A Map Stitched in Time: Tracing the Threads of the Past

Lauren Nixon-Matney • January 5, 2026
A Map Stitched in Time: Tracing the Threads of the Past


The imagination of a child can take you to endless worlds on the other side of the stars where magic allows time travel to break the space time continuum at any moment…


The First Time Travel Jump—Split Infinity


When I open my eyes, I am somewhere else.


The Shannons’ living room, warm and familiar, the glow of an old TV screen flickering against the walls. I can hear the hum of the VHS player, the quiet rustling of someone shifting on the couch. The smell of popcorn lingers, and for a moment, I forget whether this is real or something I’ve stepped back into.


The movie is already playing. A girl just a little older than me falls through time, slipping between past and present like it’s as simple as turning a page. My fingers curl around the edge of the blanket draped over my legs.


Can time travel be that easy?


Could I do it too?


The hum of the VHS player shifts into something new. The world around me bends again, pulling me from the comfort of the Shannons’. The world around me seems to twist, just like it did in the movie, as if the boundaries between past and present were never meant to stay fixed. With a blink, I’m no longer in the Shannons’ living room, but standing in another time a place where VHS tapes line the shelves like windows into different worlds.


The Next Jump—Finding The Two Worlds of Jennie Logan


Time bends again. A flicker of static, a shift in gravity, and suddenly…


I land in an old video store, the kind with narrow aisles and rows of plastic cases stacked too tight, their corners worn from years of hands flipping them over, reading the backs, deciding what story to take home.


My mom gasps. ‘Oh my God, I loved this movie.’


She holds up a dusty VHS tape, the cover slightly faded, the title in soft, elegant letters: The Two Worlds of Jennie Logan.


I’ve never heard of it. It looks old.


‘It’s about a woman who finds an old dress and it’s hard to explain. She goes back in time.’


She flips it over, reading the blurb like she’s seeing it for the first time in years.


I glance at the price sticker.


A quarter.


Twenty-five cents for a portal through time. Twenty-five cents for a forgotten world.


We buy it. Take it home. Put it in the player. And when it starts, I feel that same pull in my chest the same feeling I had watching Split Infinity, except this time, it’s different.


This time, it’s not just about traveling through time.


It’s about longing for something already gone.



Watching The Two Worlds of Jennie Logan


As I slide the tape into the player, the present starts to blur into something else, something deeper. The room fades as I’m pulled back into another world one where time isn’t linear but dances between what was and what could have been.


The lights are off. The glow of the TV flickers against the walls, soft and golden. I sit curled up on the bean bag, a blanket wrapped around my legs, Mom and Nanny sitting close.


The movie plays soft music, sweeping dresses, an old Victorian house full of ghosts from another time. A woman finds a forgotten dress in an attic, slips it over her head, and suddenly, she isn’t here anymore. She’s somewhere else. Some other place in time.


I glance at my mom. She’s watching, eyes fixed on the screen, lost in something deeper than just the movie.


Her expression shifts, something flickering across her face not just nostalgia, but something quieter, deeper. I wonder what she’s remembering, if she’s thinking about a past that feels just out of reach.


I glance at Nanny. She smiles softly, like she’s already seen the ending but still loves the story anyway.


And then I look back at the screen. The main character is stepping forward, reaching out, pressing her fingers against something invisible an unseen thread between past and present.


Something in my chest tightens.


I wonder if I found the right dress, the right house, the right moment… could I do it too?


As the credits roll and the house around me settles back into its familiar shape, something stirs within me. The time-traveling dreams from the movie pull at the edges of my mind, and before I know it, I’m not just lost in the story anymore. I’m reaching for something real something that could take me to the past, just like the characters I’ve watched.


The Trunk as a Time Machine


I barely make it through the credits before I’m up, heart racing, heading straight for our family trunk.


I climb on top of it, arms stretched out, just like before. Just like always.


Only this time, it’s different.


This time, I know how it’s supposed to feel. The moment right before the leap. The shift, the pull, the breath caught in my chest.


I squeeze my eyes shut, willing the air to hum, the ground to shake. My own dress is just an old nightgown, but in my mind, it’s something else. Something older, something from another world.


“Take me back.”


And I swear, just for a second I feel it.


The weightless drop in my stomach. The moment before the fall. The past stretching out in front of me like a thread I could follow if I just reached far enough.


I press my hands against the lid of the trunk, just like Jennie Logan reaching through time.


And that’s when I remember what’s inside.


