I typed “home” into my phone, then deleted it. Instead, I let the car choose. Somewhere around mile seven, it hit me.
Because “home” isn’t a place you arrive at once. It’s a place you return to over and over again. Until the road between who you are and who you want to be finally feels like yours. When was the last time you took the long way back to yourself?
If this post hit something in you, take the keys. Drive your own seven miles. And come home — not to a building, but to the person you’ve been missing. driveyou7home
When I was seventeen, my grandfather would say that before every road trip: “Drive you seven home” — his old-country way of saying take the long way back, the way that lets you breathe before you arrive.
Drive. You. 7. Home.
— J.
I pull over at the same gas station. I buy the same cheap coffee. I drive those same seven extra miles — even when I’m already home. I typed “home” into my phone, then deleted it
I’ve interpreted this as either a personal recovery journey, a travel story, or a metaphor for finding your way back — and written a reflective, narrative-style post suitable for a lifestyle or personal blog. A journey back to where you belong There’s a strange kind of silence that comes with driving alone at 3 a.m. The roads are empty. The radio plays static between stations. And your mind — your mind finally stops pretending everything is fine.