The Moth - The Moth Radio Hour: Signed, Sealed, Delivered - Stories about Letters
Episode Date: October 10, 2023Special delivery!—a Moth Radio Hour all about letters. At work, for romance, and to the Tooth Fairy. This episode is hosted by Moth Executive Producer, Sarah Austin Jenness. The Moth Radio ...Hour is produced by The Moth and Jay Allison of Atlantic Public Media. Storytellers: Meg Ferrill's letter is read aloud in her human sexuality class. Danielle Dardashti is surprised by the severance letter she receives. Matty Struski pens a letter in an attempt to win back his ex. Lu Levin strikes up a correspondence with the Tooth Fairy. Otis Gray gets a job writing rejection letters. Stacey Perlman visits a medium, who knows of a letter to the great beyond.
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From P.R.X. this is the Moth Radio Hour. I'm Sarah Austin-Geness. In this episode, stories
all about letters. It turns out letters are not a thing of the past.
Some people, like me, are still writing and stamping,
opening and reading them.
Our first story is from Meg Farrell.
She told this at an open mic story slam in San Francisco
where we partnered with public radio stations,
KQED and KALW.
Here's Meg, live at the mall.
It's 1998 and it's my second year in college.
I know, I look exceptionally young.
I had just picked my major and I had done this by going to one of the buildings on campus
where they house all the bannersanners one for each of the majors
And it looked up and I saw it and I was like that's it and it said leisure studies
And I was like I can do that I can I can do that really really well
And so like the exceptional leisure studies major I was, I decided to push out all my core
requirements and just focus really intensely on my electives.
And so I chose human sexuality because it sounded exotic and yes I was naive and innocent
at the time.
And I also chose it because at the time I was also dating my first girlfriend and I thought
it might be relevant.
So the class started and it started first with STDs. It was just like picture after picture after
picture after picture after picture of STDs. It was just really hard on me because I'm a visual
learner. And then we quickly moved into sexuality.
And because it was the 90s, we really just covered homosexuality, bisexuality, and heterosexuality.
Because at the time, we didn't talk about much.
I mean, if you were a man and you had a piercing in your right ear by urban legend, you were gay.
Like, what do we know? We all wore scrunchies. We were like a confused nation completely.
So I shall tell you that.
I went to school in North Carolina,
and North Carolina is not the liberal hotbed
that you think it is.
At least it wasn't in 1998.
And the other thing you need to know
is that I've never really been much of an activist.
Like, yes, I did adopt a manatee in seventh grade, but I have no idea where he is right now.
So for these reasons, combined, I was in the closet at the time.
And so when we started talking about homosexuality, I was like really interested about what was
going to happen.
And at first, it started out most things
start out when you have a group of 18 and 19 year olds
and it's like hive mind.
And they're all like, I don't know.
What do you think about homosexuality?
I don't know.
What do you think about homosexuality?
I don't know.
What do you think?
And then it's all really fastened to they're all going to hell.
Yeah.
And I was like, oh my god, I'm like in the center of the worst, bad, after school
special ever.
Or perhaps this is the moment that like all of my degrossi high training should come into
action.
I wasn't sure what it was.
But the one thing I knew was I was starting to get like really upset because people were
throwing out words like hell and Satan and all these things.
And these were like all of my class friends. and it was really starting to like burn on me
and so it kept going and it's kept spiraling worse and worse and then one girl
stood up and she said and she like turned I remember she turned to the class like
she was making this grand announcement and she's like if my kid was a
gay I disown them and the class just like kept agreeing with it, it seemed to make sense
to them. And then finally someone else got up in the class and she goes, if there's someone
gay here, they should just stand up and tell us why. Like seriously, in what scenario would that make sense? I, like that is the most unsafe space I can imagine.
So I kept it inside and most of it was like really mad at them
because they weren't who I thought they were.
But I was also mad at me because I was doing exactly what I knew
I would do, nothing.
And I just went home really, really mad and really angry
and really hurt.
And I sat down at my roommates' computer
and I started typing out this letter to my classmates
and I just filled it with all the anger
and all the hate in every single word I could put,
just fire.
And then I went and dropped it off anonymously
at my teacher's desk because that's what I do.
I like push sangre and then I just and dropped it off anonymously at my teacher's desk because that's what I do. I like push-sanger and then I just drop off anonymous notes because I'm passive aggressive.
So then I went into class and 20 minutes in, the teacher did something I had not expected.
