    It inexplicably looked more possible.

    And so, when Lael set off from Chicago to break the women’s world record, with the campaign of it also becoming a global community ride for anyone to join her at any time, I started smacking the ceiling repeatedly with a broom every time that animal started scrambling, knowing it wouldn’t rid me of it but at least to get it to shut up every few hours. I kept eyes on her 170-mile-per-day average on Strava for the next three months.

    In the meantime, I continued having the most unpredictable year since I had moved away from my home city. Through hardship I had always trudged through by having some sort of beefcake ride or race plan on the horizon, and had historically been able to scrape just enough resources together to make them happen. But this was the year of rug-pulling, and every single plan I had for the summer fell apart like a sculpture of toothpicks. I did take one big leap-of-faith and moved back into a house with my new boyfriend and began the decompression ritual that comes with letting go of a life on-the-fly, and before I could dare to pencil much in on the calendar again, Lael was back stateside, cruising the coast of California toward the start of historic Route 66- her beeline to the finish of her record attempt back in Chicago.

    I now lived further from her track through Missouri than I had when she announced her plan, and I started pulling wires. My new boyfriend, Jeremy, was familiar with my wildness on a bike anecdotally, but hadn’t seen the intensity in use yet. I told him that Lael was on the way, and that I wanted to meet her, and that I wanted to do it in ultra-inspired fashion- a 450+mile round-trip bike ride from home to a strategically-planned intercept point, ride 75 miles with her to just west of St. Louis (if I could keep pace on a loaded bike), and be home in five days. I needed a lot to line up just right. I needed to predict her timeline that was not publicly posted, I needed the job that I had just started and had tried to ghost me to pay me so I could afford a couple cheap hotels, I needed the weather to stay temperate, and I needed my engine to run right for back-to-back days of hard riding I hadn’t been training for.

    And it all did. Flawlessly.

    I was ready by a Saturday to roll out on a Monday. Saturday night my overthinking habit served me in an unusually positive way- I realized my tracking math was wrong and I needed to leave a day earlier. After shit, anticipatory sleep, I began rolling south on Sunday morning, bound for the bunkhouse just east of Jefferson City, MO on the famous Katy Trail.

    The day was easy despite relearning to handle a bike with weight on the handlebars. 40 miles of rolling, buttery pavement dropped me at my first luxury gas station stop of the trip, and from there it was all flat, crushed limestone for 50 more to the spur into the dead-on-Sunday state capital. I hit the Subway downtown for an actual meal ten-minutes before they closed, and headed back to the trail for the last 13 miles to the bunkhouse.

    For just $10 a night, the Turner Katy Trail Shelter provides two floors of beds, a shower room, basic kitchen, and secure bike storage. The only drawback is that you have to pack in your own bedding. I had crushed a fitted twin sheet into my bar bag and precariously buckled a travel pillow onto my saddle, but with the night dipping down into the mid-40’s that night, I was kept awake for all but a few hours by shivers and a hyper-awareness of wandering brown recluses.

    Monday. This was the day I made the unknown haul to Rolla from Jefferson City (85 miles), through territory with no activity on cycling heatmaps. For expediency I knew I had to risk state routes as the backroads would all be unpaved, steep, and slow. It turned out to be the most beautiful stage of the trip as I entered the Ozarks and was met by rolling golden grass and rock walls, dipped in and out of river-valley towns, but the climbing only became steeper and denser as I neared Rolla. Over the crest of the last major climb, a cyclist who introduced himself as Matt ran me down and greeted me with “don’t usually see roadies out this way, they’re scared of the hills.”

    Yeah buddy. I told him about the mission I was on and he led me on a safer route to my hotel. We exchanged Strava handles and I carried on up the road.

    I checked into my hotel and immediately checked Lael’s location via the satellite tracker she had been carrying for her entire trip. She’d crossed the Oklahoma border into Missouri the night before, and stayed overnight just east of Joplin, roughly 170 miles away. She was now only about 60 miles from me. I had chosen Rolla as my meet point for two reasons- it was the closest town on her path that I could get to fairly directly, and it was my guess that she’d end her day’s ride in or near there based on her daily average. Her route across the world was visible from the start, but her stopping points were unknown without talking to Lael yourself. By this point, it was still early enough in the afternoon that I started to predict that she might just blow right through town in the dark. I needed to take care of my needs after 188 miles of heavy riding, so I cleaned up, grabbed some Steak-‘n-Shake from next door, and recapped with loved ones on the phone, refreshing the tracker anxiously every 20 minutes. I unloaded my gear from my bike and laid out a fresh skinsuit, and boiled with anticipation as I prepared to jump out onto the road and meet Lael Wilcox in the dark.

    At 9:04 p.m., September 9th, Lael crested the hill in front of my hotel as I stood over my bike with lights flashing. An escort vehicle following with its hazards on was a surprise to me, but as a hyper-vigilant person, it let me fully engage with Lael in conversation and not sweat passing cars. I asked her if the driver was Rue, her partner and photojournalist that had been documenting her ride.

    “No, it’s some locals that wanted to escort me to St. James because the roads are bad.”

    I hardly expected the worst roads she had ridden in the world, based on safety or surface, would have been in Missouri, USA. She insisted they had been great. Through the small-talk I heard the urgency in her responses. I had assumed that by this point in her effort, having only days to go in her globetrotting ride, Lael would be quite casual; instead, I recognized a similar intensity that I spend much of my life in. She was present, but she was on. I learned she was now trying to reach Chicago by day 108- two days earlier than her goal time. As we cut the darkness, I told her the bullet points of my life on a bike, that I lived in a van for five years to keep the dream alive, and that she was the only email that was returned.

    “Really?” the sharpness broke with what sounded like genuine surprise. “I really try,” she said. We talked briefly about finding sponsors in the ultra-endurance world, and she asked me what kind of racing I did prior.

