Tag: memoir

  • the roads that raised me

    The house I lived in then was barely five hundred square feet, and most days I could feel every inch of it. The narrowness wasn’t just architectural; it was the intimacy of a space that holds only what you need and very little extra. There was a comfort in that kind of minimalism, the way it forced an honesty about my life. I had enough plates for one person and maybe two. A coffee maker that sputtered like it was remembering something. My uncle’s television and a couch the color of a sunrise someone turned up too bright. And in the back room, the silhouettes of my mother, grandmother, and great-grandmother hung in a row, their profiles quiet and observing, like they were keeping a ledger only they knew how to read.

    That Thanksgiving morning was bright but cold, a typical Laramie contradiction. The walls hummed with the faint memory of warmth. My dog shifted in her sleep, three-legged and stubborn, her breathing soft enough to blend with the refrigerator. I had no intention of cooking. The holiday had become less about food and more about the stillness it allowed. For once, the world expected nothing from me.

    Despite the holiday, the house felt like an ordinary day — but the memories arrived anyway. They came in slow, not as ambushes but as invitations. I could open them without collapsing. That still surprised me.

    That day, the roads came back first.


    There were the roads to Burns, the long stretch from wherever I was living at the time — Cheyenne, Laramie, no fixed point — to that small house my grandparents occupied like it was a final frontier. Burns never asked for much. A few blocks of houses, plain and sturdy. A water tower. A horizon that pressed right up against the town’s edge as if daring someone to leave. But the house itself held enough texture to shape my memory.

    I think most about the times my dad drove me, especially the one where he let me take the wheel of my mother’s Buick. It was a rare permission. I had wanted to drive that car for so long, watching my mother grip its wheel like it was the only thing she trusted. The car smelled faintly of her: powder, gum wrappers, something else I can’t quite name anymore. Dad’s voice came casually from the passenger seat — go ahead, take it — and in that moment I was suspended between elation and terror.

    The sky that morning was split in two, one half blue, the other gray. It had just rained, the kind where the air feels rinsed, and every puddle on the pavement mirrored the sky. The Buick was heavier than anything I had driven before, and I could feel the suspension in my bones as I steered around the first curve.

    That’s when the hydroplaning happened — quick, slippery, a moment that lifted me out of certainty. The wheels lost their grip, just a fraction of a second, but enough that time stretched. I felt the car rise slightly, the steering wheel loosening in my hands. My breath caught. The interior lit up with morning light bouncing off the puddles, too bright for such a quiet scare.

    I didn’t say anything.

    I didn’t want to lose the privilege of driving.

    I didn’t know if my dad felt it too.

    He didn’t look at me, or if he did, I didn’t see it. He was staring ahead, trusting me more than I trusted myself. Eventually the tires found the road again, and I pretended nothing had happened. My heart took longer to land.

    That stretch of road — wet, shimmering, quiet — became part of my internal map. When I think of Burns now, I think of that sky, that split between blue and gray, the brief sense that the car and I had become unmoored.


    The actual house in Burns was its own character. There was the odd bathroom where the washer lived, with a hose snaking into the toilet because that’s how the plumbing made sense. Above it hung classic car calendars, the kinds with old muscle cars and women posed on their hoods. My grandpa didn’t care what month or year it was; the calendars stayed even when their dates no longer applied to anything. They were decorations of a sort, reminders of a world that made him laugh or dream or simply pass the time.

    His desk was the sacred part of the house for me. It was the only place I knew where every pen worked. Every marker, every calculator. Nothing scratched or stuttered. He valued function and he valued humor; The Far Side comics he tacked up or collected felt like extensions of him — absurd, dry, unexpectedly wise. I learned to see the world through those cartoons: cows with opinions, scientists in trouble, spiders having existential questions. The humor made room for my own quiet oddities.