She read my letter and I mean I expected her to read my letter, but it was how she read my letter.
Like where I had shoved anger into each word,
she read it calm and patient and compassionate and almost loving, giving people the space to
actually take in the word for themselves. And so when I said homosexuality is not a choice,
she said homosexuality is not a choice. And she continued reading my letter with my words but her tone. And she went on from there.
And she said, right now I'm sitting next to you, as I have this whole semester, the same
person that you've laughed with, the same person that you've worked with. But if last
week I had told you about who I loved, you would have looked at me differently.
Maybe with disgust, maybe with hate, maybe something even worse. But by remaining anonymous,
you can accept me for who I am. And then she kept reading my letter and when she got to the end,
she folded it up. And it was like this huge silence, like this long, painful silence,
and I swear the only thing you could hear
was like my heart beating out in my chest.
It was like a homo heart at Grail and Poe moment.
And then from the back of the room,
there was a slow clap.
That grew into thunderous applause as the whole room erupted into cheers and clapped her,
which isn't a word.
Sorry.
And I even looked at the girl who had said she would disown her own kid, and she had tears
streaming down her cheeks as she slapped her hands violently.
Like so excited with the moment.
And guys, I would like, because I'm very vain to say that it was my words that peeled the
hate from the room that day, but it wasn't.
It was my teacher.
It was the way she said my words.
Because this is the thing guys, your words can be magical,
they can be brilliant, they can be perfectly constructed,
but they are worth nothing unless they're heard.
Thank you guys.
Woo!
Woo!
Woo!
Woo!
Woo!
Woo!
Woo!
Woo!
Woo!
Woo!
Woo!
Woo!
That was Meg Farrell.
Meg is a Portland Oregon-based storyteller, comedian, and writer.
She's working on a book for young people about what she wishes she had known sooner in
life.
She says the book may be the mildest form of a midlife crisis.
Meg wants her the advice, shred your bank statements, but save your love letters.
So she says the letters she's kept are a crewing interest in her heart.
She held on to the letter from this story too, which reminds her that anger isn't the
way to unity.
It was written over 24 years ago and Meg says she believes in the power of being vulnerable,
so she's shared it with all of us.
To see that letter, fear of what's inside.
You can't unread a letter.
Our next storyteller is Danielle Dardashty.
Danielle told this at an open mic story slam in New York City, where WNYC is
a media partner of the Moth. And just a technicality, this story involves a package with a letter
inside. Here's Danielle, live with the Moth.
It's January 2013, and I'm in a job I love working for a boss I love at a major media company.
On Tuesday, January 15, I close the largest deal of my career. After months of strategizing and negotiating,
I reel in a multi-million dollar deal
that is all new business for the company.
And I feel amazing.
It's like in a movie where I'm walking down the halls
and everyone's high-fiving me
and telling me congratulations in the elevator.
And I feel like a rock star.
Two days later, my daughter, Raquel, who's
nine years old at the time, comes down with a stomach bug.
And I have to call in sick to work to stay home with her.
I'm up all night with her on Thursday night on the bathroom
floor.
And now it's Friday morning at 9am. And we're
still on the bathroom floor together. And there's a lull between vomiting episodes. And I check my phone.
And I see that I have three missed calls from my boss. So I call her back. And the moment she gets on the phone, I can hear
that she doesn't sound exactly like herself. Like maybe she's on speaker phone. And she says,
hi Danielle, sorry to bother you at a bad time. I'm in Dina's office. And Dina is the head of HR.
And Dina's office. And Dina is the head of HR.
She says, we had to make some tough decisions today and eliminate several jobs, including
yours.
The rest of the conversation is a complete blur.
Something about numbers on a spreadsheet, mass layoffs across the company.
My email has already been shut off and they're
over nighting me a package, outlining my severance agreement. My daughter
Raquel starts throwing up again and I'm holding a wet washcloth on her head
and I'm leaning over the toilet with her and I'm crying and she's saying, Mommy, what's the matter? And I'm saying, no, I'm okay, I'm okay.
But I'm not okay.
I'm a wreck.
I feel rejected and unappreciated.
And I cry for three full days, Friday, Saturday,
and Sunday.
Monday is Martin Luther King Day.
And it's the day that Obama is
inaugurated to his second term in office. And I'm sitting in my living room, in my pajamas
still. I've been wearing the same pajamas for three days now. And I'm watching the inauguration
on TV. And at some point, in the middle of the inauguration, suddenly I feel a sense of hope reemerging in me.