    I said, “Criteriums, cyclocross, primarily gravel after that, but I don’t really jive well with most of that crowd.” She cracked a laugh.

    She told me she got exactly 7 hours of sleep every night, and that it came easily. As one who sweats everything, is kept up late into the night and hawks my alarm on race mornings, I was envious of that off switch. I avoided as many of the questions that I would have expected her to hear on loop throughout her trip as I could, while riding at her shoulder at 20mph along the frontage road of I-44, but made it a point to ask the most pertinent one to me at the time- “Where are you stopping tonight?”

    “Sullivan!” she declared through the wind.

    40 miles further up the road. My stomach dropped, but I was hell-bent. I told her I had planned to ride a chunk of the next day with her and asked what time she guessed she might start again in the morning, and started running all of my internal clocks. 30 minutes after meeting one of the few people I have ever genuinely revered, I bid Lael goodbye and let her know that I hoped to catch her in Sullivan in the morning. She went right, I went left and turned around at the entrance of a gas station.

    “Genna!” I hear from the window of the pickup that had been behind us for ten miles as it turned behind me. How the heck did this person know my name?

    It was Matt, the chance cyclist that had found me earlier in the day. Intrigued and inspired by the story I had told him about Lael and that I was on a mission to ride in her wake, he had come out to insure an uneventful ride out of Rolla. Like a plot device come to life, he and his excited daughter gave me a fast lift back to my hotel so I could more quickly get to bed and prepare to go find Lael again first thing the next morning. Like a cheesy sitcom joke, sleep didn’t come easily.

    I was on the bike and headed to Sullivan by 4:50 a.m. It was 49 degrees, completely dark, with some fog hanging in low spots on the road. I put the one t-shirt I had brought with me on over my skinsuit for minor protection from the crisp draft I was very underprepared for, with the spirit of “deal with it, bitch, we gotta go.” I kept the pace higher than usual for a loaded ride, caught between trying to keep the engine warm, and trying to cover the 40 miles fast enough to relax my sore legs for a moment before trying to keep up with a world-record-chaser. I got to town at 8:20. I took my goofy shirt off and refilled my bottles in a park bathroom across the street from Lael’s hotel, then decided a few minutes later to grab a quick breakfast from the gas station. I hawked the tracker watching for the moment it went live again so I didn’t miss her exit. I rolled over to the hotel entrance with a container of biscuits and gravy and sat on a bench. I opened the lid and took a bite, and then looked at the tracker again.

    It was on, and showed her headed east away from the parking lot. My heart stopped and instantly shot through my throat. I threw my barely-touched breakfast in the trash can, grabbed my bike, and hauled out of there in full aero-tuck with a growling stomach. Crushing it through town, I took my phone out of my pocket and checked tracking again. I was gaining. A few minutes later, headed away from businesses and out toward the frontage road again, I noticed I was now ahead of her location and I slowed to stop. I rolled onto the edge of the road and pulled out a Little Debbie fruit pie from my handlebar bag, and ate it while I waited for Lael to appear over my shoulder again. The tracker showed her stopped at and intersection for a while, so I took a moment to breathe in some relief.

    It was then that I figured out the tragic delay in the tracker that undid the story from here forward. Another update, and she was somehow ahead of me again. She had been the entire time, and all of my waiting put me what was ultimately ten minutes back. Still, I got back in the saddle and flat cooked the pace for nearly an hour, full-throttle over every roller, hunkering down in every straight, pulling my phone out every few minutes to see if it was doing any good. Eventually, I encountered road crews doing repair work. I asked a worker in passing if another cyclist had come by recently, and he said “yeah, about ten minutes ago.”

    I kept the pedal to the floor into St. Clair, losing all confidence but still hoping the silhouette of another bike would appear over the crest of the next hill. Once I found traffic again, now at the end of my range for holding that speed with a packed bike, I turned off into a Casey’s parking lot, officially giving up the ghost. I grabbed a Red Bull from inside to trip the brain’s reward system and distract myself from my disappointment, my perceived screw-up. I sat down on the curb and stared at my phone. I gave myself a few minutes to pick myself apart, and then a large group of cyclists rolled up from the road. They began talking to me, asking me where I was headed and where I had come from, and I told them. Many of them hadn’t heard of Lael or her ambition at all, and after a few minutes, I became aware of how much more interested they were in who I was and what I had accomplished just to meet her than they were anything else. Someone chasing a world record had just surged through town not long before, but they just wanted to know about me.

    I said goodbye to them and started the last 30 miles to my next hotel. I rolled into Eureka physically sound, but emotionally frayed. I sat down at a Mexican restaurant and ordered a jumbo margarita on the rocks, queso, and a chicken quesadilla I had to force myself to eat. As is the way of the ponderer, I let my guard come down and asked myself the internal questions about how I, a person that historically removes herself from the path of others and carries a nearly unbearable tension when approached by strangers, could only recognize the true intensity of what I myself was doing through the recognition from strangers. I had accomplished my mission to meet a legend, albeit briefly, but I hadn’t gotten to ask her the larger questions and learn more about her process to the top.

    I was denied any more opportunity to draw comparisons.

    I was gifted the freedom to continue to wonder. To not count myself out because what advantages someone else may or may not have had.

    I punched the end of the broom through the ceiling and heard that obnoxious animal hiss, and saw golden daylight through the hole.

    ~

    That evening on the phone, while soaking my sore legs in the tub, I told Jeremy that I was ready to be home. I laid out my plan to cover the distance of the last two days of my trip all at once. At 6:00 a.m. the next morning, I headed away for 189 miles home, on fatigued legs, at a large calorie deficit, and with an extra large band-aid on my rear tire to cover a gash that you could see the inner tube through.

    I finished the ride just after sundown, faster than I had ever ridden that kind of distance, with a loaded-down bike. 462 miles inside four days, alone.