    The basement, though, was the heart. It smelled faintly of dust and old paper, cool even in summer. The typewriter sat like a relic, heavy and sure of itself. My grandpa would sit down there and type letters to us, the keys clacking in rhythms that felt both chaotic and comforting. Sometimes insects got caught in the process — a deaf bumblebee, a squished spider — pressed into the margins like unintended punctuation marks. Those tiny marks of the basement accompanied his words across miles. They were not mistakes. They were signatures of the room itself.

    When I was driving to college with my dad and the Buick moment happened, I was leaving one life and entering another without knowing it. Burns stayed the same, though — watching from the edges of my adolescence with a quiet, steady love.


    The Vedauwoo dreams came later, threaded through the years when everything felt precarious. In the dreams, I was driving over the pass, the one between Laramie and Cheyenne, the granite formations rising like ancient teeth on either side. But the weather was always impossibly snowy, steeper than real life. The road would disappear beneath me, and suddenly I wasn’t driving anymore — I was sledding down the pass, sliding uncontrollably, the world tilting at an angle that made my stomach drop. The dream didn’t end in a crash or death. It just ended in motion, a sense of descent without resolution.

    Looking back, it wasn’t a dream about dying. It was a dream about losing control, about being pulled into adulthood faster than I could stabilize myself. It was the hydroplaning moment magnified and stretched into a landscape. Even in sleep, my body remembered that sensation of the ground slipping out from under me, the way fear can arrive without warning and then vanish without explanation. Those dreams always left me waking with the taste of snow in my mouth, as if fear had a texture.


    The roads to Gillette were their own education.

    Denver to Laramie to Casper to Buffalo to Gillette — each stretch with its own temperament. Some parts were monotonous, endless prairie that lulled me into thinking I knew what was coming. Other parts were violent in their weather changes, the wind pushing the car sideways, the snow hiding the ditches.

    There was one year when a storm hit hard enough that I couldn’t make it past Cheyenne. The snow was coming down in sheets, sideways, the kind of storm that feels personal. I turned the car around and ended up staying with my grandparents again. They opened the door like they always did — delighted, relieved, unguarded. It didn’t matter that the roads had forced me into their home. They acted like I had come intentionally, as if I had remembered something important about where I belonged.

    The house was warm in that familiar, slightly stale way that belongs to older homes — the furnace blasting, the air thick with old carpet and whatever had been cooked hours earlier. My grandma fussed over where to put my bag. My grandpa was already pulling on his heavy coat because storms always made him antsy, and he needed to walk a bit before bed.

    He had always been a walker. Even in his later years, when his steps had grown shorter and his back curved into its own quiet question mark, he insisted on walking the small blocks of Burns as if they were a duty he owed the world. By then, he wore Depends tucked under his jeans. Sometimes they sagged a little. Sometimes there was the faint smell of urine or worse — a smell he couldn’t entirely help anymore. It didn’t embarrass me. If anything, it made me love him more. It was proof of how hard he was trying to stay himself even as his body betrayed him. Proof that he still wanted to move through the world under his own power.

    I told him I wanted to stretch my legs after the drive, and he brightened. Really brightened. His whole face opened the way it used to when we were little and he’d say, “Let’s go get the mail,” like it was a grand outing.

    So we walked — slowly, carefully — into the kind of snow that makes all sound disappear. The storm had quieted for a moment, just long enough for us to step outside. Streetlights cast wide cones of light that caught the snowflakes in yellow halos. Our breath rose thick and white in front of us. The houses were dark except for a few porch lights left on as a kind of prayer for anyone still on the road.

    He waddled a bit, the way older men do when they’re trying not to slip, trying not to let their dignity fall out of their pockets. I matched my pace to his. Neither of us said much. We didn’t need to. His presence was enough — solid, gentle, aging but still unmistakably him.

    We didn’t walk long — maybe one block up and one block back — because the wind picked up again and the snow started needling our faces. But in that short stretch, something in me settled. I felt wanted. I felt chosen. Not for what I could offer, not for what I could perform, but simply because he was happy I was there.

