Why I Write

Sometimes there’s a story. Sometimes there’s reflection on a process that yields a story. Here’s my process in three parts.

From Kāʻanapali, Hawaii May 12, 2023 
Where does the a snowflake begin and where does it end?

Why I Write, Part I

I write because I have thoughts, and thoughts, left unattended, become a problem. They pile up like unread emails, each one flagging itself as urgent, none of them quite making sense until I’ve forced them into a sentence and made them sit still.  Deleting emails may unclutter your inbox, but deleting your thoughts is not a solution.

This is not, I should say, an efficient system. A therapist would be faster. A long bike ride works too. But neither of those produces a well-turned paragraph, and that — embarrassingly, joyfully — is half the point.  Maybe it takes a motorcycle ramble to make the point whole.

I love the thing of writing. The way a sentence can be technically correct and still completely wrong. The way you swap one word for another and suddenly the whole room changes temperature. It’s a craft with no ceiling, which is either inspiring or maddening depending on the day and how long I’ve been staring at the same clause.  That’s something I didn’t understand as I do now when I began writing in earnest upon retirement.

And then there’s the other reason, the one that feels almost too earnest to say out loud: I write to find you. Whoever you are, reading this. Writing is a slightly ridiculous act of faith — that the particular shape of your inner life, wrestled into words, will land in someone else and they’ll think, yes, exactly, that’s the thing I couldn’t say. It doesn’t always work. But when it does, it’s the best feeling there is.  Even though my work doesn’t seem to have garnered much of an audience, the feedback I get has landed squarely in, here I am and you’re welcome into my world.  

So. I write to think. I write for the love of the sentence. And I write because somewhere out there, you’re reading. That seems like enough.

Mt. Hilgard and the Silver Divide from Lake Thomas A. Edison, August 12, 2025 
As the snowflake’s journey continues

Why I Write, Part 2

I write to figure out what I think. This sounds simple until you try it, at which point you discover that your thoughts are not, in fact, a tidy list waiting to be transcribed. They are a pile. A lively, argumentative, occasionally contradictory pile. Writing is how I sort them — how I find the thread and follow it until something true shows up at the end.  Here is what I’ve learned after 37 years in a classroom: the thread is almost always a story.

I taught public school for nearly four decades, and whatever I was supposed to be teaching — history, math, science, the proper use of a semicolon — I was really teaching through narrative. Every lesson had a beginning, a middle, and an end that opened, if I did it right, into the next beginning. Because that’s how learning actually works. Not as information transferred, but as experience built. One story stacking on another until a student looks up one day and realizes they’ve been constructing a worldview all along.

Writing, for me, is the same thing. It’s how I reflect on what’s happened — to me, around me, through me — and give it enough shape, like sculpting a clump of clay, that it means something. A story has edges. It holds like the carefully carved contours that give that clay form.

And the part that still moves me: everyone has them. Students who thought they had nothing to say. People who believe their lives are too ordinary to be interesting. They’re wrong, and I’ve spent a long time trying to convince them of that.  I humbly submit sisyphusdw7.com as my effort to share stories, mostly ordinary, but gently, persistently, and sometimes with a well-timed anecdote. 

That’s why I write. To make sense of things. To love the language that makes sense-making possible. And to keep saying, to anyone who’ll read it: your stories are in there. Go find them. They’re worth telling.  Especially if the story can bring a smile to the reader’s face or provide a glimpse into what’s possible.

Anyone who reads probably thinks they’ve got a book in them.  The book I’ve always thought was in me has a title, Journey of a Snowflake.  In its vague outline the story is based on the water cycle, a topic I have shared with somewhere in the neighborhood of some 2,700 students in the course of those nearly four decades in the classroom. 

Cycles are my jam.  I look for them and ride them.  I’m amused that my quest for finding patterns in the natural world and virtually any manipulated form of the natural world by humans, is the essence of AI.  We are all responsible for Artificial Intelligence insofar as the technology we seem not to be able to live without has gobbled up pretty much the sum total of what we’ve identified as the known and scours all of that data searching for patterns upon which predictive models can act with this artificial form of claimed intelligence.  It seems that AI has also gobbled up the unknown. Not always do those scoured patterns result in something true.  At least that’s how I understand it.   

I’m hoping my journey with this snowflake can make sense to my grandchildren as the spectre of their encounter with language is undergoing such profound upheaval.  Language is ceding ground. The images that flood my grandchildren’s world can inspire, certainly — but inspiration is not imagination. A picture gives you something to see.  I’ve included a few in this piece.  A word gives you something to build. And what gets built in the private interior of a reader’s mind, assembled from nothing but black marks on a page, is a thing no algorithm can generate and no screen can replicate. That is what I am afraid we are losing. That is why I write. To me, a picture is no substitute for a thousand words.

Merced River, Yosemite Valley, December 13, 2025
The snowflake is on the move

Why I Write, Part 3

Every snowflake begins as a speck of dust, a condensation nuclei. 