    Haunted by something that just won’t let me stop pushing.

  • My Mother’s Shadow Sister

    I am compelled to begin with a disclaimer. I refuse to write on the surface of things and the story I tell here is intense. I am a decade removed from the life I talk about ahead, which lends itself to forgetting detail. You’ll have to excuse me, I was a kid. I am obligated to write it as I experienced it, and the natural consequence is that others that have had their hands on it may not be portrayed in the most flattering light. I don’t deal in gentle things, but I know gentleness from its absence. I forward an apology to the aforementioned, even as the major characters have long been aware of my intent with my writing. I owe a particularly strong apology to Papa, for not getting over myself and giving this the same fervor and time that I do to everything else so you could read some of it before you left. The rare grace you gave me before your time came grants me extra courage to continue anyway.
    I hope today finds you well, but I also hope it finds you honest. I’m breaking a chain of generational abuse by doing so myself. Some may consider my tone rather graceless, if not scathing, but there is nothing soft about what I had to endure as a child and I don’t obligate myself to make it comfortable. The first gift I was given in life was the ability to recognize harmful behavior from the adults I should have been able to trust. The second was the instinct I had to successfully remove myself from it and forge an identity that runs under its own power, and is fueled entirely by will. I’ve chosen to use them both.
    That was the original opening to this, but I already feel pushed to make an addendum.
    “Be attentive to the repercussions that might cause for your future. The story you tell is from your perspective, and not deemed the whole truth,” is the response I received after sending my dad a heads up that this post, which I have been struggling with since February, was going to be made. I made it clear months ago that this was imminent.
    Dear reader, I’ll leave the interpretation of that response up to you, but I must first point out that I have lived the repercussions already. That’s what this is about.
    Content warning: These passages contain themes of abuse, suicide, domestic violence, and other subjects that could be uncomfortable for some. Reader discretion is highly encouraged.
    ~
    There was an accident when I was an infant. I was taken to the hospital with symptoms of shaken baby syndrome, and consequential cranial hemorrhaging, after I had been left at home with my dad for a day. As evidenced by this writing, I made a miraculous recovery. Prognosis for brain injury in infants is generally very poor, and if survived, often results in a person going through life unable to reach appropriate developmental milestones, and requiring assistance in basic care for the rest of their lives.
    I was removed from my parents custody and placed under legal guardianship with my maternal grandparents. My mom and dad lived on adjacent land so there was never much physical distance, and they remained a part of my life. I remember my mom using this event as cannon-fodder against my dad in their countless, high-octane fights throughout my childhood. I obviously had no memory of it to harbor any feelings about it myself, and I have to recognize the weight of the distrust and anguish my mom would have endured in the event of such harm coming to her child. From all accounts I ever heard though, it was just an accident. Not the result of malice, just negligence. I’d also consider it a precursor.
    Come with me now to picture day, first grade. I remember my deep blue velvet dress. It’s still my favorite color. I get off the school bus at my parents house and walk up to a locked front door. I go around the house to find the side door is also locked. There isn’t a car in the driveway, but after my mom’s collision with a dump truck with my grandma and I in the car (which I credit for my inability to sleep in a moving vehicle now), it was usual for my dad to drive the only family car to work. At this point on the timeline I had reasonable free-choice of if I was dropped off there or at Grandma and Papa’s but… did I mess up this time? Am I in trouble? I panic, despite their house being in my direct line-of-sight. I run across the road and try to climb through the barbed-wire fence that borders their property. My dress becomes snagged, and my legs are scraped through my tights as I begin to cry uncontrollably. This might be my first memory of a helplessness and entrapment that would become a central theme of the years to come.
    I free myself from the fence, and run through the tall golden grass with my backpack swinging, across the cow pastures at the corner of McPhillips and Black Chapel Road, to the house of those who always came to my rescue. I burst through the front door sobbing, quickly consoled by my grandparents who, if I remember it correctly, might have laughed at how big of a distance six-year-old me perceived that 1/2 mile or less of unobstructed Indiana open field. I never felt unsafe when I was there. Not when I ran outside in rural darkness and heard the shrilly barks of coyotes nearby, and not when I was brought there when my parents were on another tirade and I needed to get away. They consoled me in the sunroom where I looked over that field through north-facing windows- the same windows where I would narrate the movements of the cows through Papa’s binoculars in a Steve Irwin accent, where I would look past the barbed wire at my parents house that was not truly home.
    The house that my last memory of was as it was being hollowed out by fire.
    ~
    My grandpa, Jerry, was always known as Papa to me, even into adulthood, and from this point on I’ll refer to him as such. He passed away rather abruptly in May of 2023, on the day we had planned for me to visit his house for the first time after a long pause in communication. I was the honored officiant of his services and his folded casket flag sits on display in my van. With all of the difficult text to follow, understand that this is the most painful and fresh part of the story as I’ve lived it so far. He historically hadn’t been that supportive, much less interested, in my obsessive pursuits on the bike or really anything else I did that wasn’t chasing money, but the day before his stroke he had saved the link to my GPS unit to his desktop to follow me on a multi-day ride. It was like tragic poetry to discover that only after we could no longer talk about it. I don’t know if he could understand me, but when I got to his house after he was already in a coma and on hospice, I made sure to let him know “I made it.”
    Our relationship had been severely strained, and I had imposed no-contact in 2018 after I had finally grown tired of his consistent down-talk of most every choice I made as a young-adult. He was from a different time, obviously, used to being in command of things and would reiterate often how “people only visited when they needed something.” He was an incredibly intelligent man, but if I may mirror his critical judgement here- was others’ approach only in times of need a cause? Or was it an effect, a consequence of ye who would cast out sharp criticism before fully listening to someone’s story. You might already be able to tell who I take after the most. I learned so much from him, including to never take advice from someone who could not hear others out (or someone whose life you didn’t want to emulate).
    At the visitation for my grandfather on my dad’s side, Papa and I spoke for the first time since that break. There was no tension then, just the warmth I remember from when we weren’t on opposite teams. I don’t know if he gave as much thought to our falling out as I did. I was the one who was “too sensitive,” after all. (And thank goodness for that.) We made plans for dinner in the coming weeks, and caught up in a Cracker Barrel as was tradition. Before I got in the van to make the drive home to St. Louis, I told him- “The reason I have not visited is because I have felt like I couldn’t,” and softly yet sternly explained that I needed him to trust me to take care of myself, that I knew me better than anyone else ever could. It was a bold assertion toward someone with an iron spine and general dominance like he had, but he didn’t argue with me. Hundreds of imaginary disputes I had with him in my head during our period of silence, borne out of innumerable memories of not being given enough space to speak, were in that one moment dispelled. I prefer to think that he began to respect the rigidity I exuded that could have only come from one place. That was the last time I ever talked to him in person.
