I鈥檓 out building a fence against a dove-colored December sky. It鈥檚 4:08 P.M., and the sun is anxious to clock out for the night. Rain is in the forecast for tomorrow and the next day. I need to get this done before dark, but I鈥檓 barely halfway through.
I shove another screw into the wood. The drill bucks and smacks me in the face. This will be my second black eye in as many months.
Six months ago, my husband, Chris, and I bought a 46-acre farm in northeast Tennessee. Though we鈥檙e equal partners in it, the farm was my idea, and I鈥檓 the primary manager.
The impetus to buy the farm grew out of a career and identity crisis I was having. I was feeling increasingly insecure about the stability of my chosen profession鈥攋ournalism. I鈥檝e ducked and woven聽my way through a freelance writing career, bringing home just enough money to drive an 18-year-old truck and (sometimes) have health insurance. At the same time, I鈥檇 completely burned out on endurance sports, which I鈥檇 been doing throughout my teens and twenties. Training felt like a chore, and I was seeking a new way to use my body that didn鈥檛 require thousands of dollars in gear and entry fees.

I鈥檝e always loved animals, being outside, and hard physical labor. As a kid in the suburbs of Washington, D.C., I鈥檇 often play farm, pretending to tend cows or mend fences as I was raking leaves or pulling weeds. (I was a weird kid.) And, in a bid to eat more sustainably, Chris and I had already been hunting for and growing our own food in raised garden beds at our suburban rental home in Tennessee for a few years. While considering how to supplement my income, I thought,聽People always need to eat. So I came up with the idea to buy an old, run-down farm, where initially we would grow enough to feed ourselves and a few neighbors. I鈥檇 sell eggs and pumpkins at the farmers鈥 market. Maybe we鈥檇 even make goat cheese someday. Chris balked at the idea, but I couldn鈥檛 be talked out of it. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e not making any more land,鈥 I said, trying to convince him that it was a good investment.
I signed my name on the title paperwork, soothing my soul that I was about to embark on something good and just. Yes, I know: swapping journalism for farming鈥攖he only other industry that, thanks to tariffs and climate change, is at聽even bigger risk of losing its footing鈥攊s about as idiotic as grabbing the undercarriage of a bull and hoping milk squirts out. There鈥檚 never enough money. There鈥檚 too much rain. There鈥檚 not enough rain. The tractor or my truck won鈥檛 start (cue the country song).
But in doing so, I may have actually conquered another crisis, one I鈥檇 given up on fixing years ago. At 34 years old, I finally love my body.
I spent years in a deep embrace with endurance sports. First I ran. Then I did triathlon. Then I raced bikes. Then back to triathlon again. Along the way, I developed a serious eating disorder. I鈥檓 nearly six feet tall and had ducked under 100 pounds when, at 20, my father staged an intervention. I got treatment. I got better.
Still, I never fully came to terms with my body鈥攖he size or the shape or the wonder of it. Post-recovery, at my healthy weight, I鈥檓 145 pounds. In the normal world, no one would call me overweight. But for more than a decade, I didn鈥檛 live in the normal world. I lived in the endurance-sports world, where tininess was right up there with godliness.
Producing my own food is the hardest endurance sport I鈥檝e ever done. No level of training compares to the day-after-day-after-day grind of wrestling food from the earth.
Running, cycling, and triathlon are sports that celebrate the knife-edge between fitness and thinness鈥攄oing the most you can with the very least. Now聽there鈥檚 a movement toward聽body positivity in triathlon and running. 鈥淩unning is a celebration of what I can do, not punishment for what I ate鈥 was a common line, even when I was competing. I probably said it myself. Maybe some of us even meant it. I reckon that some of us also knew there was a tinge of untruth to it. At least that was my experience. When I read things like聽聽his favorite thing about retirement is that聽he鈥檚 鈥渘o longer a slave when it comes to things like diet,鈥澛營 think,聽I hear you, Alberto.
Meanwhile, producing my own food is the hardest endurance sport I鈥檝e ever done. No level of training compares to the day-after-day-after-day grind of wrestling food from the earth. In September, I nearly threw up while stacking 60-pound hay bales in a 110-degree barn. I鈥檓 fairly sure I have a hernia from of gravel. Last summer, when I posted聽a picture of a tiny blackberry in my palm, most of the comments were variants of Holy cow, those calluses.
Today聽I don鈥檛 care so much how my body looks as long as it performs as the tool I need it to be. Brute strength is the thing I crave most. Maybe it helps that I鈥檓 not wearing spandex every day. Maybe it helps that I鈥檓 no longer playing the who-can-throw-away-most-of-their-dinner聽game that plagued many cycling-team camps that I attended. Maybe it helps that I fought bean beetles and powdery mildew to produce most of the calories on my plate. Or maybe I鈥檓 just too tired to care about聽sucking in my belly as I build a fence.
The most astonishing thing about life on a farm is that I鈥檝e stopped thinking about calories altogether. This is quite possibly because I鈥檓 too busy to think about them. I鈥檓 up at 5 A.M. to exercise the horses. Then I feed our various critters鈥攃ats, dogs, aforementioned horses, and聽soon聽chickens and goats. I clean stalls, move manure to our compost pile, and, if I鈥檓 lucky, sneak a cup of coffee in somewhere. I sit for a few hours of freelance-writing work and then head back outside. Afternoons and evenings are spent rebuilding barns or pulling dumped concrete blocks out of the stream. Some days I get in a run before it鈥檚 time to feed the animals again. And this is just my winter routine. In summer, we also pull聽weeds, pick聽bugs off plants, and harvest聽whatever has come into season.

A year ago, I thought there were good and bad foods. I now think that any food that I can pull from the earth鈥攂e it a turnip or a tuber鈥攊s a good food. The only bad foods are the things that won鈥檛 grow. We鈥檙e still a ways away from being fully self-reliant: it鈥檚 amazing how hard it is to grow all your own food,聽and how accustomed we鈥檝e become to unseasonal bananas and lettuce in winter. But about half of our produce and proteins鈥攆or the latter, we usually hunt for a deer and grow a hearty crop of pinto beans and black-eyed peas鈥攃omes from within a square-mile radius of our kitchen.
Farming is the sport that鈥檚 made me the most at peace with myself. I am my own boss. I get more vitamin D than I need. When I take a second to catch my breath, I pet velvet horse noses and snuggle with our barn cat. I have never been so in tune with what the weather is about to do. I have never spent so much time in the natural world. And, unlike in journalism, no one sends nasty e-mail聽to their local farmer.
To finish building the fence, I worked the last three hours by the light of a headlamp. I had aching arms and a swelling black eye. Strangely, the black eye didn鈥檛 bother me. Whereas once I would have run for a mirror and an ice pack, now I cared more about finishing the work than what I might look like tomorrow. Driving the last screw in, I thought, I could work for longer if I had to. This body could do more.