Monthly Archives: September 2013
Night lights
Several of the graves in this cemetery are decorated with solar-powered landscape lights, which gives the place a bit of surprising glow if you’re not familiar with this sort of cemetery decor.
These kinds of lights don’t collect up enough power during the day to burn all night; I think they only last for about eight hours. Which leaves the graves, eventually, in the dark after all.
Englewood Cemetery
Slaton, Texas
photographed 8.10.2013
It’s time to vote!
I am happy to announce that my photo “In a Ghost Town Do Ghosts Go to Church” is one of ten finalists in the Digital Lightroom’s on-line photography competition.
If you have time, follow the link and vote! (If you just can’t bring yourself to vote for my photo, please vote for my friend’s photograph “Park Lookout.”)
Thanks!
57.4¢/gallon and 60.4¢/gallon
I knew you’d want to know if the gas pumps still showed a price, and they do. I am not a gasoline-price historian (or any kind of historian, for that matter) so this valuable clue about when this station was last operational is lost on me.
Perhaps the One Day | One Image Research Department (Yes! We have our own research department.) could investigate and report back.
I can tell you, though, that Flite-Fuel is the more expensive one.
Sudan,Texas
photographed 5.25.2013
Some things have surprising connections
I took this shot in April, when the weeping willows surrounding this huge memorial were just starting to leaf out. A few weeks later and the view of the memorial would have been obscured. I’ve looked at this shot several times since I took it, thinking it would be good for the blog, then changing my mind for various reasons that I don’t even recall.
This time, when I looked at it, I was reminded of the little cross I saw in the cemetery in Marathon, Texas, which was also partially obscured by vegetation:
So, from the huge memorial for Potter and Bertha Palmer in the Graceland Cemetery in Chicago, to an unmarked cross in Texas – some things are the same, even when they are different.
Chicago, Illinois
photographed 4.16.2013
Marathon, Texas
photographed 8.17.2013
To be sold eventually to strangers, 4
The house was a time capsule, much of it frozen in place the day my mom died in 2005. The level of housekeeping fell off, the amount of space that was lived in decreased. A few things, though, kept progressing onward. Like wall calendars. My dad has a strong fondness for calendars (they are his go-to Christmas gift for the sons-in-law and grandsons – trains, airplanes, beer, or other special-interest topics chosen specifically for the recipient) and he always treated himself to one or two while he was placing the order. His own choices ran to steam locomotives and scenery from England. For as long as I can remember, a calendar has hung on the left side of the back door, swinging from a nail he pounded into the maple paneling decades ago.
I’m not sure I would have ever decided to hang a calender in the bathroom, but he did: a calendar from the Texas Tech alumni association is there on the wall. (Don’t get the wrong impression: he’s a proud TTU graduate.)
These two calendars – the train one by the back door and the college one above the toilet – are frozen in a different time capsule: August 2012. One morning in the third week of that month, he failed to show up at my husband’s office, as had been his daily habit for the nineteen years since his retirement. My son, who works at the same office, went to look for him, and found him on the floor, under the train calendar. He’d been there all night.
An ambulance came, against his wishes, and took him to the hospital. He’s not been home since. In the intervening months, he’s been in the hospital two times, had a pacemaker implanted, been in one facility we came to refer to as a “skilled” nursing facility, and been in another one that really did have skilled and caring staff; currently lives in an assisted living center. There were times early on when we were all pretty sure he wasn’t going to make it, and times when we thought he’d be able to live at at home again. We were wrong on both.
Cleaning out his house wasn’t as emotional as I had thought it would be. I think I somehow compartmentalized it as just some old, fairly interesting stuff I happened to be sorting through, instead of letting myself think of it as his stuff. Stuff I was deciding to keep, or throw away, or put into the estate sale.
Most of the time, I was able to maintain this false front. I was an archeologist, working in a still-standing relic! I was an historian, looking at interesting artifacts! I was researching interesting names from long-ago family members! (Lulu Green – what a fantastic name!)
But I didn’t let myself become The Oldest Daughter, working at her grim task.
Until the bathroom.
That’s when the ephemera of an old man’s life got to me. The drawer full of disposal razors. The half-used tube of toothpaste and the barely-worn toothbrush. The black plastic comb. Hand lotion tipped up to get the last bits out of the bottle. A metal nail file. And the padded toilet seat. His walker parked there, because he needed help getting up from the toilet. The unstrung role of toilet paper. A completed crossword puzzle book in the wastebasket. And the calendar, turned to August 2012.
Lubbock, Texas
photographed 9.1.2013





