"Is there anything you'd like to include?" the attorney asks.
"I'm wondering if
there's any way to ensure my journals are never read after my death," I
say.
My husband and I have
finally met with a professional to create a will. She adds a note, but I'm certain it is insufficient. I
know I need to destroy my own journals when the time is right. But when is right?
My first journal was a
sister's gift as I departed on a solo Greyhound trip to California and flight
to Mexico. The first entry reads 7-2-74. I was nineteen. I hold this journal here
beside me as I scribble these words.
I also have an
overflowing storage bin crammed with others. These journals hold decades of
secret thoughts, experiences, and emotions as well as the early scribbles of
scenes for every book I've written. They are private and without them I could
never have written those books.
Over the past months I
transcribed the journals from the five years and five months I lived in Mexico
City in the early 1980s. In the process, I discovered something interesting: a
coming-of-age metaphor in a foreign city, the most populous city in the world
at the time, a city that spoke a language I was only just learning.
My early entries are in
English. As months passed, English mixed with Spanish, a word here, a sentence
there. Toward the end of my life in Mexico, Spanish dominated my pages. Now I
struggle not only to understand that younger me but also the language she mastered.
Without my journals,
the thoughts and experiences of that girl would be lost. I'd venture to say
that without those journals this woman would be lost as well, and this writer,
certainly this memoirist, would not exist.
I live an examined
life, but I do not want my unfiltered journals read by
others. My rants and rages, my whining and whimpering, my gloating and bragging
are private. But I am not yet ready to burn them. I need them. They are my memory,
my path, my connection to a world, a language, a culture, a me, long forgotten.
So, I ask they be destroyed when I die. Morbid? Perhaps. A viable safeguard?
Probably not. Better than nothing? Maybe. In a perfect world, I will finish
mining these journals before my time comes, and I will celebrate with a
glorious backyard bonfire.
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4 comments:
I can totally relate, Arleen! Not that I've journaled anyway near the amount you have, but I also consider everything I've written privately to be private. I hope you're able to include such a clause in your will. And speaking of that, my hubby and I need to meet with an attorney to write our will too.
I'm so glad I'm not the only one who thinks about this. I've thought of having them cremated with me, but how would I know that would happen? I don't think it's morbid at all. My journal writing is a way to "exorcise" my thoughts in a private space.
Thank you for reading and commenting Mary and Danika. It's great to know I'm not alone in these thoughts!
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