The Story I Didn’t Delete (New Chapters)


On erasing, keeping, and the parts of life that still belong to me 🖋️
Restoring my blog archives, my life story in sentences and snapshots, meant bringing back words I wasn't sure I wanted to face again. But the hardest part has been deciding which ones stay, and which ones I let go. 

When I look through my old posts, I see versions of myself I don’t always want to remember. Me at my heaviest, ducking out of photos and hating the ones I couldn’t avoid. Me learning to run, dragging my body across finish lines because I needed to prove I could. Me as a new mother, wide awake at 3 am, writing about postpartum depression when I felt more broken than blessed.

And then there are the marriage posts. The anniversaries I thought would keep stacking. The photos where we looked happy. The vacations where I believed I was building forever. Those are the ones I’ve hovered over most often with the mouse shaking in my hand, ready to hit delete. Sometimes I did. Because it hurt too much to see them, to read words I once wrote with so much certainty.

But not all of them. Not most of them.

Because here’s the truth: even the parts I wish I could erase are still mine. Still part of my story. Still my kids’ stories, too. Someday they’ll scroll back and see who I was when I was raising them: the messy version, the exhausted version, the woman who tried to love as if it would last. And I don’t want to hand them a curated fairy tale. I want them to know the truth: that their mom was complicated, that her life cracked open, that she wrote it all down anyway.

Keeping those posts doesn’t mean I want that life back. It doesn’t mean I’m proud of every word. It just means I’m not pretending it never happened. The record matters. The proof matters. Not because the past defines me, but because it shows the path I walked to get here  the words a map of where we’ve been, even if it isn’t where we are now.

Some chapters close. Some photos are hard to look at. Some words feel like they belong to a stranger. But I’ve left them anyway, because they are proof that I lived them. Proof that I survived them.

The story I didn’t delete is still my story. Maybe not the one I wanted, but the one that made me.

This post is part of my New Chapters series — reflections on rebuilding, resilience, and writing new parts of my story.

Recent Reads: September 2025

Recent Reads Header

September was heavy on the thrills and chills. I found myself in locked rooms, facing unhinged characters, and wondering how much worse things could possibly get on the next page. Some stories leaned into pure chaos, others thrived on tension, and none of them were what I’d call “light.” It wasn’t an easy reading month, but it was definitely a memorable one.

📊 Reading Stats

Books Read: 4
Genres: Horror (2) ◦ Thriller (2)
Formats: eBook (4)
Sources: Kindle Unlimited (4)
Average Rating: 3.13 stars
Average Time to Read: 6 days
Yearly Reading Goal Progress: 46/100 books

46%

📖 Book Reviews

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📘 The List

Author: Kiersten Modglin

Genre: Fiction ◦ Thriller

Publication: 2016

Format & Source: eBook ◦ Kindle Unlimited

Dates Read: August 29  September 8, 2025

Rating: ★★★★☆

From the outside, Bates looks like any other small town. But when Jordyn and her husband move in, they discover a chilling ritual: every six months, a list of six children’s names appears. Within half a year, each child dies. The townspeople live in fear, bound by secrecy, until Jordyn decides she needs answers.


This book had a quietly eerie atmosphere that really worked for me. The concept was so unique, and the small-town setting gave it the perfect claustrophobic feel. Sure, it was highly unrealistic, but it was also fast, fun, and compulsively readable. Modglin has become a go-to for me, and I’m steadily making my way through her backlist.


Quick Take: Spooky, secretive, and so bingeable — the kind of thriller you read in one sitting.

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📘 Are Your Parents Home?

Author: Jon Athan

Genre: Fiction ◦ Horror

Publication: 2024

Format & Source: eBook ◦ Kindle Unlimited

Dates Read: September 8  September 14, 2025

Rating: ★★☆☆☆

Ella is home alone with her younger siblings and two friends when a strange man shows up at the door. His rambling quickly turns menacing, and before long, he forces his way inside — unleashing pure chaos.


This was my second Jon Athan novel, and he’s definitely earned his reputation for splatterpunk and extreme gore. I love horror and especially home invasion stories, so I was eager to dive in. The pacing was relentless, but the gore was so over the top that it often drowned out the story itself. It had me cringing, even a little queasy — and that’s saying something. Still, like a train wreck, I couldn’t look away. I didn’t hate it, but it’s one of those reads that leaves you unsettled long after turning the last page. And yet… I’ve already picked up my third Athan book, so clearly I can’t resist.


