The songs on the album were informed by the positive feelings generated by Ferron's relationship and family, which by 1994 included a baby daughter named Maya. Relegated to a drawer marked "g" for "garbage," Ferron considered the songs too personal to record until she auditioned them for guitarist Shelly Jennings. Some of the album was recorded Ferron's garage on
Vashon Island, using portable equipment. "It's very peaceful," Ferron told
The Province. "But not sleepy. I went through a lot of emotion putting that record out." "There's supposed to be a question mark at the end of the title, but everyone thought it looked stupid," she told
The Vancouver Sun. "But I think the question mark is important—because who ever really knows? It may feel like driving, but we all take wrong turns, we all screw up all the time, but we all keep going." The song "Maya" was inspired by a dream about
Joni Mitchell. "Borderlines" had previously appeared on Ferron's 1977
debut album. "Girl on a Road" has become one of her signature songs. According to a 2017 interview, only one line of the song is strictly autobiographical: "My momma was a waitress, my daddy was a truck driver/ the things that kept their power from them slowed me down a while." The song was written quickly, in Chicago, while waiting for a sound check. She cried while writing it. When recording the song for the album, she asked the musicians to refrain from distracting flourishes in order to maintain focus on the core message. The song also inspired the title of a 2009 documentary about the musician by filmmaker
Gerry Rogers. ==Critical reception==