Like, yes, I can take a shower.
Yes, I can put on a bra.
Yes, I can open that severance package
and see what's inside and what they offered me. So I tear it open
and I am taken aback, such a generous offer. They're offering me six months full pay severance
and I've only been at the company for less than two years. Suddenly, I'm feeling extremely grateful and elated.
And I feel like I need to thank my boss for this.
So I sit down at my computer and I realize, you know,
I have a lot of people I need to thank.
I need to thank the Chief Revenue Officer and the CEO and the Chief Marketing Officer.
So I just copy all of them on the email
and it goes something like this.
Dear everyone, thank you for this awesome opportunity
to work with all of you.
Thank you for recognizing my abilities
and promoting me into this amazing role.
I've learned so much over the last two years
and we've all accomplished so much together.
Like this massive deal I just closed the other day.
I know you're gonna do amazing things with this client
and make me very proud.
Greatfully yours, Danielle Dardashty.
And I didn't wanna overthink it,
so I just hit send.
Two hours later, my phone rings.
It's someone in HR.
And she says, hi Danielle,
I'm calling from Dina's office.
And we have decided to grant your request
for an enhanced severance package. Instead of six months' severance, we're offering you 12 months' severance
and your entire back-end bonus.
We're over-nighting you a new package
outlining this new offer.
And I'm thinking, what the fuck just happened?
It wasn't until two years later that I found out Fuck, just happened!
It wasn't until two years later that I found out they misinterpreted my enthusiastic email as a threat to sue them.
So, what's my takeaway?
Well, it certainly never hurts in business to be thankful,
but sometimes being grateful pays off big time. That was Danielle Dargashty.
Danielle lives in White Plains, New York with her husband
and their two college aged kids.
She's an Emmy award-winning documentary producer, co-founder of a show called Story Boom,
and she's also working on a podcast called The Nightingale of Iran.
When Danielle told this story at our Moth Story slam competition, she won.
To see a photo of her on stage, go to themawth.org.
And while you're there, check out our schedule
of open mic storytelling events.
Come out one night to a city near you
and throw your name in the hat for a chance to get picked.
We want to hear your stories. In a moment, two love letters, one to a romantic partner, and one to the tooth fairy, when the The Moth Radio Hour is produced by Atlantic Public Media in Woods Hole, Massachusetts, and
presented by PRX.
This is The Moth Radio Hour from PRX.
I'm Sarah Austin-Geness.
This is an episode with stories all about letters.
That's right, physical letters that show up in your mailbox.
You can hold them in your hand.
People are still sending them.
Letters to set the record straight.
Thank you letters.
I'm sorry letters.
And yes, also love letters.
Our next story was told by Maddie Straski
at a Moth story slam in Los Angeles,
where we partner with Public Radio Station, KCRW.
Here's Maddie live at the Moth.
I've always been a really great guy to break up with.
When I was in high school, I used to watch my friends go through these horrible breakups
and in attempts to win their X's back, they would always come up with these grand romantic
gestures that look great when you see them in a rom- rom-com, but when you experience them
in real life are just stalkery is the only word I can come up with.
And I swore to my 17-year-old self
that I would never become emotional over a breakup.
I would, no matter what happened,
I would always maintain my dignity.
And a couple of years later, when I was in college,
I met Sarah, and she was amazing.
She had pink hair, and she was an artist,
and she loved to dance, and sing karaoke,
and she just felt free.
And we used to stay up all night listening to music
and talking about things that mattered.
And when we were together, I felt free.
And we just felt for each other really hard.
And things were great because I was young
and I was in love for the first time
and everything was new and raw.
And I had never felt like this before in my life.
And I think that's why I had such a hard time
when she broke up with me.
And the worst part of the breakup was that she didn't really
give me a reason.
She just chose another guy over me, and it just crushed me.
And suddenly, my dignity and my self-respect
didn't seem to matter that much to me.
I just wanted to get her back, and I wanted
to tell her how I felt.
But I'm not one for giant romantic, stalkery gestures. so I grabbed a pen and I wrote the first love letter that I ever wrote
in my life and I just poured my guts out on the page and I told her how much I loved her
and I told her that I've never loved anybody like I loved her and I could never see myself
loving anybody else the way I loved her and you know without her around me I just felt
empty and lost.
And I put this letter in an envelope, and I mail it to her,
and I just waited.