Quick Take: Relentless, grotesque, and impossible to look away — splatterpunk horror at its goriest.

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📘 Just Married

Author: Kiersten Modglin

Genre: Fiction ◦ Thriller

Publication: 2021

Format & Source: eBook ◦ Kindle Unlimited

Dates Read: September 15 – September 18, 2025

Rating: ★★★★☆

Grace and Ryan are finally taking their long-delayed honeymoon in a quiet cabin in the woods. But their romantic getaway turns sinister when someone begins threatening them, cutting the phone lines, and trapping them inside. To make matters worse, both Grace and Ryan are hiding secrets of their own.


I’ve been on a Kiersten Modglin binge, and this one delivered exactly what I hoped for. With claustrophobic vibes and twists that reminded me of Freida McFadden, it was clever, fast-paced, and unsettling in the best way. I love a good “trapped” story, and this one felt halfway between thriller and horror, which made it all the more fun.


Quick Take A cabin-in-the-woods thriller with clever twists and claustrophobic chills.

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📘 Party Games

Author: Jon Athan

Genre: Fiction ◦ Horror

Publication: 2025 (revised edition)

Format & Source: eBook ◦ Kindle Unlimited

Dates Read: September 18 – 22, 2025

Rating: ★★★☆☆

A group of estranged college friends reunite in a cabin in the woods, already simmering with old tensions. When a stranger shows up claiming his car broke down, they let him in, only to discover he has his own sadistic “party games” in mind.


I’m clearly a sucker for cabin-in-the-woods horror (two just this month!), and Jon Athan leans into that trope with full force. The story instantly reminded me of the movie Funny Games — which, it turns out, was his stated inspiration. Violent, gory, and disturbing (as all of his books are), this one still felt like the “tamest” of his extreme horror novels I’ve read so far. The writing isn’t refined, but that’s not really the point. These books are designed to shock, entertain, and unsettle, and they do exactly that. For extreme horror fans with a strong stomach, this was fast, grisly fun.


Quick Take: A brutal, Funny Games-inspired splatterfest — disturbing but oddly bingeable.

🎖️ Favorite Book of the Month

The List by Kiersten Modglin

That’s a wrap on this month’s reads — here’s to another great chapter! 📚

His First Four Miles (One Minute Memoir)

A memoir of shin splints, slushies, and watching him pull ahead

Setting: September 30, 2025 — The high school track at dusk, where Caleb went farther than he ever had before

We’d only been back to running for a week and a half, and my legs were already screaming with shin splints. I could barely string together more than one minute of jogging at a time, still relearning the rhythm after so much time away. Every stride felt like the beginning all over again. So when Caleb announced that evening that he wanted to run four miles, I hesitated.


The longest he’d ever gone was 2.5, the same distance we do each year in the Turkey Trot, which offers both a 2.5 mile run and a 4.4. Every year, he breezes through while I stumble along, gasping. Every year, he asks to do the longer race. And every year, I promise maybe next time we’ll do the longer one. This year, I finally signed us up for the 4.4-mile race at his behest, half out of hope, half out of faith that I’ll somehow get myself there. Caleb, it seems, is already ahead of me.


At the track, I told the boys to stick to their own lanes. Caleb set off right away, steady and sure. Holden trotted beside me for a bit before calling it quits around three-quarters of a mile, and I made it a mile and a half before surrendering to my shins. We ended up side by side on the bleachers, sharing a pair of AirPods and keeping half an eye on the track while Caleb kept circling, relentless.


Meanwhile, he never slowed. Lap after lap, he just kept going until, less than an hour later, he’d done it. Four miles. A steady 13-minute pace. His cheeks were pink, but his breathing was calm. He looked like he could have gone on forever.


On the way home, we swung through the Burger King drive-thru for post-run treats. At the kitchen table, Caleb sipped his slushie like it was nothing while Holden and I dug into sundaes. To him, the run was just another evening. To me — limping, tired, and so far behind — it was a revelation. He’d already reached the place I was still dreaming of, effortless in the very spot where I struggle with every step.


