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Meera Lee Patel

ARTIST, WRITER, BOOK MAKER
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Dear Somebody: Taking creative inventory.

November 21, 2025

Three Sisters Make a Wish for Uppercase Issue #67 (2025)

A year from now, here are five things from this week that I'd like to remember:

MONDAY

For my current Being column, I wrote about taking creative inventory. I make an effort to do this at the beginning of ever quarter, in order to re-align my creative work with my evolving values. An excerpt is below; the entire article is available for reading in the current issue of Uppercase Magazine. 

Three Sisters Make a Wish, published in Issue 67 of Uppercase Magazine (2025)

“On a rudimentary level, this means disengaging with behavior where other people’s lives and work stamps out the value of mine. I stop scrolling Instagram, where it becomes easy to believe that everyone else is better at everything—from parenting to painting—than me. I stop reading books by artists I love if I find that I’m comparing my voice to theirs. Instead of turning to Pinterest—or even the books in my studio, for inspiration, I head to the library. I turn back 100 years or so and usually find the most exciting inspiration in work that was created prior to the Internet’s existence—before the allure of someone else’s life and creativity became more important than my own.

On a more conscious level, this work means recognizing my true voice—my values, stories, and desires, deeply enough to separate it from the rest. When self-doubt creeps in and tells me my work isn’t good enough, I recognize that it’s the voice of my fear, who can’t bear to see me fail. When the pressure of producing more work than is sustainable grinds at me, I recognize that it’s the voice of my immigrant upbringing that tells me I must succeed to be worthy, even of my own love.” 

—from Creative Inventory: Going Back to the Basics for Issue 67 of Uppercase Magazine

TUESDAY

“My grandmother says that mango trees used to belong to everyone”; tracing the removal of Confederate monuments across the American south; the principles of patience.

WEDNESDAY

The cover of LEARNING TO LET GO, published by Michael O’Mara Books (2025)

The UK edition of LEARN TO LET GO, titled LEARNING TO LET GO, came out this week! I’m thrilled to have this edition available for overseas readers, and very grateful to Michael O’Mara for supporting this book. 

If you’re in the UK or overseas, please support this edition of the journal buy purchasing directly through Michael O’Mara, Amazon UK, Waterstones, or at your local independent bookstore. 

For a limited time, Bookshop.org is offering 10% off with the code LOVEBOOKSHOPS — it’s the perfect time to pick a copy or two for the upcoming holiday season. Thank you, always, for your support and encouragement. 

THURSDAY

Some of you may remember that I painted Tony Hoagland’s Reasons to Survive November during my MFA program three years ago. I was introduced to the poem by Laura Olin and from the moment I read the first line, the poem has never left my brain. 

To me, the mark of good art is if it propels the reader to do something. Hoagland’s poem did that for me; it inspired me to pick up a paintbrush and create something new. The poem itself speaks of an enemy, and in my early years of motherhood, the enemy felt external: the many obstacles that stood in between me and the art I so desperately wanted—needed, to make. 

Over the past handful of years, I’ve worked myself up into a fever trying to make emotive work—not work based on an emotional subject or experience, but work that made the viewer feel. How can I use colors to better express certain emotions? How can I use texture to create an emotional landscape? How can word and image come together to create something otherwise inexplicable? How can I make a simple drawing that beckons a feeling otherwise unseen, a feeling that can only survive deep inside the heart? 

Years later, the questions above are still the questions I ask myself each time I sit down to make. And years later, Hoagland’s poem still inspires me to take action: to pick up a paintbrush and create. But as I grow as a person and as an artist, my enemy looks less like someone or something outside of me. The more I make, the more deeply I understand that my biggest obstacle isn’t balancing motherhood and career, finding clients, or growing an online platform: it’s reducing the volume of the voice inside me that says I’m destined to fail. 

Reasons to Survive November hanging in our mudroom (2025)

This painting now hangs in our mudroom; N refers to it as The November Poem. Most days, I walk right past it in an effort to tidy the mountain of shoes, pack backpacks, or shove tiny feet into even tinier socks. But when I do look up, I see much more than a strange painting laden with young brushstrokes and skewed perspective. I see myself in a kaleidoscope, through a million different lenses, every version of myself eager to help the next survive. 

FRIDAY

November like a train wreck—
as if a locomotive made of cold
had hurtled out of Canada
and crashed into a million trees,
flaming the leaves, setting the woods on fire.

The sky is a thick, cold gauze—
but there’s a soup special at the Waffle House downtown,
and the Jack Parsons show is up at the museum,
full of luminous red barns.

—Or maybe I’ll visit beautiful Donna,
the kickboxing queen from Santa Fe,
and roll around in her foldout bed.

I know there are some people out there
who think I am supposed to end up
in a room by myself

with a gun and a bottle full of hate,
a locked door and my slack mouth open
like a disconnected phone.

But I hate those people back
from the core of my donkey soul
and the hatred makes me strong
and my survival is their failure,

and my happiness would kill them
so I shove joy like a knife
into my own heart over and over

and I force myself toward pleasure,
and I love this November life
where I run like a train
deeper and deeper
into the land of my enemies.

—Reasons to Survive November by Tony Hoagland

See you next week!

xx,

M


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In Process Tags Tony Hoagland, Laura Olin, Reasons to Survive November, Learn to Let Go, Uppercase Magazine
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Dear Somebody: Joy is not made to be a crumb.