And I kept waiting, and I didn't get a response from her.
And I felt so humiliated.
And I was so mad at myself for writing this letter.
I just hated myself for not walking away
with a clean break from this relationship.
But eventually, I moved on and I got over Sarah
and I graduated from college
and I dated other women who broke up with me
and I handled that with dignity and grace.
And I moved from Boston to Los Angeles
and my life was going pretty well.
But I always, even years later, I hated the fact
that I wrote this letter and it just haunted me.
And it was one of those things that sort of hangs around in the back of your mind, taking
you down a notch when you're feeling a little bit too good about yourself.
You know, like, I'd be walking down the street, enjoying a beautiful day, and thinking about
how good my life was going.
And then this voice would just be like, oh, yeah, but remember that letter?
You wrote the salary, you pathetic piece of shit.
And I'd be like, oh, yeah, right.
And so that's how it was for a while.
I would think about it not all the time,
but when I did, it just really made me feel bad about myself.
And one day, I go home and I grab my mail,
and I'm thumbing through the mail,
and I just stop in my tracks, because there's a letter.
And it's from Sarah.
And I haven't talked to Sarah in 10 years
since I wrote that letter to her.
And I opened it up, and it's pretty short. And it just says, I'm going to Sarah in 10 years since I wrote that letter to her. And I opened it up and it's pretty short.
And it just says, I'm going to be in LA pretty soon.
And I'd love to catch up with you and talk face to face.
And she left her number.
So I called her and we arranged to meet up
at this coffee shop down the street
from my apartment in Los Fieles.
So we ended up meeting up at the coffee shop.
And after we had some small talk and we caught up for a few minutes,
she said, listen, the reason I got in touch with you
is, I met this guy, and I'm moving in with him,
and I was cleaning out my apartment,
and going through my things, and I stumbled across this,
and she pulls out the letter that I wrote her.
And I just froze, and she said, I'm really sorry,
I never responded to this. I was in a really bad place then, she said, you know, I'm really sorry, I never responded to this.
I was in a really bad place then, but you need to know, I've been carrying this letter around for 10 years from place to place.
And it really helped me get through some rough times, you know, just being able to read it and know that somebody, at some point,
loved me the way that you did. It really, it helped me. And I just wanted to say thank you.
And then she's like, slid the letter across the table to me.
And she said, but, you know, the guy I'm with now is amazing.
And, you know, he's amazing.
I'm in a much better place in my life.
And I don't think that I need this letter anymore.
And I just wanted to give it back to you.
And part of me wanted to grab that letter
and just run out the street and lay it on fire right there
and destroy the symbol of humiliation
that I've been carrying around for the last 10 years.
But I didn't, because when I looked at it,
the letter, it looked worn.
And it looked like it had been read and re-read dozens of times over the years.
And I realized that letter meant a completely different thing to her than it did to me.
You know, where I saw shame and humiliation and embarrassment, she saw warmth and comfort
and love.
And I just said, Sarah, you know, I wrote that letter for you and I wanted you to have
it.
And a lot of things might have changed in the last 10 years, but that hasn't.
And she just smiled, and she put it back in her bag, and we didn't talk about it again.
And we ended up spending a really great day together.
You know, we just hung out, we reminisced about old times, and she laughed, and we kept
them touch after that.
We wrote letters back and forth for a bit, and then letters changed, emails, and emails
changed to Facebook posts, and we're both married now
when we both have kids at Verone.
And every once in a while I still think about that letter.
And I'm amazed by how much different I feel about it now
that I used to.
I used to just feel so embarrassed by it.
But now I'm really proud that I wrote it.
I'm glad that I told her how I felt even though it took us
10 years to talk about it.
And I'm glad that it was able to help her through some rough times in her life.
And I don't know what she ended up doing with that letter, but I'd like to think that
she held on to it.
And I'd like to think that maybe someday if she's having a rough day, she might stumble
across it again and might bring a smile that would face and help her through another rough
time.
And it might have taken me 30 years to realize it,
but that letter allowed me to have the most dignified break-up
I've ever had in my life.
Thank you.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That was Maddie Strusty.
Maddie lives in Pasadena, California
with his wife Valerie,
and he's a full-time stay-at-home dad to their nine-year-old daughter, Rain.
Maddie and Sarah still touch base about every six months or so.
He says, it feels like we pick up right where we left off every time.
I have to admit, this story had me sobbing the first time I heard it.
