You do not have to be good.

Before you go on further, I would like to issue a trigger warning: I mention some things about trauma and abuse, and while there aren’t any specific details, if these topics make you uncomfortable, please take care.

You do not have to be good.

In my first year of high school, at the age of 14, I came to the conclusion that I had been holding onto a secret for far too long.

And so, on a relatively normal night, after dinner had been eaten and the table cleared, I ran into my room, sitting alone for an amount of time that felt, all at once, like a few minutes and a few hours, fleeting and endless. I was frantic, yet a calm, steady voice whispered past the pounding heart in my chest: tell them.

And then I did: I told my family about how I endured sexual abuse at the hands of a family member for years in silence.

I can’t make out the details, truthfully, about how it all started, what my first day was like with this truth out in the world–traumatic events have a way of blurring your days together–but one day I was in therapy, sitting on a couch in front of a bubbly, vibrant, hippie-ish (in the most loving way possible) woman who took my dark truths from me, set them aside, and let me leave them there.

She asked me what I liked to do, and I listed off my hobbies: I like reading; I always have. I love musical theatre, and I can’t help but sing along to music, as if I’m part of it. I like to draw and paint.I write poetry.

That seemed to strike a chord: one day, she handed me a sheet of paper and asked me to read what was on it.

You do not have to be good. It felt like an affirmation. A command–gentle, but firm. I continued:

You do not have to walk on your knees 

for a hundred miles through the desert, repenting.

You only have to let the soft animal of your body

love what it loves.

Tell me about despair, yours, and I will tell you mine.

Meanwhile the world goes on.

Meanwhile the sun and the clear pebbles of rain

are moving across the landscapes,

over the prairies and the deep trees,

the mountains and the rivers.

Meanwhile the wild geese, high in the clean blue air,

are heading home again.

Whoever you are, no matter how lonely,

the world offers itself to your imagination,

calls to you like the wild geese, harsh and exciting–

over and over announcing your place

in the family of things.

I fell in love instantly, even if I didn’t understand it all at first.

Wild Geese became the safety blanket I clung to when I felt the trauma creeping in like a dark fog, cutting through it like a beam from a lighthouse. I would trace the words over and over in my mind until I nearly memorized the whole poem.

When I could no longer stand in a crowded room without it spinning: You do not have to be good.

When the rage burned through my stomach: You do not have to be good.

When I was asked, too early, far too early, if I could learn what forgiveness felt like: You do not have to be good.

When my body was confused and feeling something that wasn’t there. When I couldn’t sleep. You do not have to be good.

Mary Oliver and I, as I’ve come to learn, have gone through some very similar experiences in life. Mary Oliver knew what it felt to be trapped in a body–and knew how words and the gentle hum of nature continuing its work in spite of constant suffering could make freedom feel possible. She knew what rage felt like.

She carried trauma, heavy, dark, ugly trauma, and yet continued to fall in love in many ways: with the romantic poets who inspired her to put pen to paper, with the brutal world around her, with her lover Molly Malone Cook.

When Mary Oliver passed away a few months ago, I found a rare clip of her reading her work aloud and played it on my drive home.

As I turned onto my road, she began, in her steady voice, to read Wild Geese, and I began to weep in the way one does when they hear something so deeply beautiful that they miss it as soon as it starts.

Friday night, I made my favorite poem an indelible part of me, and I couldn’t be happier.

Thank you, Mary, for giving me Wild Geese.

SPOTLIGHT: Bookish Adventures in Buffalo!

Last weekend, my boyfriend and I packed up my tiny Kia Forte for a short getaway to Buffalo, NY, one of our favorite cities.

Something that you guys may not know about me is that I am a pretty huge hockey fan. Despite living smack dab in the middle of Islanders, Bruins, and Rangers territory, I am a huge Montreal Canadiens fan, thanks to my boyfriend. Buffalo is a really great hockey town, and it was the reason for our first trip there a few years ago: the NHL draft was being hosted there, and we quickly fell in love with the city.