    Dear reader, I took the step to salvage a relationship that was deeply troubled yet still valuable in a style I had never had exemplified to me, one that follows a format of “this is the problem I have, and this is what I need from you to fix it.” I was intimidated by Papa. He was notorious for speaking over you, always knowing better than you, fairly tactful with others but never with those he had power over. Not communicating with him for a couple of years was me tripping that outlet when I had finally been overloaded with the condescension. He never called. We may never have spoken again had I not been so bold as to tell him exactly why I had stepped away, with a precision that didn’t leave room for volatility. I would have accepted any outcome so long as I made that move forward; any further argument would have resulted in recurrence because I would not entertain another senseless dispute. Instead I was rewarded with a sense of levelling at long last. I found peace at his passing only because I took that risk. We had emailed back and forth in the months between and we exchanged the “I love you,” that I had heard every night before bed at his house in elementary school, and never once remember hearing from my parents. He told me once that his determination that I belonged with them was a mistake. I have to agree.
    I began to live with them full-time in fifth grade while visiting my grandparents farm on weekends at my choosing, but it wasn’t a smooth transition. My parents kept moving, before and after. I was uprooted so often in elementary school that I became withdrawn socially, shutting down almost entirely by the time I was about 14. We’re all aware that kids are fairly no-holds-barred with their commentary, and I became known as the girl that always moved. There one month, gone the next. Friends were so temporary, it didn’t make much sense to me to find them. Being plucked from familiarity and habit so frequently wired me to anticipate it, and even now I look for the activities and spaces where people aren’t present. Everywhere, I find holes in my social adjustment. Customary “polite” phrases and language were things I hardly paid attention to before even two to three years ago, and now I still question their legitimacy. I became a person that has frequently answered “how are you?” transparently, realizing how a response that isn’t robotic can lead to discomfort in others and I wonder, honestly, whose problem that really is. Keeping my head down, minding my business, sometimes totally engrossed in my own internal world because circumstances programmed me to turn inward is still frequently misread as rudeness.
    Between second and sixth grade I had been to five different schools, a couple of them multiple times. My mom never seemed settled anywhere we lived, and neither was I. In seventh grade we finally moved into the house where they still live as of the time of this writing, but even with roots established, the ground I walked on cracked. Over the years my mom became more dependent on my dad as her vision deteriorated from an incurable, uncorrectable genetic eye disorder that she and all but one of her four siblings also have. (It is unknown if I inherited the mutation and/or if I’ll be subject to this degeneration in time.) By this point, she could no longer drive, and was officially considered legally blind and thus disabled. This dealt a blow to her mental health, but that wasn’t the only factor. Let’s walk back again for a moment, to when I first clearly remember my world being… wrong.
    We were in a two-bedroom duplex and I shared a room with my younger sister. My brother, the youngest, stayed in my parents room. That was the year when I can clearly recall the condition of our living space becoming more cluttered, and it was the setting I most vividly remember my mom’s desperate screaming of my dad’s name as the warning before items were thrown, furniture overturned, holes punched in the drywall. I couldn’t tell you what the fights were about. Not once. It didn’t matter. I still hear it because I was both deeply afraid and profoundly furious. The violence was never toward me (although I do remember my dad grabbing my siblings by fistfuls of their hair) but I was overloaded enough that one afternoon I removed the screen from the bedroom window and climbed outside, clocking in my head how long it would take to walk to my grandparents’ house- this time eight miles away. My parents walked in and discovered my alternative exit and I was chastised for it. No apparent concern, no question as to why I felt I needed to get out. I was just a disobedient child. How irrational. How inconvenient.
    It was that same apartment where my mom was struck with a coffee mug during another of these disputes, and my dad was taken away in handcuffs. Subconsciously, there was somehow no relief for me when he was gone. He never had been the person I was most afraid of.
    Arrive at seventh grade. We had moved to the house where we would remain for the rest of my school career, and where the depths of my parents deep torment, and my perverse response to their authority, would give fault lines new names. Mrs. Beals, my teacher for four of nine class periods, was solid granite during the school day. She fostered my strengths as a student writer and offset the busted confidence that resulted from an unsafe and unstable life at home. She might even be to credit for effort from me academically at all. We were pen-pals for years afterward. I fell deeply enough into a fog eventually that I never returned her last letter, and she passed away after double-writing me to check in. I still regret that.
    The year after that, the seismometer was gauging constant waves. I was automatically enrolled in advanced-placement English and literature classes as a result of above-average scores on relevant testing from the year prior. I had a meeting with the counselor about this, because I knew this meant I would have to focus more, actually work, and not float myself along haphazardly. It meant I had to commit myself, at home. A home where I was anticipating a screaming match and another broken television every time I walked through the door from the bus. I couldn’t. I would fail. I suffered that entire year and it wasn’t until the interruptions of my classes for meetings with social service counselors that the teachers I had for those two periods seemed to get some context on things and lightened my load at the very end of the year.
    This, dear reader, is when I started giving it absolute hell, yet not in the constructive sense, and it is notoriously the most difficult part for me to write concisely about because I am still so vehemently angry at how much the world, and my parents, seemed to be placing all responsibility for me on me without meaningful or consistent intervention. I have to sit in that discomfort and relive it to tell the story, because in my fighting back against injustices in my home, I was blamed. By my parents, by my peers, by the social service figures that were in and out of the picture for the entirety of my high school life by my own doing. My reactions were more heavily reprimanded than their source. I was the whistleblow and by default expected to be above it all. I’ll do little here to conceal my frustration about that. My perspective from 16 to 28 has not changed, and not because I haven’t matured psychologically, but because I was right. And for the sake of innumerable other minors with abusive caregivers that can’t advocate for themselves in a system that gives them no rights, one that does nothing before physical violence comes against you, I feel universally required to be loud about it. My mom told me to “just wait,” until I was older, with a burned-in bitterness that has prevented any real relationship development between us since. I understand now. I understand how not to be. How not to treat those I care about. How I did and do not have a hand in my own mistreatment, but I have both hands on the ghoul it tried to create and I’m breaking its arms so it can’t reach anyone past me.