I have some old love letters too, but none that have been discussed decades after the fact.
That is some emotional maturity. Our next story is all about letters to the tooth fairy.
So anyone out there listening with kids, just a word of caution, these letters reveal secrets.
Live from a story slam in Boston, where we partner with Public Radio Station WBWR and
PRX.
Here's Lulavin.
So I'm a Jewish kid from a small Jewish town in New York originally.
It's called New City, New York, but it's actually
sweetly named Jew City to the other Jews.
And something nice about having that big
of population as a kid is that come the holidays.
It's more 50, 50 in classrooms.
You have kids that are celebrating Christmas
and kids that are celebrating Hanukkah for presents.
And I really enjoyed that as a kid,
but the thing that kind of I wished I had more in my religion
was that all of the kids that celebrated Christmas
and Easter and stuff had Santa and the Easter Bunny
to believe in and make them happy.
And I thought that was really cool.
But all I had was the tooth fairy.
So I really, really dug the tooth fairy.
And I really enjoyed getting visits from her
because it was like, oh, they get chocolate,
but like I get a quarter when I lose my tooth.
So it's a first grade.
And I have parents that work really hard to make me and my sister feel loved, but also
have to work a lot.
My mom was getting her masters in education and about to start teaching and my dad was an organic
chemist so that included long hours at the lab and I didn't really see a lot of them
and like parents come to school things but one day in first grade I came home and I was
like I want to make a new friend I'm going to write to the tooth fairy she's always shown
up for me so I'm just going to leave a letter under my pillow.
And I wrote my first letter to the tooth fairy.
I said, dear tooth fairy, I'm in first grade.
You've collected my teeth before, but it's nice to meet you.
I feel like we could be really good friends, and I'd love to hear about your life and your
job.
I'm super interested.
Write me back if you
feel like that would be a good idea. No pressure. I stuck it. I showed my mom. I
was like, mom, I'm writing to the tooth fairy. I hope she answers. And my mom was
like, hmm, get me to. That's so fun. And that night I stuck it under my pillow. I
went to sleep, no expectations, but hoping for a response.
And the next morning I woke up and I saw this beautiful letter under my pillow on like purple stationary with glitter on the border and a fairy sticker in the corner.
And it said, it's so nice to talk to you. Not a lot of people do that with me. I'm
really excited. I think you're really your great kid and just nice things about wanting
to start a friendship with me. So I was ecstatic not only because I got a response but because
I knew it was definitely from the 2-3 because we did not have fancy stationery or stickers in the house.
And I kept writing to her every night, but before I would put it under my pillow, I would tell my
mom just because I wanted to let her know how the progress was going. We were never going to have
a play date, but I was still stoked. And my mom would always not have her head and be like,
I'm glad it's going well. Keep doing it. And so this is obviously how my mom knew
that the tooth fairy would be getting letters.
But eventually in your friendship,
like you can stop telling your mom that you're talking
to someone because your just friends are just talking.
But it made me so happy and joyful
to get these letters back.
So when I was like, I'm going gonna ask the tooth fairy what she looks like.
It's the elusive question,
but I feel like we're there.
And so I say, hi, tooth fairy.
I hope you're doing well.
Thanks for responding to my last letter.
I'm just wondering, you can trust me,
no pressure, but you can trust me.
What do you look like?
Could you just tell me anything?
I'm so excited to know.
Because we had a contest at the dentist's office
to draw the tooth fairy for a bowl of Hershey kisses,
and I wanted to win.
And so I left this letter under my pillow,
but I did it without telling my mom this time.
And in the morning, my letter was still there. I hadn't gotten an answer. I thought,
oh my god, have I betrayed the two threes trust? Am I losing something that I've loved?
And that's made me happy for so long. And I told my mom, and my mom was like, oh man, she's
probably just collecting teeth of the world. Don't worry. And I ended up getting a letter
back late the next night which
was good so my belief was still there and it was strong enough for me to bring a
letter or four into first grade show and tell now so I come in and I'm like hey
guys I've been writing the tooth fairy.
We're really close friends and if you want to give it a shot, you should probably talk
to you to hear my letters.
And there's this cool kid in class named Jordan Houseman and he says, from the back of the
room, that's not the tooth fairy to mom.
And I go, oh, first that, because that hurts to hear that someone is calling your friendship
fake.
And I say, it's not my mom.
We don't have the stationery in the house.
And I keep writing for a little while from extra responses here and there.