The trunk feels heavy, filled with memories and moments that stretch across the years. As I sift through the artifacts within, I feel the weight of time in my hands. And then, the quilt worn and stitched with care—emerges from the depths, its history alive in every thread. A family quilt that has a piece of the first Texas flag sewn by Sarah Bradley Dodson ( my great great great great great Aunt) made in the early stages of the Texas Revolution leading up to The Battle of the Alamo.




The Quilt & The Lizard


It’s heavy, worn soft with time, stitched together by hands I never knew but somehow recognize. I pull it out, unfolding the layers, running my fingers over the seams, tracing the history sewn into every piece.


My favorite part of the quilt wasn’t the history stitched into it, or even the small piece of the first Texas flag... it was the lizard. A tiny, hand stitched lizard, embroidered by my great-grandmother Dora. It sat almost hidden, like a secret waiting to be found.


My Granny used to tell me stories about watching her mother quilt, how Dora would sit with family or friends, the soft rhythm of needle and thread moving through fabric, voices low and steady, hands working together like a quiet kind of music.


I used to trace the stitches of that tiny lizard with my fingers, as if I could feel a piece of her there her hands, her patience, the way she moved thread through fabric the same way my dad wove stories about her into my childhood.


Another Stitch in Time – The Texas History Quilt


Quilts tell stories. Every stitch, every patch, a moment in time, held together by the hands that came before. 


In middle school, I took Texas History with Miss Madura, a teacher whose husband had supposedly coached Shaquille O’Neal in high school (something we all thought was the coolest fact ever). But the thing I remember most about her class wasn’t basketball it was the quilt. She had our entire class sew a Texas History quilt, with each of us designing a square dedicated to something meaningful from our state’s past.


My square was Sarah Bradley Dodson, sewing the first Texas flag. I remember pressing my pencil into the fabric, painting each stroke carefully, imagining her hands moving just like mine stitching something that would outlive her, something that would be remembered. I already knew what it meant to stitch history together.


I thought about Sarah sewing the first Texas flag her red stripe above the white, a symbol of unity and independence. I thought of Dora and all the hands that had shaped my story before me. I wanted my own piece to reflect that sense of purpose, of heritage, that same sense of possibility, where time bends, and the past reaches forward to meet the present, creating a connection that spans generations.”



When we finished, Mrs. Madura pieced it all together, stitching our stories into one shared tapestry. Years later, at graduation, she brought it back, unfolding it one last time before passing it on to someone else. I don’t know where it ended up, but I like to think it’s still out there somewhere stitched into time, a part of history.


The quilts I’ve seen, the pieces I’ve stitched, all remind me of the time I spent learning our history. But as the years passed, those same threads began to unravel, and the familiar comfort of family heirlooms started slipping away things I once thought would always be within reach.


The Loss Creeps In—The Memories Remain



A letter I used to hold... gone. A name, written in old ink, stolen, sold to someone who didn’t know its weight.


The trunk meant to hold the stories of generations, the heart of our family history lost? I can’t touch it, can’t pass it to my children.


I don’t even know who holds the key to our history.


The origin of our family’s Texas story. My Time Machine! 


And occasionally that makes my stomach twist in a way I can’t quite explain. Because I was supposed to be able to pass my hands over those stitches for the rest of my life, for my children to run their tiny hands over the threads of their history. 


And though this is a loss that truly aches sometimes, life is about so much more than the possession of physical items. Some of these artifacts may be lost from us, but the history behind them remains. 


I take a step back. The room is still. The air holds steady.


But I can feel it like an echo, like a shadow, like something just out of reach.


Some things disappear. Some things slip through time, through hands, through memory.


But not everything. Some become memories that remain.


Maybe history isn’t something behind us at all. Maybe it’s a trail of light, stretching forward, waiting for us to follow it back.


I close my eyes for just a second, and it’s still there. History doesn’t vanish. It lives on in all of us, stitched into the fabric of who we are passed down through generations, carried forward in the stories we tell and the memories we preserve.