    Freshman year. I’m my mother’s first teenager. It was around this point where rather than trying to remove myself from the radius of my parents fights, I started stepping into them. I recognized my mother’s pattern of making snide, pointless, passive-aggressive jabs at my dad, not excluding statements like “well I don’t put our kids in the hospital,” serving only to inflame their relationship with virtually no room for resolution. I became conditioned to predict her aggressions. I knew what her loud, audible sighs meant. I knew that the narrowing of her stare would be followed with hateful dialogue. I knew that when the case workers and family counselors would visit, she’d switch off her antagonism and present a sweet facade of wanting to be supportive and to resolve tensions. It was intentional.
    And when those figures left, I could expect the silent treatment and every breath I took to be monitored. She knew I was the one who brought them there. With every quip, every punishment she dealt for countering her reactivity, she was making an active decision to deny my siblings and I a healthy home, and I took that personally. I started reading her behavior and adjusting mine so finely that I wired myself to no longer cry when we argued, because that was her cue to double-down. I still rarely cry in front of other people, and handle emotional events with an uncomfortble level of stoicism.
    Every day I dreaded both getting on the bus to go to school, and to come home. Class and social functions meant regular meetings with envy. I observed the stresses of many of them being trivial and their fun rooted in the mundane. I couldn’t understand it; everything was serious to me, all of the time. Pep rallies, after-school extracuriculars and functions where parents showed up and showed genuine, sometimes competitive pride for their kids was something I could not get anywhere near. I was always watching what I wanted so badly- freedom, opportunity, warmth, safety- from behind glass walls. Ever-aware that it existed, but never able to touch it. When I did worm my way into running track and playing soccer very briefly, my incredibly fragile confidence was blown by the unrelenting comparison to everyone around me and the accelerated jealousy-borne treatment I received from my mom when my dad would simply pick me up from practice. I didn’t finish a season in either sport. She always stopped just shy of force- her narcicisstic strategies left it open to me to quit things out of sheer brokenness so she could still say it was my choice. The lack of support (at best) and outright sabotage (at worst) haunted me in the throws of bike racing as an adult, and I still feel the thickness of that envy for those chasing athletic pursuits with a village around them, or at the very least, are able to stress more about their performance and not the milestones they completely missed by acts of aggression by a parent. This has steered me toward the niche of “self-supported” racing in recent years and riding ultra-distance, where I don’t pay any mind to who isn’t around to cheer. Where both friend and foe are too far away to have any influence.
    I turned my displaced energy toward drawing, a time-pass she had no power over. My senior year I spent half of the school day in the art room, under the mentorship of a teacher, Mr. Shiner, that I initially thought I needed to avoid. I heard his dry humor from the halls before I ever entered that room, and I was too fragile for it. I misjudged us both. I don’t remember what the struggle that particular day was, but I had explained an issue at home to him one afternoon and saw the empathetic frustration wash over his face too. He and Marcus, the only individual from social services that I ever trusted, helped me hold on to the part of me that knew that everything I was forced to face was not a reflection of me, and they kept pushing my strengths regardless of my resistance. Meanwhile, my mom made sure to never give me real praise for my talents. The closest I ever got to that was giving her one of my best pieces to her for her birthday anyway, partly as a peace treaty for the flower pot I gave my grandma for Mother’s Day in kindergarten instead of her. She never let go of that. I was five.
    In the house, my mother’s dysfunction also took on a physical form. The corners of every room began to collect stuff, and eventually trash. Piles of clothes and paper and boxes and food wrappers and even keepsakes were shoved into piles that walking paths were forged through to keep it somehow passable. There wasn’t a surface on the furniture that was free of debris. The kitchen sink was always piled to the top with soiled dishes and the garbage cans would be consistently overflowing. Pets lived outside year round because they “didn’t belong in the house,” (and frankly they’d have eaten something toxic) until thay’d be taken elsewhere while I was at school and I’d be lied to about it, distraught that they were missing. Eventually the carpet was ripped up in every room and nothing replaced it. It was cancer in the living room, and heart failure in mine. Meals mere more often than not fend-for-yourself. It was this that got most of the attention from social services, but somehow the fault for the condition of the house was still partly directed back to the person blowing the whistle on it. Because “I wasn’t perfect either.” Professionals, ignoring power dynamics ina home where the adults are notoriously unreasonable and unstable. If I had such a problem with it, it was on me to fix it.
    I tried. My mom even bribed me with money to clean the whole house. Even one room was an all-day undertaking and it was all or nothing with her. I would burn out quickly. If she was in a giving mood, she’d reward me anyway. If not, she got some free improvement at my expense. I don’t know if she could even see how bad it was at that point or not, but I know she wasn’t willing to face it herself regardless. She definitely couldn’t accept how severe of an implication the environment had on the rest of us. I also don’t think she understood the implications of threatening my brother with “being taken away by CPS,’ when his unmanaged anxiety made him intentionally miss the bus, or getting us excited for weekend trips, the only reprieve from the constant tremors at home, to eventually sabotaging them intentionally by picking a fight the day before. To this day, dear reader, dealing with disappointment is my Achilles heel because of that.
    Pause for another disclaimer. Please understand- I do not condemn my mother for the severity of her declining psyche and the depth of her depression. She made two seperate suicide attempts and I watched her be taken away in the ambulance both times. I do not place blame on her for the events in her own past and genetic factors that resulted in the intense internal fights she did and still does live with. I have always understood that she was an objectively ill individual that needed more help than she was getting from a severely broken mental health system, and that the behavior from Papa that put me at odds with him was 10-fold when she was growing up. I’ve spent a lot of time having the same venting sessions about him on loop with her, to the point that I realize that was the only real way we ever related to one another. I’m not going to do that anymore.
    I do, however, hold her accountable for her repetitive and unchecked projection of those struggles on her own children and failing to forward even the most basic acts of care toward me while I was still in the house. I fault her for be unwilling to listen. I blame her for the resentment she allowed to build and spinning lies to make herself appear less culpable. I’ve perceived a habit amongst much of my maternal family (I hardly know my parternal side) to exhibit accelerated emotional reactions before any objective thought at all, something I’ve taken to heart and walked backward with. Both of my parents were responsible for observing my desperate campaign for a home where they weren’t working against my security, and choosing to blame me instead. The powerless scapegoat was a primitive route to deflection. It was automatic. Looking their destructive habits in the eye would have meant disrupting the entire house, and required a level of self-awareness nobody found important. My dad and I have been able to deconstruct much of this around bonfires in the yard since then, which is why you don’t see as much flack given here. I don’t know if my mom is capable of recognizing how far her faults have reached, but she’s shown me she isn’t willing to rebuild anything to code. I’ve planted my feet firmly in the space that exists between condemnation and submission. I have carried the consequences of her actions for long enough.
    One of the most vivid dialogues I remember from the time when my mom and I were at the height of our clashes was when the one family counselor my mom actually seemed to like said to me “Genna, we can’t just ride in on a white horse and save you.” A mental health professional, coming into a very clearly dysfunctional home and implying the daughter that is old enough to interpret the problem but has no legal autonomy that she shouldn’t expect rescue is so severely flawed. A system I turned to for help, in that moment, out of desperation because I was suffering, told me I was asking for too much. It says “deal with it.” It says “you’re a part of this whether you like it or not.”
    No, I’m not. I never was. If that isn’t the message you were trying to convey, it’s a shame that someone in the role you had didn’t possess enough tact to find other words. And if this ever gets around to you, I hope you’ve changed that rhetoric. I hope you haven’t dismantled the hope of other kids by continuing that cynicism because you don’t deserve a position that exists to serve if you have. Even if you can’t remove someone from their plight, that quote doubled the weight of mine. The brokenness of that statement is why I feel so responsible to advocate for the descendents of abusive family systems because their words and experiences are quashed before the age of eighteen. And afterward, from what I have experienced, it’s worse, because overnight much of society expects you to shove it away and move on.
    I turned eighteen in February of 2013. In January, I had gone to both of my high school counselors with an overwhelming anxiety that when I became of legal age, my parents were going to throw me out. “It will probably blow over,” they said. Dismissed again.
    In March I was kicked out, before I had even reached graduation, and moved in temporarily with a boyfriend I had only had for a few months. There was nothing the school could do for me then. I barely passed my classes, and didn’t attend my gradutation ceremony because there was nothing I could be proud of, and I wasn’t giving my parents one more opportunity to not show up.