I thought I came back to running to prove something, to feel proud of myself the way I once did. But that night, watching him at the table, I realized the real gift wasn't in chasing my own pace, it was in watching him pull ahead, faster than I'll ever be, and knowing my pride in him outpaces anything I'll ever run.

This post is part of my One-Minute Memoir series — short reflections on small moments that still manage to say something big.

Get Sh*t Done: October 2025 Goals

Time to check in and reset. In this post, I’m looking back at how I did on my September 2025 goals — and setting some fresh ones for October 2025. Whether I crushed it or crawled through it, it all counts. Let’s keep going… one messy step at a time. 🧹

September 2025 Goals Recap

Read five books: FAIL. I did get close, though! I read a total of four.
  • The List by Kiersten Modglin
  • Are Your Parents Home? by Jon Athan
  • Just Married by Kiesrten Modglin
  • Party Games by Jon Athan
Watch five episodes of TV: DONE. I watched all five episodes of A Body in the Snow.
Do three fall activities or outings: DONE! We crushed this one.
  • Blodgett Family Farm
  • Kelly's Farm Market
  • Zarpentine Farm's Fall Fest
  • Spirit Halloween Store
  • Green Acre Farm
  • Herman's Farm Market (x2)
  • Schutt's Apple Mill
  • Powers Farm Market + their Spooky Hayride
Reduce debt by $600: FAIL. It turned out to be another spendy month, but so it goes in the fall!
Track all migraines: DONE. I had a total of three, and they were all before I started a new med, Qulipta. I have had ZERO since then. 
✅ Total Completed: 3 of 5. Not too bad!

October 2025 Goals

Reading + blogging

  • Read five books: setting the same goal as last month.
  • Read three horror books: it's spooky season!
  • Read one eBook
  • Set up Kindle holder and remote page turner
  • Do one Library Stack blog post

watching

  • Watch the latest season of Halloween Baking Champisonship
  • Set up Christmas movie spreadsheets for 2025: yes, this is a real thing I do.
  • Watch five Hallmark Christmas movies or TV show episodes

Running + fitness

  • Go for 12 runs/walks: my goal is a minimum of three a week.
  • Go three miles in one run/walk: I'm currently up to about 2.5 (mostly walking still).
  • Figure out + set up new Garmin running watch

Seasonal + fun

  • Go on four more fall outings or farm visits
  • Go for dinner at BJ's: they're doing a Tuesday night $5 Halloween pizookie deal.
  • Buy at least two Christmas gifts: need to get a start on this!

decluttering + organizing

  • Organize my running clothes + gear: I think I'm going to get a new laundry basket and keep all of my running clothes separate.
  • Clean my car: inside and out. Trying to keep the new ride tidy and clean!
  • Change over my purse / work bag: need to switch over my bag and go through and clean out what's in there.
⭐ Priority Goal: Hitting 12 runs. We have two Thanksgiving races coming up in November and I really need to increase my mileage. We're doing the 4.4 mile Turkey Trot for the first time this year, as opposed to the 2.5 mile we usually do (they offer both lengths). I'm not there quite yet, but I will be!

One messy step at a time still moves you forward.

Month in Review: September 2025

September 2025 in Review

September was full. From birthday cakes and hayrides to sore legs and spreadsheets, it was a month of new starts, small traditions, and plenty of comfort mixed in.

