Riding with the Dead ©️

It was sometime around supper, the Alabama sun finally bleeding out over the pines, painting the road in that syrupy, honeyed kind of light that makes you forget just how mean the world can be. We were riding in that beat-up side-by-side behind the cotton fields, wheels kicking up dust like red ghosts in the rearview.

She sat up front with her husband, her hair pinned neat like Sunday morning, even if it was only Friday. He was a Yankee—God help him—all tight shoulders and Indiana jaw, gripping the wheel like it might betray him. He didn’t fit in the seat or the silence. Didn’t know how to let the heat speak. His shirt was too clean, his mouth too closed, and Lord, did he drive like a man waiting to be punished.

She didn’t say much. Just looked out toward the tree line, where the light makes things look farther away than they are. She wasn’t angry. No, it was something quieter than that. Like maybe she’d made peace with something awful, or maybe she’d just grown too tired to pick the fight.

Their boy was in the middle, covered in dust and grinning like a possum. Laughing, wild, free. He didn’t know about inheritance yet. Didn’t know blood could bend time. He just liked the speed and the wind and being between them.

I sat in the back, out of the way, watching like I always do. I wasn’t there for the ride. I was there for the reveal.

And sure enough, it came.

I blinked. Just once. Nothing dramatic.

And when I opened my eyes, it wasn’t her and that Yankee at all. It was my paternal grandparents. My grandfather with his thundercloud eyes and rough hands, and my grandmother, stiff and sugar-laced, the kind of woman who could apologize and wound you in the same breath. They were sitting there, plain as day, but wearing different skin.

It was the way he held the wheel—like he wanted to win at driving. And the way she turned her head slightly away, not out of fear but survival. I saw it all—the old fights, the unsaid things, the long silences filled with obligation. I saw the dirt that never left the bloodline.

And that Yankee—poor fool—he didn’t even know he was wearing a ghost.

Because that’s the trick in the South: we don’t pass down heirlooms. We pass down wounds. And they ride with us, talk through us, love through us. Even when the voice has a northern accent and no idea what it’s inherited.

I sat there, just breathing, just listening to the wheels grind over the land my people never left. And I thought—Lord, she married a Yankee. But the curse? The curse stayed Southern.

The Unbearable Lightness ©️

You know, there’s this strange thing about loss. It doesn’t just take something from you—it reshapes the space it leaves behind. It changes how you see things, how you feel things. And sometimes, it makes you question everything: people, intentions, even yourself. I’ve been thinking about that a lot lately, how grief can turn even the simplest of relationships into something… complicated.

When someone you love is gone, the world suddenly feels a little off-kilter, like you’re trying to navigate by a compass that doesn’t point north anymore. And in the scramble to figure it all out, we start holding onto what feels tangible, what feels safe. But sometimes, in that holding on, we can forget the things that don’t have weight or shape—the things you can’t count or measure.

Here’s the thing: people aren’t perfect, but the best relationships aren’t about perfection. They’re about trust. About knowing, deep down, that the person sitting across from you has your back, no matter what. That’s what love is—it’s showing up, day after day, even when things feel messy or unsure.

And maybe that’s where we get tripped up. Because when life feels fragile, it’s easy to misread people’s intentions. It’s easy to wonder if they’re here for you or for what you have to give. But when we let those questions fester, they can overshadow the truth.

And the truth? The truth is that what matters most can’t be bought or traded. It’s the quiet moments. The laughter. The way you feel when you know someone really sees you for who you are. That’s the currency that holds value, the thing that stays long after everything else fades.

So if you’re ever wondering why someone is standing beside you, maybe the answer is simpler than you think: they’re there because they love you. Not for what you’ve lost or what you have to give, but because they can’t imagine being anywhere else. That kind of love? That’s worth holding onto. That’s what really matters.