keeper of cosmic and moral balance

Really, out here if you say “We had a windy day.” it’s redundant: every day – every damn one of them! – is windy.

(I reached out to the visitors’ bureau folks to see if they wanted to sponsor this post. They declined, citing my “poor attitude” and “tendency to exaggerate” and a few other things.)

Yellowhouse Canyon, Texas
photographed 5.10.2026

bottom of the barrel

The first time I ever looked into a cemetery trash barrel I felt guilty, like I was intruding on something I didn’t need to know about.

And maybe I was.

But I still do look inside of them. This one that I saw the other day in Oklahoma made me sad: all that’s left of someone’s birthday wishes to their beloved, deceased person was an R and an I. That’s not much, is it?

Mountain View Cemetery
Mountain View, Oklahoma
photographed 4.25.2026

night/terror

No surprise to anyone that’s seen more than, say, four of my photos: I can’t go very long without posting some kind of a reflection. And for some reason, hotel rooms have the best reflections.

So, while the conference I attended may not have been particularly helpful for my real job*, the hotel room views did provide some nice opportunities to make images.

Frisco, Texas
photographed 4.27.2026

*My real job – grants writer. And I SURE ENOUGH went to a session on using AI to write grants. It felt a little bit (or a lot) like spying on my competition.

discombobulation

Photo recipe:

  1. Get a room on the 7th floor of the hotel
  2. Stand at the window with the curtains closed behind you* to eliminate (most of) the reflections
  3. Take a few-ish intentional camera movement photos
  4. Then choose two of them to layer into one image
  5. Decide to mirror the resulting image
  6. And THEN decide to mirror the mirrored image

And there you go.

Frisco, Texas
photographed 4.29.2026

*Which I am sure looks completely sketchy to anyone who happens to look up. But it’s dark, so maybe they won’t notice?

at the end

It was a beautiful night in Oklahoma City last week. VC Torneden and I had an amazing opening for our show “American Highway, revisited” at the Paseo Arts and Creativity Center. The evening included a delicious dinner, excellent conversations with other artists, a stroll through the galleries, an art purchase, and just general all-around goodness.

The Paseo Arts District
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
photographed 5.1.2026