Highlights

  • Labor Day kickoff: We started September strong with pumpkins at Blodgett Farm — yes, on September 1st. I had the day off work, so we enjoyed our time at the farm followed by a sweet lunch at BJ’s (thanks to a free Pizookie coupon), and the day ended with Lilo & Stitch Uno with Holden (he cheats). To top it off, Holden found a baby squirrel in the yard, and we drove it to a wildlife rehabilitator. A very “us” mix of cozy, chaotic, and memorable.
  • Holden’s birthday: Holden turned another year older and, for the second year in a row, requested a Nutella birthday cake. We celebrated with two hours at Get Air trampoline park before heading to Applebee’s for dinner (though his original request was McDonald’s.) 
  • First day of school: September also brought the return to school routines. Holden started 2nd grade and Caleb 5th. They were... less than happy.
  • Zarpentine’s Fall Fest: When the boys came home one Sunday, we headed straight to Zarpentine’s Fall Fest. We sampled cookies, lemonade, and sno cones, and Holden came home with a freshly painted face. 
  • Fall farm trips + Sunday rhythm: We hit just about every local spot: Zarpentine’s, Green Acre, Herman’s, Schutt’s, Kelly's, and Blodgett Farm for cider slushies, donuts, cookies, and other treats. A new rhythm quickly formed: every Sunday after the boys came home from their dad's, we’d go for a run, then pile into the car for a farm stop. It became the best kind of tradition... simple, cozy, and reliably sweet.
  • Moana + Spooky Hayride: One Friday night, we watched Moana 2 at school, then went straight to Powers Farm for opening night of their Spooky Hayride. It’s haunted hayride “lite,” with animatronics instead of live actors, and the kids loved every minute, especially finishing the night with cookies.
  • Spirit Halloween wander: No September is complete without walking the aisles of Spirit Halloween, trying on masks, and laughing at the over-the-top animatronics.
  • Soccer season: Holden laced up for his first game of the fall season. Saturday mornings are back to early sideline cheering.
  • Nurse’s office regular: In the first few weeks of school, I think I got five calls from the nurse’s office about Holden: falls from the swing, trips at recess, you name it. Second grade is apparently hazardous.
  • Home Depot project: Holden and I built a wooden airplane together at the monthly Home Depot workshop. It was simple, a little messy, and exactly the kind of project he loves.
  • Doctor catch-up + neurology: After months of putting it off, I finally caught up on all of my doctor's appointments: primary care, neuro, and more. At neurology, we switched me from Emgality to Qulipta on September 10, and it was a game changer. I went from 10–11 migraines a month to almost none. Relief doesn’t even begin to cover it!
  • Hallmark schedule release: On September 17, Hallmark finally released their 2025 Christmas movie schedule. I immediately started prepping the spreadsheets... my favorite kind of seasonal ritual.
  • Health reimbursement win: I found out I qualify for a $600 a year health reimbursement through my insurance, and I immediately submitted claims for running clothes, shoes, accessories, and a Garmin watch. Very exciting and I'm already plotting what to spend it on next year (another pair of backup running shoes, a water backpack or belt for long runs, race registrations + more!). 

📚 Books I Read

  • The List by Kiersten Modglin ★★★★☆
  • Are Your Parents Home? by Jon Athan ★★
  • Just Married by Kiersten Modglin ★★★★☆
  • Party Games by Jon Athan ★★★
🏅 Favorite Book of the Month: The List by Kiersten Modglin
Books Read: 4
Yearly Progress: 46/100

🎬 What I Watched

  • Unknown Number: A wild catfishing documentary on Netflix. Totally jaw-dropping.
  • Sweet Bobby: Apparently I was on the catfish train this month. Another Netflix catfish doc, fascinating and sad.
  • Body in the Snow: The Trial of Karen Read: True crime docuseries from ID. Really well done. High profile case I didn’t know much about. After five episodes, I still don’t know what I think happened.
  • Into the Fire: The Lost Daughter: Two-part true crime Netflix doc about a missing girl. Her birth mom placed her up for adoption, then years later heard about her disappearance and vowed to find out what happened. Pretty good, but not my favorite watch of the month.

🏃 Running Recap

Runs this month: 6

Total miles: 9.63 mi.

Total time ran: 3:41

Average pace per run: 21:11 | 21:58 | 20:52 | 25:10 | 24:34 | 22:01

Average monthly pace: 22:55/mile


Notes: We started with a mile at the track, worked up to two, and later did a 2.25-mile trail day. Some outings were mostly walking (shin splints, oof), one got creepy-dark on the wooded trail, and Caleb often sprinted ahead while Holden and I kept it steady in the back. Painful sometimes, but it’s progress — and it’s ours.