Not very glamorous, I know. But that tiny particle of nothing-much floats up into a cloud, and water vapor wraps around it, crystal by crystal, and something intricate and unrepeatable takes shape. Then it falls. It lands on a mountain, melts into a stream, travels to the ocean, rises again as vapor, and begins the whole extraordinary journey once more — different each time, carrying something of everywhere it’s been. 

I write to figure out what I think. Thoughts, left to themselves, are just specks of dust — vague, restless, bumping around without form. Writing is what pulls them into a shape. A sentence. A paragraph. A beginning, a middle, and an end that opens, if you’re lucky, into the next beginning. The crystal builds slowly, and then all at once you have something that didn’t exist before. Something no one else could have made in quite that way.

Our stories are like that. Each one starts small — a moment, a question, a thing that happened on an otherwise ordinary Tuesday. But stories don’t stay small. They gather. They transform. A story that begins as a local bicycle ride becomes a multiple day ramble over fascinating terrain encountering by chance ordinary people with extraordinary stories. That’s a story just like those stories depicted in my motorcycle rambles. And that’s why I write.

A story that began in a classroom finds its way into a grandchild’s imagination. A story whispered at bedtime floats up and becomes part of how a child sees the whole world. You never quite know where it will travel or what it will become by the time it arrives.

The snowflake doesn’t choose its path. It goes where the wind and the water take it — from cloud to mountain to river to sea to sky again. But here’s the quiet miracle: it was never lost. It was always becoming the next thing.

That’s what reflecting on our experiences does. It catches the journey mid-flight and says: look at this. Look at where you’ve been. Look at the shape of it. A story gives experience its edges. It makes the invisible visible, the fleeting permanent, the personal somehow universal. You write down what happened to you, and a stranger reads it and thinks — yes. That happened to me too. I just didn’t have the words.

So I write for the craft of it — for the love of finding exactly the right word, the sentence that finally holds the weight I needed it to hold. I write to make sense of things. And I write because I believe, with the quiet stubbornness of someone who has spent a long time watching people discover this for themselves, that everyone has stories worth the telling. That’s what all of the authors I admire have done for me.  They’ve given me the courage to listen, consider, and tell the story.

You can too. Your stories are in there — in the ordinary Tuesdays, the small moments, the things you’ve carried so long you’ve forgotten they’re remarkable. Find them. Write them down. Give them a beginning, a middle, and an end.

And then let them go, the way a snowflake lets go of the mountain — trusting that the journey, and whatever it touches along the way, is exactly the point.

Yosemite National Park, Merced Peak on April 19, 2019 
Perhaps this is where the snowflake’s journey begins and ends, in that moment

sisyphusdw7.com


SoBe, The Blue Heeler

The Origin Story

December 4, 2018

Out of the Mystic

December 4, 2018… A cold, nearly winter, overcast Tuesday morning.  Bicycle rides on Tuesdays are routinely on roads less traveled east of my home in Merced.  On this day, there were three of us, Pete, Tom, and yours truly, on the saddles.  It’s apparently different from when on horseback you’re in the saddle that’s on the horse’s back.  

We were just making our way past the last of the pistachio orchards approaching the rangeland of the Sierra foothills when a little blue heeler spotted us, popped out of the rows of trees, and ran up to greet us.  

There’s no other way to explain my reaction other than it was love at first lick.  My second thought was I’m taking this dog home.  I’ve always had the notion of adding to the long list of Labrador Retrievers canine family members we’ve kept over the past 32 years, either a Standard Poodle or an ACD, Australian Cattle Dog.  

The Dilemma

Why a Standard Poodle?  That’s easy, because of Charley, John Steinbeck’s Standard Poodle there for companionship and comic relief, was along for his journey in Travels with Charley.  

Though I was only six when Travels was published—I read it later in college—the book touches on themes of nostalgia, identity, and the complexities of post WWII America.  I vividly remember how Charley was more than a pet along for the ride. He was an essential character in Steinbeck’s assessment of the rapid change he witnessed taking place in post war America.  

Homeward Bound

Why an ACD? Because Bluey, who lived to 29, holds the Guinness World Record as the “Oldest (verified) Dog to have Ever Lived”. Since longevity is a characteristic of ACD’s, and Skidboot’s intelligence declared him the “World’s Smartest Dog,” Heelers are the very embodiments of hearty stock with brains. Labs are friendly and playful, Poodles smart and sophisticated, but they live on average for 12 years. Note: neither ever earned titles of longevity and intelligence.

Skidboot (top) and Bluey

Of course, I would end up doing due diligence, stopping by the few residences along South Bear Creek and asking if they knew to whom this little blue heeler, perhaps less than a year old, belonged. I would then place ads in the local newspaper and list her on social media as lost. And I would contact the local county animal shelter and SPCA about her status and advice on the statute of limitations for claiming a “found” lost dog.

