As a communication major almost 30 years ago, my career goal was to run a house organ. A house organ is an organization's communication channel. It tells stories of its members, crafting the narrative and norms that both reflect and inform an organization's culture. That goal shifted when I returned to graduate school and witnessed the power of research to impact community health. Then, 10 years ago, an email introduced the Family Medicine medical journalism fellowship, and I discovered how my training and expertise could uniquely serve my new discipline. Family Medicine's former editor, John Saultz, called the journal the "diary of our discipline." 1 At the close of my time with the journal, I offer this final entry in our diary.