My mom is working.
It gets a little bit iffy.
And eventually, I did realize that the tooth fairy wasn't real.
I don't know when,
but the other important thing that I realized is that if the tooth fairy looks like my
mom, who cares about me, like my mom does, then that makes me just as joyful. Thank you. That was Lou Livin.
Lou lives in Brooklyn, New York where they're learning how to rollerblade.
Lou is a program coordinator at NYU Law and loves to hunt down tooth rotting baked goods.
And if you're wondering about Lou's mom,
she's now retired and spends her days bird watching
and playing pickleball.
And she kept the letters from this tooth fairy exchange.
They are just the cutest.
To read all of them, visit themough.org.
When we return, rejection letters from the heart and a special message from the other side, when the moth radio hour continues. The Moth Radio Hour is produced by Atlantic Public Media in Woods Hole, Massachusetts,
and presented by the Public Radio Exchange, PRX.org.
You're listening to The Moth Radio Hour from PRX.
I'm Sarah Austin-Geness.
We've been hearing all about letters in this hour.
This next story takes it up a notch. It includes hundreds of handcrafted letters.
Otis Gray told this at Amath Graham Slam in Brooklyn, New York. Here's Otis.
On paper, you'd think that you'd hit rock bottom when you'd just answer to Craigslist ad for a job wrapping a naked guy in duct tape in South Philadelphia.
But you'd be wrong.
Rock bottom is not getting that job. Yeah, he turned me away at the door when he opened it and was visibly shocked that Otis
was not a girl's name, which is both stupid and sexist.
But I had just spent four years at art school as a sculptor and had an absent father, so
I was accustomed to rejection to that point.
But at least with a duct tape man, there was a reason why I got turned away.
Shortly after when I got rejected for the Fulbright scholarship, there was not a reason.
I got a form email saying,
you have not received the full-bright scholarship,
it is not our policy to explain the reasons
for this outcome, please do not contact us.
I had spent nearly a year pouring my entire soul
into this application and you submit like your entire person,
letters of recommendation, your entire body of work, your grades,
a personal statement that defines you to your core,
everything.
And I know that the normal response to rejections
generally sadness and disappointment,
my whole life, I've dealt with it like,
okay, tell me, you know, how can I fix this?
What can I do?
Why?
And now I was so, so mad.
Like, you can't tell me what part of,
which part of me wasn't good enough.
Which was not a unique feeling,
because while I do joke about my daddy issues,
it was not his policy to explain the reasons
for that outcome either.
About a month later after I got rejected a former professor who knew I wasn't doing so hot called me and said hey, you seem
desperate
How do you want a job?
Writing personalized rejection letters to high school students
letters to high school students. I have never been so good at something so quickly in my entire life.
So this foundation, what they did was they gave money to high school students pursuing summer programs in the arts. My job was to take the judges feedback and craft it into the little personalized rejection letters.
I was impartial.
I didn't see them or their work, just the critique of it.
That year, I wrote 160 letters and these things were Shakespearean.
I was taking all this untethered rage I felt from being ambiguously rejected and making
them into these poetic little little complement sandwiches like,
dear Leila, you know, your use of lights and dark
and your charcoal is phenomenal.
And you have a really unique grasp of composition
for your age, but you gotta get out there
and explore girl, get out of your comfort zone.
Relentlessly follow your curiosity into the darkness.
You owe this to yourself, Leyla.
I was like the general patent to this little brigade
of art marines all over the country.
And the more they started coming out,
like dear Patrick, you're passion at 14 shines through.
And you play the oboe like you sold your soul
to the goddamn devil boy
You don't even need this scholarship
You get that oboe money Patrick
and
Like doing this I felt so whole
And like doing this, I felt so whole. Because these kids were putting themselves out there,
like, opened the judgment,
and I had the opportunity to give them
the feedback that I never got.
Wow, but I had, then I had to write one letter.
It was a young dancer.
I'm gonna call her Sarah.
And Sarah was applying for one of the best ballet programs
in the entire country.
And the judges said that she was really talented.
But they were afraid that if she went to this program,
they were afraid that her spirit would be beaten down
by the judgment implicit in the ballet world around body
image, and that she might be better off
doing a program in contemporary dance instead.
So now I knew that this girl Sarah probably didn't look like your stereotypical ballerina,
and it was my job to tell her that a factor in why she wasn't accepted was a part of her that she, you know, she maybe couldn't change.