After stopping by Toronto to visit some friends (who have a gorgeous bookshelf and a bunch of plants all over their house, but you are going to have to take my word for that because I didn’t want to be the weirdo taking pictures of their home), we made it to Buffalo in time to indulge in some fantastic hockey: the National Women’s Hockey League (NWHL) was in the midst of their playoffs. Their city’s team, the Buffalo Beauts, have a huge amount of support and are a massively successful team, having made it to the championship finals in all four years of the league’s existence. It was a thrilling game, and the Buffalo fans made it all the better. I’d be lying if I didn’t say I got a little emotional seeing a women’s league being so heavily supported. :’)

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We had amazing seats to boot. If you’re in the area, please do go support the Beauts and other hockey teams in Buffalo. There’s an incredible energy when it comes to sports in this city!

Anyway, back to bookish things. On Sunday, we had a lot of time on our hands to explore the city–my boyfriend had surprised me with tickets to Hozier that night, which was the reason for our trip, but we had until 8:00 to meander around the city.

Of course, I was on the hunt for a bookstore, even though my shelves are as full as they possibly can be.

 

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I came across a little indie bookstore called Westside Stories, and I am so incredibly glad that we decided to go there, because it is a very special little place.

Filled to the brim with used books of all kinds, Westside Stories is a cozy space with a definite community focus. I was amazed at the mix of vintage editions and newer titles, with a few ARCs sprinkled in. I found a truly gorgeous copy of Paradise Lost by John Milton that I couldn’t pass up, along with the ARC of Sing, Unburied, Sing by Jesmyn Ward, a title I’ve been wanting to pick up for a long time.

Westside Stories also carries totes, tee shirts, and other adorable bookish gifts like pins, bookmarks, and postcards, many of them from Out of Print. They also had their own merchandise, which I could not pass up: a gorgeous tee shirt featuring an illustration of their storefront.

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Joe, one of the owners of the store, he helped us out and chatted with us about the store and the area. He clearly has a lot of passion for his store and it shows–he was incredibly friendly and had recommendations for other customers, even going as far as to recommend another bookstore down the street when a customer couldn’t find a book they were looking for. We chatted about Westside Stories’ “Blind Date with a Book,” something they began featuring one Valentine’s Day, but was so popular that they kept it as a tradition in the store: they have wrapped books at the counter with a list of basic topics and themes that the book is about. They’re nice enough to offer that if you have the book already, you can return it after opening.

I picked up a book with this description:

  • 1800s England
  • Social justice
  • Romance

Eagerly waiting to see what book lay inside, I unwrapped it in my car to find that it was Emma by Jane Austen, a classic I haven’t read before and am excited to dive into soon!

If you’re in the Buffalo area, please visit Westside Stories. It’s a wonderful place run by wonderful people.

I also picked up some nerdy, bookish merchandise from BoxLunch Gifts, a store in the Walden Galleria (with other stores across the US) specializing in fandoms of all kinds that donates a meal for those in need for every $10 spent.

I, like many people, am eagerly awaiting the newest season of Game of Thrones. When I found this House Stark dad hat, I knew I had to get it.

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The sigil is embroidered! How could I not?!

After grabbing a beautiful plate of wings (Buffalo’s specialty) at Pearl Street Grill and Brewery that I ate too quickly to get a proper picture of, we headed to Shea’s Performing Arts Center for the Hozier concert!

Shea’s is a newly-restored theater with an absolutely stunning interior: nineteenth century designed ceilings; intricate lattice designs; and patterned, lush carpets make up the interior of this theater. I feel like Hozier’s music, already ambient and otherworldly at times, fit right in at this place, filling the cavernous ceiling.

Hozier’s newest album, Wasteland, Baby! is an ode to love and perseverance during a time that feels like the end of the world. It’s as soulful and crushing as it is electric and bouncing, and this tour only enhances its magic.

And I only cried, like, twice. It’s fine.

The opener for this tour, Jade Bird, completely blew me away. She’s a spitfire of a vocalist with an incredible range and plucky songs about heartache. Her new album is coming out in the middle of April, and she’s worth a listen. Her set earned her a well-deserved standing ovation in the first show of the tour, and she has kept receiving them as the tour has continued. If you’re a fan of artists like The Civil Wars, Joy Williams, Brandi Carlisle, and Julien Baker, please check her out!

Now for the full haul from our trip:

I had, as you all can imagine, a pretty large haul from this trip. Buffalo is a city that keeps inspiring me to come back to it, and one that my boyfriend and I truly have grown to love. We will definitely be coming back to our favorite corner of upstate NY soon.

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