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There Have Always Been Words

In the mid-1990s, I lost my footing and fell into an abyss. I won’ describe the circumstances or the depth of my grief and depression, my dissection and examination of everything that came before and during, or of my stop-and-go journey toward healing. Suffice to say, those were really tough years.

I took to the sanctuary of a series of journals as a tool to help process the intensity of my feelings, and the books have accompanied me ever since. The life I’m grateful to have today bears little resemblance to the one I struggled to crawl out of, but the journals remain—silent reminders of a dark time. Over the years, I’ve wondered what I should do with them. They’re not the kind of journal I’d want to leave behind for anyone to read after I’m gone, and I’ve never returned to them.

I knew I wanted to destroy them. Toss them in the trash? No, that didn’t seem right. Shred them? I simply couldn’t imagine putting the pages where I poured out tender feelings through the trauma of a shredder. In destroying the journals, I wanted to honour the woman who wrote them and worked so damn hard to make it through.

I started thinking in terms of the earth’s elements—fire, water, air, and wind—and how I might harness the power of one of them. First, I thought I would burn them, but the logistics of doing so seemed complicated. I remembered the worm bin I once had and thought how perfect it would have been to create compost to put in my garden and support new growth with my words. Wind? That didn’t seem like a wise or effective option. Then, it came to me one night. Use water, and transform the pages into recycled paper. Something new. A final clearing out. A redemption.

And so, my work began.

I ripped the pages out of each book in turn, tearing them into small pieces and dropping them into a bucket. I didn’t read any of the journals before beginning, but couldn’t help catch a glimpse of the odd phrase while I worked and my heart hurt for the woman who endured. I worked quietly, transforming journal pages into a bucket of torn scraps. My fingertips grew dry and cracked, blackened with pencil graphite and blue with stains from ink. Finally, the work, done, and the bucket, full, I drowned my words in boiling water to start the process of creating a slurry from which to create recycled paper pages.

Now, I wait. Will this work? I don’t know. Over the next few days, I’ll stir the mixture and work my fingers through it until it seems of a consistency suitable for drying. Already, I can see that I might want to rinse to pour off some of the pencil graphite. I have a couple of ideas of how I might use the paper should it turn out, but we’ll see. Maybe I’ll just bury the whole gloopy mess in the garden to feed the soil.

Right now, all I know is that it’s been therapeutic to finally destroy those old journals. Something new will be created in their place, and that’s how it should be.


Comments

One response to “There Have Always Been Words”

  1. Linda, Following along in your journey and awaiting the outcome. It feels to me like creating a special paper would honor the buried words, a beautiful tribute to your healing.

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