    Back inside, he stomped snow off his shoes in the entryway and laughed at himself for being “too old for this.” My grandma handed him a towel. He took it with a seriousness that bordered on ceremonial, like drying off after walking me through a storm was the last important job he’d ever needed to do.

    Later, in the small bedroom where I slept under a quilt that smelled faintly of their detergent, I listened to the storm reassert itself. The wind pushed against the siding. Snow slapped the windows. But inside, I felt held in a way I hadn’t felt in years — not rescued, not fixed, just sheltered.

    That’s what comes back when I think of that storm — not the fear of the roads or the whiteout conditions or the way the car fishtailed on the exit ramp.

    I remember the walk.

    I remember his pace.

    I remember how deeply I loved him.

    I remember how safe I felt next to a man who smelled a little like aging and diapers and winter air — and who, without saying a word, made me feel like I was worth coming in from the storm for.


    I think sometimes about the night before I left home for college. I was in the basement room, the one with the waterbed that sloshed whenever I shifted, the one that always felt a little humid no matter the season. I had packed most of my things into boxes I wasn’t sure would fit into the car. The room felt smaller that night, like the walls were aware I was leaving and wanted one last chance to close in on me.

    The basement had always been my refuge and my exile — the place I could disappear into, away from the tension that lived upstairs. It was where I learned to stay small, where I tried to make myself into someone my mother might like more, or at least dislike less. But that night, with the boxes lining the floor and the waterbed gently shifting under me, I wondered how often I would come back. I wondered what would happen to the version of myself that had grown up in that dark, low-ceilinged room.

    I fell asleep knowing everything was about to change, though I didn’t have the vocabulary for it. Growing up is a slow burn until suddenly it’s a door you’ve walked through without realizing it.

    When I returned that first Thanksgiving, everything looked the same but felt different. I remember coming in through the garage and touching the gray carpet in the hallway — a carpet I’d walked on thousands of times — and feeling a jolt of recognition that didn’t settle into comfort. The hall felt narrower, the ceiling lower, the air denser. It was my house, technically, but it wasn’t mine anymore. Something in me had already shifted, and the familiar space didn’t know how to hold it.

    I don’t remember how I got home that year. Maybe I had a car. Maybe I carpooled. The details blur except for that moment touching the carpet, realizing I was returning to a version of home that had already begun to recede.

    But I do remember the food. I remember standing in the kitchen doorway, watching my mother move with a competence that seemed ancient, older than her dislike of me, older than all the years we’d spent misunderstanding one another. The smell of Thanksgiving — her Thanksgiving — filled the house: potatoes, rolls, something sweet in the oven. For a brief moment, I let myself feel like a kid again, safe in the certainty of a holiday meal that tasted the same every year.

    I sat at the table and ate without thinking about how the house had changed shape around me. I let my body believe, just for that weekend, that home was still a place I could return to. It didn’t last, of course, but the moment was real — the kind of small mercy memory keeps alive even after everything else breaks.


    My grandparents’ house and my childhood home stand at opposite ends of what “family” has meant to me. One held gentleness. The other held survival. And somewhere in between was the house of my uncle — the one I cared for long after he was gone, the one that still feels like an unclaimed inheritance of the heart.

    When my uncle died, another kind of road opened — the road back to Long Circle. I stayed in that house for him, because it felt like the last place where love had lived in my adult life without causing harm. I cleaned. I paid what I could. I tended the yard. I tended his memory. I tended the grief that had nowhere else to go.

    Even in that small Laramie house, I kept pieces of him scattered like small shrines: a television too large for the living room, a few objects I didn’t part with, the echoes of conversations we never got to finish. I regret the things I gave away — shirts, old papers, mugs — not because they were valuable but because they held the textures of him. Absence is loud in hindsight.