RESUME THE RHYTHM:

DRIFT THROUGH A CONSTELLATION OF MEMORY

Searching For Stars

By Lauren Nixon-Matney May 6, 2026
Okay, so I asked God for a sign this week… and I didn’t make it easy on Him. I had just seen this video about asking for a sign, about how God answers, about how He delights in it… and something in me just… recognized that. Like, oh. I’ve felt that before. Lindsey, it was your video. And the second I heard it, I remembered something. I remembered a time, years ago, back in that early, foggy, pinkless season of motherhood, when I had asked for a sign too. I had prayed, really specifically… really honestly… “God, just show me I’m okay. Show me I’m on the right path.” And I asked for a blue butterfly. I didn’t see it right away. I waited. I wondered if I had imagined the whole idea in the first place. And then, not long after, life moved us somewhere new. A new place, new energy… the kind of move that feels exciting and terrifying all at once. They handed us the keys… and right there on them… was a blue butterfly. And I remember feeling that same quiet recognition. Like… okay. And then, a couple months after that, with prayers inside us building for a second child, we went to a park. One of those ordinary days that turns into something you don’t forget. And there were butterflies everywhere. Hundreds of them. Yellow, filling the air, lifting all at once like something out of a dream. And right in the middle of it… one blue butterfly. I just stood there, overwhelmed, because I knew. I knew I had been heard. Nearly one year to the day later, our second child was born. And then… life kept moving. Time passed. Things got busy. Full. Loud. Beautiful… but a little hazy, too. Somewhere along the way, I think I stopped asking like that. Fast forward. I’m sitting with my kids on New Year’s Eve, going into 2025, talking about goals and dreams. The kind of things you say out loud but don’t always fully claim. “I’ve always wanted to write.” And my daughter, so sure, so certain, just looked at me and said, “Then make it your New Year’s resolution.” And something about the way she said it… she didn’t question it. she didn’t overthink it. She just… believed it was possible. So I did. I started building something I’ve carried in pieces since I was in high school. Old notebooks, scattered thoughts, songs, memories… things I’ve never really known how to explain out loud. And for the first time, it felt like someone actually got it. So I got to work. Writing with a baby asleep on my chest… voice notes, typed drafts, music playing in the background… piecing together old memories with new ones. And I love it. I really do. But if I’m being honest… I started to wonder. Is this meaningful? Is this worth the time? Is this something good… or just something I want? And more than anything… I wanted to know if it was something God saw as good. Not just something that looked meaningful… but something that was. So I sat down, quietly, and I prayed. And I said, “God, if this is something I’m supposed to keep building… if I’m on the right path… if this is your will for me… please just show me. Give me a sign.” And I paused… because I knew I couldn’t ask for something easy. I had asked for butterflies before and blue jays have been unusually common in our backyard lately. I needed something specific. Something I wouldn’t just brush off. I looked over… and saw this little pink and white poodle sitting on my daughter’s shelf. And I laughed a little and said, “Okay God… show me a poodle.” almost sarcastically thinking… well, this one’s going to take a little more effort. But of course… Not even 48 hours later, we ran into Burlington. We were just there to grab socks and shoes for my toddler, her sandals were bothering her. Quick in, quick out. We ended up wandering a little. We’re headed to checkout… and my husband steps down an aisle, picks something up, and goes, “Okay, I know this is ridiculous… but we need this for the office.” And he had no idea. Nothing about my prayer. Nothing about the poodle. I’m barely paying attention yet. And then he turns it around. It’s a painting. Of a poodle. Not just a poodle… a poodle in a full business suit… sitting at a desk… reading a newspaper. I just… stopped. A business professional poodle, for the office we’re building together, a space where I can write. Like everything in me went quiet for a second. Because of all the things in the world I could have asked for… of all the ways that prayer could have been answered… it was that. I remember thinking, smiling, fighting back tears of joy… of course it is. Because I had asked for something specific. And apparently… He has a sense of humor. Also, just to make sure I didn’t miss it… because let’s be real, God definitely knows how to show out… the very next place we went… was Petco. And there was this real poodle. Then again. And again. Every aisle I turned… I kept running into it. And that feeling came back. The same one from before. Quiet. Certain. seen. beloved. Lindsey… Thank you so much, you reminded me to ask. You reminded me that God doesn’t just hear us… He answers. Not always in big, overwhelming ways… but in ways we’ll recognize. In ways that feel personal. Specific. Sometimes even funny… like they were meant just for us. And Lindsey… I just want you to know how much I appreciate all of what you’re doing. Your energy, your humor, the way you show up so fully as yourself… it matters more than you probably realize. You make people laugh, you make motherhood feel seen, and you bring light into spaces that can feel heavy sometimes. But there is also so much more than that… God really radiates through you. In the way you speak, in the way you encourage, in the way you remind people to keep going and to keep believing. It’s powerful. And it’s beautiful to witness. What you’ve created with “get your pink back”… that message, that reminder… it’s reaching people. It’s lifting people. It’s giving something back to women who feel like they’ve poured everything out. And that matters. It really does. I’m so grateful I came across your video when I did. And I’m really looking forward to everything you create next… especially your writing. You’re doing something good here. Keep going. Please never stop casting your light into the world… it really does break through the darkness.
