For No One: Preserving a Life Without Performance
The camera comes out even before the feeling does.
Before grief has settled into the body, it is already a caption. Before change has been lived, it has been shared. Before the impossible thing has been understood, it has been explained. Sometimes the explanation arrives so quickly that it becomes the experience itself. The flood of responses. The reassurance. The hearts. The comments saying, I know exactly what you mean! The moment and its documentation collapse into the same instant.
Something is gained in that exchange. Something is also lost.
We have forgotten what it feels like to make something for no one.
Not for followers, friends, lovers, or the version of ourselves we are trying to become or defend. Not for our children to discover one day. Just because something inside us insists on existing outside our body. To write because we must. To paint because we can’t keep it in.
There was a time when this needed no explanation.
Women have always left traces of themselves. Not because they expected history to preserve them, but because creating has always been one way of surviving change. A woven blanket. A clay vessel. A recipe copied into another woman’s handwriting. Margins filled with notes. Letters folded and tucked away. Songs remembered long after names were forgotten. Private notebooks. Objects worn smooth by use.
The record has never belonged only to institutions. It has always lived in the things women made while they were busy living.
The question is not whether we still make those things. The question is whether we still make them honestly.
An audience is not the problem.
An audience can bear witness. It can preserve. It can make a woman feel less alone. It can create the quiet recognition that says, yes, I have lived something like that too. There is generosity in sharing, and there is generosity in receiving what another person has entrusted to you.
The trouble is not that we have audiences. The trouble is that they arrive too early.
Somewhere along the way, many of us lost the habit of encountering our own lives before presenting them. We reach for the camera before we have sat with the feeling. We begin explaining while the change is still happening. We tell the story before we know what it asked of us.
The response comes quickly. Comfort. Agreement. Advice. Applause. Concern. Interpretation. All of it well meant. But every response, however kind, begins shaping the thing itself. It offers language before we have found our own. It suggests meaning before we have had the chance to live long enough with uncertainty. It starts arranging the experience into something coherent while we’re still inside something incoherent.
There is a cost to that. We begin remembering not only what happened, but the version that was understood by other people. Their questions become our questions. Their interpretation settles over the experience like another layer of paint. Over time it becomes difficult to separate what we truly knew from what we later learned to say.
Memory has always changed with time. Now it changes almost immediately.
There is a kind of honesty that exists before that process begins. It is fragile. Easily interrupted. It may be contradictory, unfinished, impossible to explain. It has not yet been revised into wisdom or shaped into something satisfying to tell. It is simply the truth of someone trying to understand what is happening while it is still happening.
That version deserves a witness too. Its first witness should be the woman herself.
Not because private things are more virtuous than shared ones, or because secrecy is noble. Because there is a relationship that must exist before any archive, before any audience, before any collective record. The relationship between a woman and her own experience. Everything else grows from there.
Some truths need to belong entirely to us for a little while. Not forever. Just long enough for us to finish learning what they mean.
It is worth saying plainly: contributing something to The Quilt is not, by itself, a guarantee of honesty. A woman can offer a piece of her life to a collective archive and still be performing. Still reaching toward an imagined response, or leaving out the parts that refuse to resolve. The difference is not where the record ends up. It is the intention at the moment it is created.
A woman sits alone in a room full of paintings. Stacks of them face the wall. The ones on top of each stack are loud, unapologetic, almost dripping with everything she keeps inside. Passion. Anger. Fear. Sorrow. Regret. Joy. Ecstasy. No audience. There was never meant to be one. This is not art made to move anyone. It is a purge. The inevitable regurgitation of her inner world, made because holding it in any longer would cost her something she can’t afford to lose. Does she know if anyone will ever see them? Does she care? She hasn’t decided. She may never decide. And that is exactly the point.
What you have lived deserves an honest account. Not because anyone else needs to hear it. Because you do.
And if, one day, something you made for no one feels ready to leave the room where it was born, The Quilt exists. Not as a platform to be seen, but as a collective record. A place that knows the difference.
But you do not have to begin there. You shouldn’t.
If you are still sitting in the dark with your own incoherent truths, trying to look at what you have been expected to forget, or to name the roles you’ve outgrown, those things can exist in private first.
The Vulnerable Work of Remembering is a companion journal designed for exactly that kind of unperformed, solitary beginning. You are welcome to take a copy with you into your own inner space.

Photo: Ekaterina Astakhova