And I had spent all my time up till then searching for reason and answers and asking why,
but this was a bad reason. I thought about my dad and like, you know, if the answer is just you,
Dad, and like, you know, if the answer is just you,
what do you do with that?
So I reckon with this, and I agonize over it for days, and then I sat down and I wrote to your Sarah,
in the future, you would greatly benefit
from an intensive ballet program.
But a program in contemporary dance
might be exactly what you need as well.
The choice is yours.
You have the passion and the drive
and the talent to just thrive in any environment
you choose to go into, so just go and do it.
And after four years of this job, and over 700 personally crushed dreams, I could confidently
say that that wholeness that I felt was not writing well-reasoned rejections.
It was learning that it just didn't always matter.
And it didn't matter which part of me wasn't good enough.
Especially if it was a reason that I couldn't change
or a reason that I would never change.
And I hope that if these beautiful little weirdos
take anything from these letters,
it's that you should never, ever beg someone
to tell you why you aren't good enough
You go and you show them how fucking wrong they were. Thank you
That was Otis Gray Otis is a Vermont native who just moved to Brooklyn, New York, where
he's a radio producer and a podcast host. He recently produced Sesame Street's Bedtime
podcast Good Night World, and he has his own show called Sleepy, where he reads old books
to help you get to sleep. He just wrapped his eighth year of writing these letters. He says he's written over 800 personalized rejections to date
and about 100 acceptance letters.
And he still really loves doing it.
Our final story about letters is from the beyond. If you believe in that kind of stuff, and I do.
Live from our story slams in Boston, here's Stacey Proman.
So, I am the type of person that believes in spirits and that there are people that can speak
to spirits.
So a few years ago when a family friend recommends that I meet with a medium named
Tish, I naturally jumped at the chance.
And I'm really excited about this because I've never done this before, but I'm also a
bit of a cynic about basically everything in life.
And I knew that I was at risk for hearing what I wanted to hear.
So, I promised myself on the drive to our home that I wouldn't read too much into what she was saying
and that I would watch my body language, I wouldn't want to feed into whatever she told me.
But I'm surprised when I get there because Tisha is this 40-something-year-old woman, and
she's got short crop tear. She's wearing jeans in a t-shirt. It's really casual, and I don't
know exactly what it was I was expecting, but it definitely wasn't a soccer mom. So she
starts to tell me about my career and my relationships, and I'm keeping this promise that I made
it to myself in the back of my head. I know I need to give her some information to work with, but I keep my answers really
short, and I put on my best poker face.
She tells me I'm going to meet this strong female mentor at this job I'm about to start,
and at the man that brought my heart a few years ago is going to reappear into my life.
And I internally roll my eyes at this because I know the odds of this happening are just
nils, like it's not going to happen.
But it does matter because I'm waiting for her to get to the good stuff.
I'm waiting for her to dramatically announce to me that there's some other presence in the
room with us.
This is how it always happens on all these ghost shows that I watch on TV.
Well, she instead just asks me if there's anybody I want to connect with.
Like, she's giving me the option today.
If there's anybody I want her to pick up on in the room, it's my friend Eric.
We met when we were 16, and we dated in that really limited way that two teenagers from
neighboring small towns with learners permits can date.
But after a few months, I broke things off with him.
And we agreed, though, that we were going to remain friends.
And he kept his word.
I, on the other hand, had a much harder time.
I did not know how to deal with how awkward I now
felt in front of him.
So when he'd call or message me,
I would always just shut the conversation down.
I'd just end it as quickly as possible.
And this went on for a few months,
and we didn't see each other for a while.
And we both got our driver's licenses.
One day my mom tells me that she saw
on the news Eric lost control of his car, he slammed into a tree, and he didn't make
it. And at 16 I did not know how to handle the guilt I was feeling, because two weeks
before that he reached out to me, and he said, you should give me a call sometime, we should
hang out. And I agreed, but I never actually planned on calling him.
And now, with this news, I don't remember why it was so difficult for me to be a friend.
But I don't tell Tish any of this.
I just vaguely respond to her that I had a friend in mind.
And I'm using this as a bit of a test for her because I don't know if all this prediction
she mentioned earlier are really ever going to happen.
But if she can tell me anything in this moment about Eric,
then I will know she is the real deal.
So she starts to tell me a few different things about him,
but nothing's really resonating with me.
She mentions a car accident, so she gets that,
but I'm not convinced.