    The legal battles, the trust documents, the accusations — those came later, unwanted and cruel. They tried to rewrite the story. Tried to paint me as a trespasser in a house I had protected. That betrayal still lives somewhere in my ribcage, an ache I touch sometimes when I’m tired. But even that story doesn’t erase the real one — the love he gave freely, without spectacle, without condition.


    I have left that small Laramie house now. The pink couch came with me. So did the dog, still stubborn, still three-legged. So did the silhouettes of the women on the wall, quiet and watchful as ever. Some things you carry not because they are easy but because they are yours.

    That Thanksgiving morning — the light through the windows, the half-blue half-gray sky, the dog sighing into the silence — I didn’t know yet how many more roads were still ahead. I only knew that I had survived the ones behind me.

    The truth is simple:

    I survived because the roads raised me.

    Because the houses taught me what love is and isn’t.

    Because the people who opened their doors — my grandparents, my uncle — left ways of being in the world that still guide me.

    Wyoming gave me the shape of myself.

    And wherever I go next, I’m taking all of it with me.

  • chlorine tongue

    Some essays, some days, end up a choppy mess. My writing is on training wheels as I pull up ChatGPT on my phone and feed it memory after memory noticing the air starting to smell of bleach when the tears come. I use my thumbs to slide type memory after memory trying to Frankenstein the memories to make a life I’m proud of. I tell myself I’m writing it all down before I’m forgotten. I’m already forgotten.

    There’s this thing called the hedonistic treadmill that we are all on. I have spent plenty of time on a treadmill used to punish and cope trying to burn fat and burn memories at the same time. I feel especially noble when I go longer than a hour because its all good mental training but I’ve got no race upcoming. Just the race to write it all down before my lung collapse, my heart bursts, my brains stop producing electricity.

    The treadmill means that despite the private chef and mountain dinner I saw you post on Facebook looking glamorous in nighttime chateaus—happiness is elusive for you, too. No matter what happens to you, or me, or anyone really, life will always crash. A fall on the treadmill. Embarrassing, shameful, but no one really cares because they weren’t watching you run on the treadmill in the first place.

    The hedonistic treadmill was never theory to me—it was the machine in the basement gym, the one that shook a little when I hit my stride. Thud thud thud. I’d throw a towel over the screen so the miles couldn’t taunt me, let the numbers sweat in the dark while I kept going. The belt always felt a hair too fast, like it knew something I didn’t. My lungs would start their small rebellion, my calves knotting themselves into warnings, but I’d stay on until the world blurred at the edges. There was a moment—always around minute forty—when the body stopped asking for mercy and just… obeyed. That strange, bleak surrender. That quiet lie that the next footfall might finally change something.

    And then there was always the slip. Not a dramatic one—just that half-second where your heel skims wrong and the belt keeps going without you. A reminder that the machine doesn’t care about your pace, your reasons, your history. It just moves. I’d steady myself, pretend it didn’t jolt me, pull the towel tighter like a blindfold. Thud thud thud. The room humming with fluorescent indifference. There was something almost honest in that moment, the way the body startles before the mind can invent a story. A brief flash of who you really are when the belt jerks and no one’s watching.

    Meanwhile, somewhere else, you were posting those mountain dinners—the candlelit plates, the chateau windows catching the dusk like they’d been engineered for it. A private chef pouring sauce in a perfect ribbon. I saw it between miles, the glow of your life cupped in my hand like something breakable. The belt kept dragging me forward while your night sat perfectly still, staged, unbothered. Thud thud thud. Sweat in my eyes. Your fork paused mid-air. Two versions of living scrolling past each other with all the intimacy of strangers on opposite treadmills—close enough to glimpse, never close enough to touch.

    What they don’t tell you about the hedonistic treadmill is how quickly the body normalizes even the beautiful things. Lottery winners go back to baseline in months; paraplegics, too—though slower, in a different key. Joy burns off like steam; pain settles in like weather. Adaptation is ruthless, almost loyal in its simplicity. I think about that when the belt finds its rhythm under me, when minute forty becomes minute forty-one and the suffering feels strangely familiar, like something the body has been rehearsing for years. The machine never gives you credit for endurance. It treats a triumph like a Tuesday. The same way your chateau dinners become ordinary to you, just another night, while I’m still caught on the treadmill’s half-life of hope—how it spikes, then dissolves, leaving only the thud thud thud of whatever comes next.