    We start asking kids what they want to be when they grow up in the single digits, but we talk over their cries for help. I have seen society as a whole exhibit a disturbing level of contempt for children. So many expectations for their behavior, and even without outright abuse as was my case, those expectations are sometimes divvied out by parents that are less-than-capable of modeling the behaviors they are demanding. There’s an unspoken theme of “you should be better than we are,” with the only roadmap being one of dead ends. Because I was not being beaten or presenting any signs or dialogue of physical abuse, I had to live in that electrically charged, unstable environment until I had rights. I tried removing myself once and was sent to a youth shelter for one night. I was brought back home and the projection from my parents again was instantaneous. The air I breathed was always thick with discourse that I was the problem, and never with concern for the experience I was having. In uncontained frustration, I threw my glasses on the ground and broke them, only exasterbating their perception of my delinquence. I remember, distinctly, the responses from others who knew what was happening inside my house, and still presenting so much pressure to just be grateful it wasn’t worse, and that it would all be over once I hit the magic number. I grieve for the kids that fall into that belief. I got incredibly lucky to have gotten away from that history without being emotionally explosive as I had modelled to me. I steered myself away from that only by internalizing how bad it felt and turning toward anything and everything that looked different- not because I was saved. Despite that success, there will always exist deficits and barriers for me both psychologically and opportunistically. I still walk on eggshells, carrying an unrelieveable tension in my mind and body, because over half of my life so far was spent in the blast radius of nuclear people. I assume most that know me think poorly of me unless directly stated otherwise. I still present enough as a childlike but not childish person that questions about parents come up regularly in my life. There is no simple, easy, or brief response to be given and so I feel equally pushed to overexplain and change the subject at the same time, because the world doesn’t like someone speaking ill of their parents but I refuse to be dishonest. I live with a chronic self-blame and fear of asking for help because doing so historically meant being told how inadequate or irresponsible I was for needing it to begin with. More recently, asking for help has been countered with “what’s in it for me?” And so I am now classified as hyper-independent. It’s not sustainable. Navigating young adult life without family support or example is something I’ve only been able to find contentment in by rejecting everyone else’s voice and making sacrifices many would find unreasonable for the sake of giving myself the chance to foster adolescent G’s dreams, late. Only in the last couple of years have I finally found some quiet, some still air where I can look inward, backward, forward, and truthfully unfold it in more detail because I want to, and not simply to endure.
    To this day my mom never calls unless it’s to deliver bad news, only interested in any connection when she wants someone to comiserate with. I’ve given her grace for as long as I’ve been willing, but too much acceptance gets me right back in that dark loop that I am not willing to walk anymore. Sometimes forgiveness means dismissing reality, and letting it go because she’s my mother is the opening line in a memoir for someone far more complacent than I am. I believe my initial removal from my parents home and resulting bond with my grandparents served to block much of the development of one with her. The personality traits I share with the man that dealt her heavy blows compounded that fracture. I have done the best I can to respect her injuries, but I have known for a while now not to fight where there is no longer space for me. I was not welcome as my mother’s eldest daughter; I understand myself more as some sort of shadow sister.
    ~
    I wonder almost daily what potential I could have fulfilled if I had gotten a better start, if I hadn’t needed to defend myself against my caregivers and got to instead spend that energy on what pursuits I wanted for my own life. I don’t know if those would have been different that what I have now- I’m consistently entertaining the idea that the lack of guidance and only having examples of who not to be set me up for the unpredictable yet wildly rich path I am on now. I’ve had the privilege of parking my van in the liveliest places, asking for little more than a place to just be, in peace. My little house has been the best place for me because I don’t want much more- I only wish for jovial figures that pass across night windows, in the forms of people that have real hope for my arrival home. I deserve that.
    In the years since, I have learned to allow people to be different than those I have known. I have taught myself to feel things and asking myself “is that the person I want to be today,” and responding accordingly. I understand how to tell uncomfortable truths, and letting the response I receive be all that I need to know about someone. I’ve insisted on listening to others’ stories of abuse and not looked for their role in it, because doing so serves to alleviate responsibility from the abuser. I’ve learned not to beg others to care, yet still honor why I have felt the need to. I stand like concrete beside myself and no matter who or what interrupts my path forward, I don’t yield. That’s how I am okay. And if you, dear reader, are the survivor of abuse of any breed, say it to yourself at least one more time. It isn’t your fault.

