hammond

I have issues. Not in general (although of course I do have quite a few general issues) – but with the things in this photo.

First of all, it bothers me a lot that the star on the hot-cold thing is wrong side up. I can almost understand the decision to point in down toward the round thing* but, it is just wrong.

But what gets me even more is that cloud that has a hand (A hand! What the hell?) growing out of the bottom of it.

And let’s not even get into the discussion about if the building that’s held by the cloud-hand is supposed to be a hand-held size or if the cloud-hand is actually gigantic enough to hold an entire building.

Tahoka, Texas
photographed 2.28.2026

*to use the technical term

educate my mind

Hello and welcome to today’s feature Using AI to Explain a Simple Concept with A Lot of Words.

Today’s Simple Concept is a building elevation, which is (according to Google’s AI Overview) a two-dimensional, scaled, orthographic projection showing a vertical view of a structure’s exterior or interior face (usually north, south, east, and west). It illustrates crucial details like building height, materials, rooflines, window placements, and doors, providing a flat, straight-on view to aid in construction and design visualization.

Or, you could also call it a “side view” or “the side” or even “a wall” if you’re less inclined toward verbosity.

Saint Charles Borromeo Church
Grand Coteau, Louisiana
photographed 10.22.2017

message obscured by the medium

Well, as this sign clearly states, “something something something Love something something.” I feel that’s a message we can all support.

And as a lesson to all would-be quote-painters, maybe corrugated metal isn’t the most legible surface to choose.

Church Point, Louisiana
photographed 10.22.2017

removed daily

Random drives often turn into discovery of things you’d never even imagine, which is at least part of the point.

This particular day, we saw a sign that said “Gravesite of Charlene Richard” and being prudent and inquisitive travelers, off we headed to see the gravesite.

Turns out that Charlene Richard was a very devout (VERY) young girl from the area who passed away in 1959 from leukemia; she was 12 years old and had been diagnosed only two weeks after her death. In addition to her grave, the cemetery had markers to commemorate her short (and devout) life, a plastic box where you could leave prayer requests for her, and a donation box.

I made photos, which I mostly forgot about until just the other day, and we headed on.

When I was researching what exactly we’d seen I ran across this article from the New York Times. It’s long and brings in a lot of narrative threads:

  • Charlene may have been a saint.
  • It’s easier now than it used to be to be officially proclaimed a saint.
  • The priest who met Charlene just before she died was friends with Mother Theresa.
  • Mother Theresa apparently made several unannounced trips to Louisiana to hang out with the priest.
  • In 1985 the Diocese of Lafayette (Louisiana) (which includes the church Charlene and her family attended) paid a multi-million dollar settlement to victims who’d been abused by a local priest. And it was this case that started the global sexual-abuse-by-priests scandall.
  • When investigators from the Vatican came to town in 2019 to investigate Charlene’s possible sainthood, they exhumed her body and removed her fingers for “collection as relics.” (The finger-removal was the most interesting thing in the article, brought up in the 4th paragraph and never mentioned again.)
  • No word on Charlene’s priesthood.
  • Or on the whereabouts of her fingers.

near Richard, Louisiana
photographed 10.22.2017

PS – If you’ve ever been to southern Louisiana, you probably already figured out that the name of the town – also Charlene’s last name – is pronounced REE-shard.

He’s no sissy

The main character in Tom Robbins’s novel Even Cowgirls Get the Blues is Sissy Hankshaw, who – with the help of her abnormally large thumbs – hitchhikes across America.

Unfortunately, the main character in the Evangeline Cemetery is physically unable to follow Sissy’s inspirational example.

Evangeline Cemetery
near Ville Platte, Louisiana
photographed 10.22.2017