And I'm actually starting to lose a lot of hope
in this whole situation.
I kind of feel foolish for being there.
And then she looks at me and tells me,
he says, thank you for the letters.
And all that energy I had been putting
into maintaining my body language just completely dissolves
and tears are streaming down my face.
And I'm crying because I had never told anybody
that I used to write letters to Eric.
I used to write to him apologizing for being such a bad friend
and asking for his forgiveness.
And I did this for almost two years and I would lead these on his grave.
And then I went off to college.
And at time when on the years passed, I would tell myself, you were only 16, you need to
give yourself a break.
And so my life basically went on.
But now it's nine years later after his death.
And I'm sitting in front of Tish,
who is just acknowledged for the very first time
the existence of these letters.
And I sheepishly ask her what the teenager in me
had always wanted to know.
Does he forgive me?
And she tells me that he says there's
nothing to be forgiven for because our paths in life
cross when they're supposed to, and your path
with him just happened to be a short one. He wants you to know that's okay. Now I don't know if
that was really Eric speaking to me through Tish, or if Tish is telling me what I want to hear
because I'm basically a stranger crying in her home right now, but it doesn't matter. It doesn't
matter if I believe in all of this. It doesn't matter if Tisha has proven herself to me or if she's telling me what I want to hear
because more than anything, it's what I needed to hear.
I just didn't know that after all these years,
I still needed to hear it.
And so I left that day not necessarily with his forgiveness,
but I did finally leave with my own.
Thank you. That was Stacey Pona.
Stacey is a clinical social worker who just started her own private practice.
She's lived in Revere Massachusetts for seven years with her rescue dog named Fay.
And she still goes back to Tish the Medium from time to time.
Eric died in 2001 when they were both sophomores in high school.
Stacey has only one photo of herself and Eric.
They went to his winter ball together,
and his mom gave her a copy of the photo from that dance.
The photo still sits in a frame in Stacey's home
all these years later.
To see that photo of Stacey and Eric, go to themoth.org.
The stories in this hour were told at our open mic nights, but remember, you can pitch
us your story about a letter you wrote or received or any other story about an important
turning point. Record right on our site or call 877-799-MOF. That's 877-799-6684. The best
pitches are developed for Moth shows all around the world. Here's a letter-related pitch
that we loved. I'd like to tell you the story about my grandfather's foot.
Some years ago my grandfather James Scott had a really terrible bout of in China.
It meant that he couldn't do his walking in the Scottish Highlands that had done all his life.
Rather than give up what James did was, he started to write
his family, and for some reason he decided to write to me more than anyone else. And for the best part
of 30 years he wrote to me every week about what was happening in his living room, in his town,
in the family. And in the end, once he did pass when he was 86, I was left with a foot deep thick pack
of letters and that's why I call it my grandfather's foot.
It was an amazing experience for me because I'm not particularly a letter writer but Jimmy
wrote to me every week and I wrote back and looking back on those letters and I still
have these letters.
It's a beautiful record that it's like
it's like the archaeology of my life and it's there. It's mirrored by him coming back to me.
So thanks James Scott. I love you man.
Remember you can pitch us at 877-799-Moth or online at the Moth.org, where you can also share these stories or others from the Moth archive.
That's it for this episode of The Moth Radio Hour.
Write a letter to someone you care about,
and we hope you'll join us next time.
This episode of the Moth Radio Hour was produced by me, Jay Allison, Katherine Burns and Sarah
Austin Jeness, who also hosted the show.
Co-producer is Vicki Merrick,
Associate Producer, Emily Couch.
The rest of the Moths leadership team
includes Sarah Haberman, Jennifer Hickson,
Meg Bulls, Kate Tellers, Jennifer Birmingham,
Marina Cluche, Leanne Gully, Susan Rust,
Brandon Grant, Sarah Jane Johnson, and Aldi Caza.
Our pitch came from Scott MacArthur of Morton in Marsh, England.
Most stories are true, as remembered and affirmed by the storytellers.
Our theme music is by the Drift, other music in this hour, from Kackie King, Selwagin
Symphonet, Jackie Terrison, Blue Dot Sessions, Corey Wong, and Fergus McReady.
We receive funding from the National Endowment for the Arts.
The more 3DO Hours is produced by Atlantic Public Media in Woods Hole, Massachusetts, and
presented by PRX for more about our podcast, for information on pitching us your own story,
and everything else go to our website website themoth.org.