Extras

  • Loved: Cider slushies + donuts; a return to running; a free Pizookie; Caleb’s free slushie from Tops; an unexpected free car wash for my new ride; a solid work review; a s'more themed facial at a salon.
  • Sucked: Blisters on night one of our return to running; shin splints after our longest distance.
  • On the Menu: BJ’s, Applebee’s, Texas Roadhouse, Texas BBQ, Naan-tastic takeout, McDonald’s drink runs (obviously), Crumbl’s Biscoff cookie, plus all the farm goodies + donuts.
  • Made Me Laugh: Holden lobbying hard for McDonald’s as his birthday dinner, only to eventually settle for Applebee’s. Caleb tried all evening to sway him to choose Texas Roadhouse instead. They never want the same thing for dinner!

This Month on the Blog

Coming Up in October

  • Shoes + shins: Getting fitted for new running sneakers — goal: fewer aches, more miles.
  • More miles, more treats: Keep the Sunday routine (run → farm donuts/cider slushies).
  • School life: Open House at both boys’ schools; Caleb also starts back up with early-morning band and chorus.
  • Work day adventure: Take Your Child to Work Day — both boys are coming this year.
  • Movie countdown begins: Hallmark Countdown to Christmas movies kick off October 17th! Spreadsheets ready, cozy season officially starting.
  • Stage time: The new theater season kicks off with my aunt. Our first show is Clue, and I can’t wait to start another year of our tradition together.
  • Holden’s calendar: Soccer continues + a birthday party on deck.
  • Time off, Halloween + costumes: A couple days off work including Halloween. This year, Holden = Flamin’ Hot Cheetos bag; Caleb = hot dog.

What I Learned

Progress doesn’t have to be fast or flashy. We showed up, even when it hurt; we made space for small traditions; and the migraines quieted. That’s real momentum.

So that’s it for me! See you next month!

Twenty-One Minutes

What a slow mile, two kids, and a pair of new shoes taught me about starting over


On September 18, I laced up my new shoes and went back to the track for the first time in over a decade.


I had forgotten how to run. Forgotten how to start, what to expect, what distances and times might be possible. The first time I began running was in 2012, and it feels like a lifetime ago. I don’t remember the training plans or the splits, but I remember the feelings. The first mile I ran straight through without stopping. The first time I broke ten minutes on a mile. The amazement of every milestone. I remember how invincible it made me feel.


So I decided to try again. I started to prepare. New shoes. Special workout gear. MapMyRun, a long-ago deleted app, re-downloaded to my phone. A playlist waiting to start in my ears. It felt like it should be this big to-do, with the way I prepared and the buildup in my head, but in the end it came down to one small decision: today is the day. Ready or not, I was going.


The kids and I headed to the track.


We did one mile. A 21:11 mile. I jogged in short spurts and walked the rest. My first jogging steps felt foreign, as though my legs had turned to wood. Stiff, awkward, almost unrecognizable. I got sweaty. I got blisters. But I did it.


At one point I thought: maybe I can’t do this. But then I reminded myself: you already did it once. You can do it again.


The first time around, I was childless and in my twenties. Now I’m in my thirties, with two kids who run alongside me. My body has since carried and birthed them. It has stretched, shifted, survived. It isn’t the same body that once ran a half marathon. But maybe that doesn’t matter. Because running has always been more mental than physical.


Holden encouraged me the whole way, while Caleb sped ahead. That’s how it usually goes: Caleb out front, while Holden and I trudge through together. We stop to catch our breath. We slow to rest our legs. We push forward, even when it feels easier to quit. Every Thanksgiving, we participate in the Turkey Trot — it’s tradition — and after this run, the boys were already buzzing with excitement about this year’s race. Their energy carried me when my legs couldn’t.


When we finished, we all felt lighter. Stronger. Energized. Just a week earlier, Caleb had told me he didn’t want to do the Turkey Trot this year, a decision that broke my heart a little. But after our mile at the track, he was back in. All in. 


And so was I.


Even though my legs hurt. Even though it’s hard. Even though it would be easier to stay home, to let myself quit. I’m in again. 


For them. 

For myself. 

For the girl I used to be, and for the woman I’m still becoming. 


I am reclaiming a part of myself I thought I had forgotten many years ago.


I don’t know how I’ll keep myself motivated. I don’t know what pace I’ll ever reach again. But I know this: I showed up, even when it was hard. I did it once, and I can do it again. Because sometimes starting over, that very first mile, is the bravest mile of all.