  • The Eulogy of the Man Who Always Came to My Rescue

    -‘Peace be Still’, by Candy Christmas plays-

    “As once I was, I shall never be. As now I am, I shall ever be.”
    -Jerry Lewis Olliff, aka “Granitehead”

    Good morning, Vietnam. Thank you, to each and every one of you, for being here today. I hope this afternoon finds you well, but I also hope it finds you honest. That’s what it takes to have an audience with Papa. Throughout this presentation I have included excerpts from my own personal writing ‘I Will the Machine’- I can’t think of a more genuine way to fulfill the honor of commanding the memory of him. Personally, I don’t like a world without his sharp commentary very much. Potentially to everyone’s dismay, I hope to take some of that for myself. I had asked him in an email over the winter if he would give me the grace to write about him as it pertained to telling my own story and he replied, I quote, “just don’t cuss me out.”
    Well, game on.

    My name is Genna. I’m Jerry’s granddaughter, and daughter of his fourth child, Beverly. He asked me last summer to do this, as he did for my grandmother, aware of his mortality but with a muted confidence in his voice that his time wasn’t coming soon. He said that if I was to accept, that we would talk about it more. That was the last time we met face to face, and we never were able to talk about it. Still, he is in this room with us, and while I speak to you with words guided only by my own spirit now, I am speaking to him today as well. I am 28-years-old, and even as he stood in as a second father to me, I didn’t have enough time as a comprehending, mature adult to develop much more than a childlike, but not childish, perception of him. My memory of him is frozen, firmly anchored in the time when he and my grandmother were home to me.
    We went a spell without communicating in the past several years, mostly by my choosing, because I am, by my own quote, “a desperate engine that will not stop”, a human locomotive that barrels forward regardless of the will of anyone else, and sometimes that left us both billowing steam as our iron wills clashed. After he attended the visitation of my paternal grandfather last year, what was ultimately the only important thought was shared- we missed each other. I now live in Missouri and coming back home isn’t as easy as it used to be, but soon after we met for dinner and caught up. I provided him the explanation for my absence and… he conceded. I let down my pride, and he met me there. Since then, we had emailed back and forth about this and that, and in one of those messages I wrote “I miss you, and I am always worried about running out of time.” That was March 27th. On April 29th, I received the message about him being in a bad way while I was riding my bicycle on the Katy Trail, a rail-trail that follows the track of the abandoned Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad, to Jefferson City, Missouri. It was an exciting plan for me, 300-miles round trip, and I had previously talked with Papa about my love for that trail, how I had ridden it end to end, and broken the women’s fastest-known-time record with four fresh stitches in my knee. Telling him that story was the first time in a really long time that I had seemed to exceed his expectations for me. I had sent him a link to my GPS this time and let him know that the following weekend I’d be at his house to watch the Kentucky Derby, getting back to a tradition that had been tabled for too long.
    By the time I was riding back from Jefferson City, two days later, we were all coming to grips with the reality that Papa was going to be boarding toward heaven soon, on that long black train to be with my grandma. My friends and family, asking my heart to work so hard while it was breaking is my inspiration for this writing. The ghosts of the Missouri-Kansas-Texas engines assisted me home that day.
    Feel the rolling on the rails as we listen to ‘Country Train’, James Last, a song that has stuck with me since the last time I heard him play it on a roadtrip. It has no lyrics, so use this opportunity to gather your own memories and I will open the floor to anyone who would like to share a story, an apology, or simply something you may have wanted to say before and ran out of time.
    If you knew Papa well, you might consider this as your chance to get your words in without any rebuttal. If anyone has anything written that you haven’t already given to me, you may bring it to me now to read on your behalf.