November 3, 2023

From a series of collages I made to accompany Ilya Kaminsky’s We Lived Happily During the War (2022)

A year from now, here are five things from this week that I'd like to remember:

MONDAY 

F has been teething for two months now, her mouth a continuous gush of saliva and spit-up, her gums red and blistered from pressure. She gnaws on her tiny fists, on cold washcloths, on gummy teethers—anything that promises a bit of relief. Her skin is flushed with stress, but when I pick her up, she smiles. I put my cheek next to hers and she laughs, tears still streaming down her face. She holds onto her joy. 

I tell her that I know it hurts. I explain the intricacy of tooth eruption—the fact that they’re all there, hiding inside her skull, just waiting for their moment to shine—though I know she doesn’t understand. I myself don’t, really. What is there to understand about pain? All I know of pain is that we continue to live through it. We tolerate it, we build resilience or numb ourselves against it. Over time, we discover that there are many things that frighten us more than pain.

I watch F wriggle in discomfort. She sleeps fitfully, crying on and off for hours. All the crying makes her vomit and all the vomit makes her hungry again. I change her wet clothes, her wet sleepsack, her wet sheets. She is quiet, solemn. Her tired eyes follow me around the room and she smiles. It’s a small smile, but it’s there, glinting in the dark. I see her searching, trying to find her way back to joy. 

The room is cold; it’s November now. F shivers and wails through her smile. I imagine she is confused. We have allotted too much pain to this tiny person—someone this small and this good—who tries, in the very worst of circumstances, to feel joy. I look at her eyes: wet, glassy. The lids are swollen from little sleep and too much salt. I wrap her back up. I dry her eyes, her face, her mouth. She smiles. She tries to sleep.

It’s been a tough day. Many hours later, when the moon comes up for air, I think about joy and how it lives inside us. I think about how, despite great pain and discomfort, F holds onto what she knows is hers. To what belongs to her. I think about how hard she tries to live inside joy and how I want to do more of the same. 

T pulls out his phone and shows me a video he took an hour ago. In it, F lays on her stomach, her face tear-stained. The front of her outfit is soaked. Her hair is matted. When T calls her name, she looks up at him and her face beams with the light of a thousand moons. He calls her again and she laughs. She laughs and laughs; she holds onto her joy. She laughs and laughs in the face of her pain. 

I watch the video to the very end, and then I press play again.

TUESDAY

My favorite poem about November and the painting I made inspired by it. This essay on Bill Watterson (found via Laura Olin’s newsletter, a favorite). Israel in 600 words or less. This poem about war, which is also a poem about money. And lastly: What is a whisper?

WEDNESDAY

I was delighted to speak with journalist and author Amy L. Bernstein, for her newsletter Doubt Monster, on creativity and happiness. An excerpt is below:

We often talk about “finding” courage, as though it were loose change under a couch cushion. But what does it take, really, to “find” courage. What steps or actions can we take to help us do what we must, when every part of us wants to look the other way?

Courage is not about summoning bravery or staring fear in the face. I think it’s more about maintaining perspective—remembering that discomfort and happiness are both temporary. Instead, work toward building character, identifying what kind of person you want to be. I want to be someone who doesn’t buckle under pressure, to be somebody who is generous, thoughtful, or empathetic, or looks for the good in others even when they’re not presenting that goodness to me or for me. Those kinds of umbrellas help you make courageous choices and to live with courage, even when it’s difficult—especially when there’s no immediate reward other than the satisfaction that you’re becoming more of the person you want to be.

Read the full interview here. 

THURSDAY

“Writing, literature, language, the body—these things are a matrix, a sacred labyrinthine geometry that helps us reach our own center and return back out to the world and eventually become through death a part of the larger universe. You have to be optimistic to write against your own death. But that does not mean that you don’t also write from a place of rage or tender yearning or icy callousness or to stop yourself from weeping or all of the above at once which is, I think, most often the case with writers who have paid a high price in igniting the engine of their own voice. This mode of optimism has the capacity to transcend the page and enter the reader’s consciousness; once there, it can cultivate in us an unwavering defense of the innate dignity of all types of personhood, knowledge that that dignity exists independently of any external value judgement. This is literature’s optimism. It is expansive. It has many dwelling places.”

—From Whose Time Are We Speaking In? by Azareen Van der Vliet Oloomi

FRIDAY

If you suddenly and unexpectedly feel joy,
don’t hesitate. Give in to it. There are plenty
of lives and whole towns destroyed or about
to be. We are not wise, and not very often
kind. And much can never be redeemed.
Still, life has some possibility left. Perhaps this
is its way of fighting back, that sometimes
something happens better than all the riches
or power in the world. It could be anything,
but very likely you notice it in the instant
when love begins. Anyway, that’s often the
case. Anyway, whatever it is, don’t be afraid
of its plenty. Joy is not made to be a crumb.

—Don’t Hesitate by Mary Oliver

xx,

M


To sign up for my weekly newsletter, Dear Somebody, please subscribe here.

In Life Tags Parenting, Parenthood, Motherhood, Poetry, Bill Watterson, Laura Olin, Amy L. Bernstein, Doubt Monster, Courage, Whose Time Are We Speaking In?, Azareen Van der Vliet Oloomi, Don’t Hesitate, Mary Oliver
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Meera Lee Patel is an artist, writer, and book maker. Her books have sold over one million copies, and been translated into over a dozen languages worldwide.

Her newsletter, Dear Somebody, is a short weekly note chronicling five things worth remembering, including a look into her process, reflections on motherhood, and creative inspiration.

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