But honestly, the little blue heeler wasn’t lost. She found me and I was prepared to suffer the two weeks that is required before you can claim “ownership” of an abandoned animal. I can’t explain the anxiety I experienced in those two weeks… It bordered on heartbreak akin to that I felt longingly for Molly and Godiva, our yellow and chocolate Labs lost to old age and knowing that dogs only occupy the physical world for a short time but live on in our hearts and memories. The longer they live, the greater the memories.

On the ride home with SoBe, reluctantly tethered to my side by a leash fashioned from roadside rope, she must have been wondering, “what’s with this thing around my neck?” She couldn’t imagine how her life was about to change. I don’t know what perils she faced before I found her so it wasn’t hard to accept her pulling against the rope while I struggled to stay upright. I knew it was this little ACD’s fate to securely join Luna and Dakota, another pure bred English yellow and black Lab rescue respectively, that would erase any of her anxiety and add to the joy of yet another member of our pack. We own a Subaru. We’re dog people.

At the corner of Plainsburg Rd and E. South Bear Creek, as I looked at the signpost marking the intersection, a perfect name appeared to me.  SoBe, from South Bear Creek.  No, I did not name my dog for an iced-tea beverage from South Beach.  I decided to call my wife to ensure safely bringing SoBe home as the traffic increases from this point to home.

The phone call went something like this:

“Hey sweetie, you’ll never know what I encountered on this morning’s bike ride,” “A damsel in distress…” I intoned.

“Oh, and so what is it that you needed to call me about your encounter?” my skeptical wife replied.

Thinking fast, I thought, “Well, I’m smitten with finding this pup’s home and since I’m getting closer to traffic, I thought you might be able to come fetch us in the Outback, you know, the dog friendly Subaru.” 

I was amazed and somewhat shocked when my wife, after sighing, agreed to leave her work to meet us at SoBe’s namesake intersection.  I knew she would resist my intent to keep SoBe.  She’s skeptical of my “great ideas” about 85% of the time.  So, I assured her that something this beautiful and sweet had to belong to someone. Only later I lamented the fact that SoBe was deliberately abandoned and she deserved so much more in life.  I leveraged keeping her on that basis.  My wife eventually relented.  SoBe reigned in that 15% of good ideas!

Welcome to your forever home Now, just make it through the next two weeks…

The Interloper

“Who is this?  She looks innocent enough?”  

While sitting out the two week statute of limitations, we had SoBe vaccinated and spayed.  With no response to two weeks of searching for her “owner” due diligence, we formally adopted SoBe, registering her with the county, getting vaccination tags and a name tag with our address and phone number.  

As spirited and fearless as a heeler can by way of breeding be, SoBe quickly adapted to adoption and membership in our pack.  Luna was the senior member but not the alpha. She was a goofy love bug.   Dakota was a few years younger, arriving at our home a few years after Luna.  She was a tad less jovial, nevertheless asserting herself alpha-like.  This perhaps because as a rescued mix of German Shepherd and Labrador Retriever she may have been a little less “refined,” more given to instinct.  

Boney, bone time

SoBe, bred to nip at the heels of animals a thousand times her mass, had chosen to be an unofficial “alpha,” age and/or instinct be damned, much to Dakota’s chagrin.  There was always tension simmering between the two of them that might erupt as play would escalate to combat, not unlike that of the sibling rivalry between our two boys.  Luna simply dismissed all of the dramatic posturing, finding Swiss-like neutrality leaving any quarreling to the late-comers.  

A Dog Is (for) Life

It is as though I find myself in the same circumstance as Steinbeck in my own  Sisyphus and Associates musings and screeds navigating encounters and insights, nostalgia and identity in contemporary America on my two-wheeled travels.  Having SoBe long for me as I long for her when we are apart, has given me a portal to gratitude that the evening news, now 24-7, robs from me. I have found out there, on the road, traveling through the West such generosity, encouragement, and genuine curiosity.  I have a sense that the America in the news or online, isn’t necessarily the America most of us know.  I just know that trust is earned when it comes to people.  When it comes to dogs, it’s just a lot easier to build.  Now, how to acquire a side car to bring SoBe along for the ride…

Time Flies Like an Arrow

Since those early days introducing SoBe to our pack, we’ve lost Luna and Dakota.  Well, sort of.  Their ashes, along with Godiva’s are in our closet awaiting a fitting internment.  Molly’s ashes are entombed in a boulder at the top of Chair 3 at Dodge Ridge where she spent her best years.  

My intent is to continue sharing SoBe stories.  SoBe is still with me, which means there’s more road to travel.  This isn’t just about finding SoBe; it’s about what she replaced, what she has filled, what she represents in the ongoing cycle of love and loss that comes with keeping dogs.  With all due respect to all of my family and friends, SoBe is my best friend.

12/8/25 Sisyphusdw7.com

In memory of Buddy, Bill and Ginger’s baby…