    -‘Country Train’ plays-

    Firstly, we have a story from Andrea, grandaughter:
    Papa had accepted an invitation to a hotdog roast at her home, in nearby Central. When dessert time came, the fixins for s’mores were brought out, with extra-large marshmallows replacing the standard size. Papa, overzealous as he sometimes was, combined two of those with his portion, and the immediate consequence was him wearing molten marshmallow as an unsolicited boutonneire. “I’ve never made a s’more before,” he said. I suppose he had s’more to learn.
    Leanne, daughter, shares this:
    Both she and Papa were seated on his tractor- he was teaching her to drive it. He paused. Suddenly, the task at hand was significantly less important in his mind than dismounting to chase a black racer snake through the grass in an attempt to catch it, leaving Leanne on the tractor to watch. He evidently lost. It’s safe to say any atheticism in our family did not come from him if he can’t win a footrace with something that has no legs.
    I will now turn the mic over to Travis, Papa’s former colleage at Rohm & Haas, for his contribution.

    If anyone else would like to speak, please rise.

    Papa was honest, critical even, and rather unfiltered except for the sake of humor. For example, when you asked him what happened to the pointer finger that he was half-missing, you couldn’t easily get the real or consistent answer on that one. The story I remember the most clearly was that he traded it in a transaction for a trained hunting dog the owner wanted an arm and a leg for, so he just settled for a pup. I am unaware if that story came before or after the beagle he aptly named “Stubby.” When asked by someone else, he said he lost it in some unholy story about grabbing a buck by the- WAIT, he asked me not to cuss… Aw, heck.

    I spent my most impressionable and vulnerable years with Papa and Grandma. With 14 acres of land to run unabashedly, I drew energy from the golden hours, the cedar trees, the bellowing bull frogs, and the shrill of wild but shy coyotes.
    It was picture day, first grade. I remember my little blue dress being caught in the barbed wire fence across the road when the bus dropped me off at my parent’s house, but nobody was home. I freed myself, and ran panicked and crying and tripped through the tall grass of my grandparents’ field toward their house. It was only a half mile or so wide but I felt small enough to be carried away by a red-tail if it saw me.
    The earth between the barbed-wire borders of McPhillip’s road was where stability lived; since then my feralness was fostered there too. I flung my distressed little self through the door of their house, where they quieted me and I was again sitting in the sunroom gazing through north-facing windows. I looked out past the field, and the evil fence, at the house that I had arrived to, but didn’t quite recognize as home- the house that my next memory of is watching from that same window as it was being hollowed out by fire.
    In all of the time that I spent at his house, running loose on his property with just myself or with my cousins and my little sister, Sierra, until his long-draw “supper’s ready!” I asked him questions about everything. If he didn’t know the answer, he would find it. My curiosity matched his.
    I had travelled with him on many a road trip, and heard so many classic stories between him and the people he met or reunited with on our trips, and although he won’t be here to read or spectate when any more of my own story is written or told, I’ve long wanted it to be one that fascinated him on equal grounds. He was a challenge to impress, and for that reason I’ll never be complacent either.
    Papa, I take this opportunity to challenge you openly, again. You’ve said a number of times that I’m too sensitive. This isn’t a unique criticism, but it was more difficult to brush off from you, because you are one of the few people in my life who I really wanted my pursuit of happiness to vicariously please. That sensitivity was information for you, that you mattered. Your approval mattered. Hearing you laugh at my wit, taking pause as you processed something unexpected I had said, and feeling that I was trusted with the sanctity of my own wellbeing despite doing everything the wrong way… mattered. It all comes from the same place. Sensitivity could be seen as weakness in a tumultuous world like ours, but I think that is also what it takes to shake the room. I’m not interested in armour. I taught me to be kinda soft, you taught me to be kinda viscious, when to not take any… scat. It is the reason I could so meticulously choose my words for this. The willingness to forgive, relive, to gather and show our humility is the reason we are here right now. The only other thing that we needed to graple with the suddenness of this is you. You were right, when you repeatedly took pause after leaving the bathroom and said “there is something about an Aqua Velva man”. I am convinced that you single-handedly kept that aftershave on the shelves for almost 100-years. You are the reason we all got into trouble, but not more than you could get us out of. You are the reason my sister, my dad, and I pulled roughly 1000 vinyl records I told you I wanted to save out of that collapsing old house. You are the curator of hoards of text on our family tree, unprompted nature fun-facts, out-of-context letters from a time long-gone, and obscure recipes from down south. You might be the inspiration, or the last straw, that drove a couple of people in this room to jump out of perfectly good airplanes. You’re the reason we had a mother and a grandmother like Kate. And according to you, you’re the reason the saying goes “close only counts in horseshoes and hand grenades.”

    -Pause-

    None of us were ready. I am convinced he wasn’t either. However, may we each take a breath and release our tension, knowing that he is home, with the magnolias in bloom and the spanish moss swaying in a gentle Georgia wind, reuinited with Grayson, Grandma Sauls, Kate, Stubby, everyone he ever or never met whose grave he found as he followed our ancestry, his oceans-wide tally of friends gone before him, and his missing finger.

    We will listen to another song by James Last, ‘Music from Across the Way’, chosen specifically because he marked this song on the sleeve of his record with a checkmark and “good” next to it.
    I choose to believe that this was you, Papa, having just a little bit of say-so. This isn’t Burger King, but have it your way.

    -‘Music from Across the Way’ plays-