By Lauren Nixon-Matney May 6, 2026
You Taught Me Beauty Even When We Were Drowning in Disaster: A Letter of Light for My Mom Mother and daughter relationships … it’s not always simple. Ours hasn’t been. We’ve lived through seasons that were heavy. Times when we didn’t understand each other. Moments that felt bigger than either of us knew how to handle. Days that felt like they might break us! You were diagnosed with bipolar disorder when I was young. Less than a year after you divorced my dad, and the same year your mom died while she was the only lifeline to our sanity. It was part of our life whether I understood it or not at the time. Looking back now, I can see that you were carrying more than I ever could have understood. Pain, loss, and things that don’t just disappear because life keeps moving forward. And still, you kept going. Imperfectly in motion… most days. I always seem to travel back in my mind to this one beautiful memory. It was Halloween, and the carnival had set up in our small town like it did every year. It had always been my favorite part of the season, that and the homecoming dance. But that year was different. We had no money. You were in bed, recovering from surgery, hurting, exhausted, heartbroken and carrying more than most should ever have to. I remember coming into your room and telling you it was okay. That we didn’t have to go. You were lying there nibbling saltine crackers, barely able to move. But you got up. You started digging through the house. Lifting chair cushions. Emptying old purses. Checking pockets. Looking anywhere you thought there might be something left behind. We found fourteen dollars and some change. And we went. We didn’t have much, but it was enough. And somehow, it became one of the best fall memories I have. You chose to get up. You chose to push through pain, through exhaustion, through everything you were carrying, just to give me those moments. You showed up for me when it would have been easier not to. And that matters more than I think you knew then. You also told me I was beautiful. I remember that too. Mornings before school, standing there in whatever version of myself I had put together, and you would look at me and tell me I was pretty. That I looked good. That you were proud of me. You grew up in a time where beauty had rules. Where thin meant pretty. Where anything outside of that felt like something to fix or hide. And even with that, you still tried to give me something softer. You tried to build me up. You taught me beauty even when we were drowning in disaster. I didn’t understand that then. But I do now. The other day, I was sitting in the bath and noticed the veins on my legs. The kind that come with time. With life. With three pregnancies. With everything the body carries. And I didn’t hate them. I actually thought they were kind of beautiful. And instead of seeing something to hide, I thought of you. I remembered being little and noticing the same thing on you. The way they looked like constellations to me. Like little lines of light. Something interesting. Something beautiful. That never changed. Somewhere along the way, the world tried to teach different definitions of beauty but my opinion has always remained the same. And I think you had something to do with that. We haven’t always agreed. We still don’t. We see things differently sometimes. We come from different generations, different experiences, different ways of understanding the world. But I can see that you were trying, even when it felt impossible, even on days when you had mostly given up otherwise. Trying to love me. Trying to build me up. Trying to give me something steady, even when it felt like we were running on quick sand! And whether you meant to or not, mostly it worked. Now I’m a Mom. And that changes everything. In a way that makes things clearer. I understand things from a different perspective than I did before. I understand how much we carry. How easy it is to fall short. How complicated love can be when you are still learning to love yourself… while also trying to raise someone else! I see now how much we carry without meaning to. How things pass through us. How easily they repeat if we don’t stop and look at them. Time keeps moving. Everything shifts, even when we don’t notice it happening. It always does. One season into the next. One version of us into another. You don’t always notice it while you’re in it. All we are is dust in the wind. And still… somehow, what we give each other is eternal. What we choose to carry forward still matters. What we soften, what we heal, what we change, even a little, still matters. It ripples. I know I won’t get everything right either. I already don’t. I know there will be things my daughters will one day have to come to terms with in their own time. Things I wish I could do better. Things I am still learning. Hope isn’t something that just breaks and disappears. It doesn’t work like that. It comes back. It repeats. It finds its way in again and again, even when you think it’s gone. Everything moves. Everything spirals. Things come and go. But somehow, hope restores. So I hope they always know they are loved. May they always have the courage within themselves to be themselves. I hope they feel understood. I hope they grow up strong, knowing they are allowed to take up space. Not for being perfect. Not for fitting into some mold. Just for being exactly who they are. I hope they know they are aloud to make mistakes. To change. To become something new over and over again without thinking they missed their chance. Because that’s what we do. We carry what we were given. And then, little by little, we decide what to do with it. And through all of it… through everything that changed, and everything that didn’t, I hope they feel seen. I hope they know that being human means getting things wrong sometimes. That mistakes are not the end of the story. That they’re part of how we learn, grow, and keep evolving. Just like we did. Just like we’re still doing! And through all of it, through everything we have been and everything we are still growing into… I truly am grateful that your my mom.
