Monthly Archives: December 2013

The remains of the gin

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This abandoned cotton gin is right in the middle of town, just a few blocks from the county courthouse. It’s sort of fantastic looking, now, to people like me.

But, I feel bad for anyone who lived nearby – and there are houses just across the street – when it was operational. Cotton ginning’s a dirty business; at the height of the season, everything around is covered with so many fluffs of cotton that it looks like snow. It might sound sort of pretty, but it’s not. And it’s hard to breathe, too.

Levelland, Texas
photographed 3.14.2012

Truckload sales

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It’s good to know that even in small towns, you can get this stuff at affordable prices.

No, it’s really not. It’s sort of disturbing.  And the thing is that this truck has been parked for a couple of weeks and seems to be selling lots of stuff.  Just in time for Christmas, too, which is a topic you probably don’t want to get me started on.

A couple of other things:

1. The lettering.  Gracious.  Especially that odd S at the end of “knives.”
2. They may have meant “taser” instead.

Levelland, Texas
photographed 12.13.2013

To be sold eventually to strangers, 8

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One.
The first thing I noticed, nearly, when I started cleaning out my dad’s house was the huge number of toothpicks lying about. On the breakfast table. On the metal tray where he kept the toaster. On the lamp table beside his TV chair. By the sink. Next to his computer. On the nightstand. On the lavatory. On the kitchen counter. In the junk drawer in the kitchen. On top of the clothes dryer. Next to his briefcase.

I don’t think he’d thrown away a toothpick in years.

Where he lives now, in an assisted living center, I don’t think he has toothpicks in his room.

I wonder if he misses them.

Two.
My dad wore braces on his teeth when he was a kid. He’s 90 now, so he was a kid a very long time ago. And it wasn’t like he lived in a city, where even in those early days of orthodontia, braces would have been easy to obtain: he lived in a small town in the Texas panhandle.

His teeth are crooked again now, having found their way back, over the decades, to the places in his jaw where they started out.

Three.
My mom was always self-conscious about her teeth, which were very crooked. She finally got braces, as an adult, and seemed to smile a lot more once her teeth looked better.

Four.
I wore braces twice. Once for six years, spanning all of junior high and a good part of high school.

Then, I got them again about 15 years ago, and wore them for a little more than a year.

I was a much more compliant patient when I was paying for the braces myself.

Five.
I dream about teeth. Broken teeth, mostly. Broken teeth like shards of glass in my mouth. Broken teeth that I keep spitting out, over and over; there’s never an end to these tooth-shards. I often have vivid dreams, but this is the only one that recurs. What in the world? Well, the Dream Encyclopedia* has this to say regarding the symbology of dreams about teeth:

Loosing the teeth may reflect a loss of power as well as a grasp of life circumstances.

I suppose I concur with that assessment. The past year and a little more has been a time of great upheaval, a time when I often felt as though my grasp of things was slipping. But I try to remember that no matter how much upheaval I’ve felt and had to deal with, it is a tiny drop compared to what my dad has gone through. In a short period, he went from owning a home full of his life’s possessions and living on his own and on his own terms, to holding a couple of checks after the house and its contents sold. Everything he owns now is compressed down to what fits into that efficiency apartment, and he has to ask me to run his errands.

He’s never asked for toothpicks.

Lubbock, Texas
photographed 8.23.2013

*The Dream Encyclopedia, James R. Lewis

The blackness

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I am posting this now so you have time to mark your brand new 2014 calendars. Come on down to Plainview, Texas, to The Blackness, Plainview’s only professionally run haunted house. They promise to “scare the yell out of ya!!”

Open Halloween-ish.

Plainview, Texas
photographed 12.10.2013

At the theater

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The sign alone would have been worth a photograph. Add in the shadow…and I had to stop.

Turns out that the sign, for the Scott Theater (which opened in 1959), was a revolving marquee fashioned after signs at the New York World’s Fair.  The sign weighed 5 tons, and was said to have cost $35,000.  It was also said to be able to withstand winds of 130 miles per hour.  Mr. Bill Martin, whose company designed and built the sign, said it was “the ultimate design for the future of all marquees.”

The theater closed in the late 1980s. And the sign hasn’t blow down yet.

Odessa, Texas
photographed 12.8.2013