Senior Writer
Senior
United States 🇺🇸

Rachel J

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Bio

Rachel enjoys the outdoors, painting, cooking, animals and books. After extensive travel, she’s happily returned to the familiar mountains and ocean of the Pacific Northwest. She holds an MS in journalism from Columbia University, and has written freelance stories for Time magazine, Columbia Journalism Review and many other publications. Her work has won her a Pulitzer Traveling Fellowship and Overseas Press Club Foundation Scholarship, and her first nonfiction book will be published in 2022. Rachel enjoys crafting meaningful stories for people to better understand themselves and the world at large.

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As a Story Terrace writer, Rachel J interviews customers and turns their life stories into books. Get to know our writer better by reading the autobiographical anecdote below!

At Home In The Wild

When I was thirteen, I became obsessed with the idea of running away to live in the woods. I may have been influenced by Hatchet, a novel in which a boy my age survived alone in the wilderness, with a hatchet as his only tool. He’d even befriended a hawk. Of course, I would need more than a hatchet, so I made lists: shampoo, conditioner, toothbrush. At first, I considered the expansive forest about 100 miles north, where I attended summer camp every year. It was lush and green, and riddled with trails. Surely, I could survive there! But I wasn’t sure what I would do when I ran out of shampoo, or conditioner. And then there was food to consider. The protagonist in Hatchet had foraged for berries and hunted small animals, but I was less confident.

My next best option was the ravine next to the community center where my sisters and I took swimming lessons. It was forested, with a stream winding through the bottom. I could sneak out to buy food. But how would I get the money? Eventually, with great reluctance, I accepted that I’d better put off my plans. After all, my parents didn’t treat me badly enough to warrant such an endeavor. And I should probably finish high school, in case I needed it later in life. As an alternative, I decided to write a novel about a girl my age who lived in the woods and penned a few paragraphs in a red Mead notebook, but they quickly petered out before she ever left the house.

More than two decades later, I did embark on a three-month journey into the Sierra Nevada mountains, one that was much better planned. I didn’t bring shampoo or conditioner – relying, instead, on a single bottle of all-purpose soap. I pre-packed boxes of food, and had a friend mail them to locations along the trail. And as I spent much of that time in a single ravine, alongside a rushing river, I realized that I was glad that I’d waited to finish high school, and became a writer who actually finished things. That I’d been just wise enough to realize that I couldn’t have everything I wanted, exactly when I wanted it. That my responsibility to others might be more important than where I longed to be – and, perhaps, could one day lead me there.

Start Working With Rachel J Today!

At StoryTerrace, we believe that every story deserves to be beautifully preserved and shared across generations. Capture your personal or business journey and share your history, experience and wisdom today.

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