By Lauren Nixon-Matney May 6, 2026
With a Little Love and Some Tenderness: A Letter of Light for Becky Greer With a little love and some tenderness. That’s what it takes, isn’t it? Not just to raise children, but to shape them. To steady them. To leave something behind that lasts longer than the moment itself. We talk a lot about our mothers when we talk about who we become and rightfully so. But, there are other women too... the ones who stand beside them. The ones who show up in the background, in the inbetween, in the everyday moments that don’t seem big at the time. The ones who fill in the gaps, step into ordinary days, and leave fingerprints all over a childhood without ever needing credit for it. You were one of those women for me. I remember you as light. Summer. Baseball somewhere in the distance. Music playing with the windows down. That kind of 90s joy that felt easy and full and alive. You had the most beautiful smile, the kind that made everything feel a little more fun, a little more possible. You were creative in ways that stuck. I still think about the way you wrapped birthday presents in newspaper comics, like even the outside of the gift deserved to be part of the magic. But what stays with me most is the way you cared. I had long, thick hair, and brushing it was always a battle. Tears, frustration, the whole thing. I can still see you sitting down with my mom, calm and sure, saying, “Liz, you’re doing it wrong,” then showing her how to start at the bottom and work her way up. Taking something overwhelming and turning it into something gentle. I think about that almost every time I brush my daughter’s hair. That small moment didn’t stay small. It kept going. From you, to my mom, to me, and now to both my daughters. You helped shape me, not in some loud obvious way... but in the quiet kind of way that actually lasts. I have this vivid memory I can almost still see so clearly. Like a safe place in my mind I often wander… My mom was in the hospital. It was a hard season. My brother and I stayed with different families, trying to keep some sense of normal. But I remember begging to stay at your house. I just wanted to be there. With you. With my brother. In that space that felt safe and fun and full of life. And they let me! I remember homemade Mickey Mouse pancakes in the morning. I remember you brushing my hair, gentle and patient. I remember sitting in the living room watching the Ewok movie, just feeling… okay. Taken care of. Like everything was going to be alright, safe and steady in a way that settled deep emotionally and stayed with me. That kind of tenderness doesn’t fade. It follows you. It shows up later when you’re making pancakes for your own kids, when you’re brushing their hair, when you’re trying to create that same feeling of comfort and steadiness for them. You gave that kind of care without making it a big thing. You just lived it. Every Christmas, like clockwork. That peanut butter fudge that didn’t stand a chance in our house. My dad and I would practically race to it, hover over it like it was gold, knowing it wouldn’t last more than a day or two. It was that good. And now, not every year but close to it, I make it too. Somewhere along the way, it became part of my rhythm. Something I carry forward without even thinking about why. Something that reminds me of you and that time and that feeling. The feeling of pure joy and nostalgia. The feeling of genuine gratitude. Because of you our family ended up with weenie dogs. Our very first one traced back to your house! It’s funny how something like that can become a such a huge part of your life, like a thread that keeps weaving through the years. How often even the smallest things are the ones that last the longest. And somewhere in the middle of all that, you took us to our first real concert. Dishwalla, The Refreshments, and Chalk Farm. I didn’t know it then, but that night unlocked something in me. A love for music that would go on to shape who I was becoming. A rhythm I’ve been following ever since. You were an incredible boy mom. Strong, fun, creative, full of life. But you were also something more than that. You were part of the village that helped raise us. Part of the constellation of women who shaped the way I see the world, the way I care for my own children, the way I move through memory and meaning now. I don’t know if people always realize the impact they have when they’re just being themselves. But I do. And I carry it with me. You left behind patterns. Ways of loving. Ways of showing up. Ways of making a child feel seen, safe, and at home. I don’t think those things ever really disappear. They just keep moving forward, showing up in new places, in new hands, in new generations. So thank you. For the love you gave so easily. For the tenderness you carried into ordinary moments and made them matter. For the joy, the creativity, the steadiness, and the care. With a little love and some tenderness. That’s what you gave. It never left. It’s still moving. It just keeps spiraling outward, finding its way into the lives it touches next.
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