    The bleach smell comes when I’ve been crying long enough that my head feels dipped under—chlorine-thick, pool-slick, the kind of chemical sting that somehow steadies you instead of warning you away. I usually write in bed, early morning, the Laramie light still half-asleep, and the tears do what they do: burn at first, then go quiet, leaving that faint swimming-pool aura clinging to my skin. Not unpleasant. More like a reset button the body invented. I’ve bleach-stained half my wardrobe over the years trying to chase that same feeling—over-scrubbing, over-cleaning, as if the fabric might hold the clarity longer than I could. The page knows the smell by now. It rises around me the same way sweat does on the treadmill: not a sign of effort, but a sign I’ve stopped fighting it and slipped into whatever rhythm carries me forward.

    There’s always one memory that won’t bleach out, though it hasn’t even bothered to exist yet. Some future burn, some future clarity, circling like a storm that can’t make up its mind about landfall. I keep rinsing my life anyway—scrubbing the mornings in this Laramie bed, running the same miles on the same worn belt—hoping the meaning will appear in the residue. Maybe that’s the treadmill, too: not the pursuit of pleasure, but the chase for a moment that might finally explain all the others. The page smells like chlorine because I’m prepping for a memory that refuses to arrive, wiping down the present as if it might reveal the blueprint underneath. Thud thud thud in my head even when I’m not running. The sense that something is coming, or should be, or would be, if I could just keep myself clean enough to notice it.

    This house in Laramie feels like a holding tank, a place where the version of me I keep chasing might finally drift close enough to study. The walls don’t offer wisdom, but they do echo—just enough to remind me I’m not finished yet. Mornings here stretch out like runway lights, the kind meant for takeoff but repurposed for circling. I write in the bed that sags a little in the middle, listening to the wind scrape against the siding like it’s trying to sand me down to something essential. Maybe this place isn’t home so much as a pressure chamber, the altitude forcing whatever truth I’ve buried to rise, bubble by stubborn bubble. I keep waiting to hear the click—some internal latch unlocking—but mostly it’s just the low hum of a life that hasn’t decided what shape it wants to be. A holding tank. A waiting room. A treadmill with better scenery.

    But the bleach-scent mornings here in Laramie keep me honest. The tears hit, the air sharpens, and suddenly I’m awake in a way the treadmill never managed. There’s no performance in this room, no digital readout pacing my worth. Just my bed, the wind shouldering the siding, and me trying to wrench something true out of myself before the day crowds in. It feels almost surgical sometimes—this need to cut through the noise, rinse everything down to the part that still hurts, still matters. I don’t know if that’s meaning or just survival. But it’s the only place I’ve found where the burn doesn’t feel wasted.

    The chlorine smell lingers, but the room stays still, like it’s waiting for me to confess something I don’t have words for yet. My face feels raw. My shirt is ruined. The bed looks the same as it did yesterday and the day before that, but something in the air is off—tilted, chemical, bright around the edges. I stare at the ceiling until the shapes blur, the way they used to when I’d push too hard on the treadmill and the whole world would dissolve into a single, pulsing point.

    The truth is uglier than anything I’ve written:

    I’m not trying to clean a memory.

    I’m trying to create one strong enough to hold me.

    The bleach, the sweat, the thud of the belt—none of it lifts. It only digs channels through whatever I am, as if the body keeps making room for something that refuses to arrive. The writing scorches the edges, leaves a heat you can’t point to but still feel hours later.

    There’s no lesson here.

    No revelation.

    Just the quiet, chemical fact of it:

    I keep going because stopping feels like vanishing.