An absurd, grotesque dis-assembly
Will waltz across Florida nimbly:
Plebes and Patricians
And news statisticians
Will celebrate parodies grimly.
Old Jules
An absurd, grotesque dis-assembly
Will waltz across Florida nimbly:
Plebes and Patricians
And news statisticians
Will celebrate parodies grimly.
Old Jules
An insect in amber can last
Long after its species is past:
Urge you to clamber
Avoiding the amber
And eat extinct plants for repast.
Old Jules
Good morning readers. Thanks for coming by for a read this morning.
I’ve poked a little fun at Junction, Texas. Partly because they were there, I was there, and it’s an easy target, standing still gazing into the headlights. But the stark reality is the people of Junction aren’t significantly different from you, me, and all the people living around us. They’re trying to scratch out a living in a country that’s caving in around them, trying to hang on to what hasn’t caved in yet.
Trying to find something that works by throwing grappling hooks into things that worked in the past. And when they see it’s not working, blaming the failures on people who are trying to reconstruct different things from somewhere else in the past.
That $3.50 per gallon gasoline sign is a disaster in rural Texas where the nearest somewhat large town’s a $20-$30 round trip. Same as everywhere else in the western US. It means the price of having groceries delivered to stores in town will skyrocket over time, and driving to the larger stores in larger towns will skyrocket alongside what’s happening locally.
Aside from some agriculture, nobody in Junction, Texas, is manufacturing anything anyone wants to buy locally, anyone would want to buy elsewhere in the US, or overseas. Same as where you are, only in Junction it’s more obvious.
But their toasters, microwave ovens, automobile parts, refrigerators and computers are manufactured in Asia, same as yours. There’s nobody in town can repair most of them when they fail without obtaining parts manufactured in Asia.
So they fantasize about seceding. Pretending they could go back to the independence of the past. Pretending that would bring back ways to make an honest living. Celebrating their tough, Comanche fighting, Confederate ancestors, pretending they have something in common with them.
While on the other hand, they try to imagine they have something in common with people a decade ago who died when an airplane crashed into a building a quarter-mile high. Grasping for some abstraction of solidarity with the people there, some anchor that pretending they remember those people might provide to help them deal with a world collapsing around them.
In a real sense, they do have something in common with those 9/11 dead, beyond them all being human beings. The people who jumped out of those towers weren’t manufacturing anything anyone would want, either. If they were living today they’d be paying big bucks for gasoline, groceries, toasters, manufactured somewhere else, too.
But there’s nothing else meaningful those unfortunate people in New York could have to say to people in Junction, Texas. If asked, I suppose they might suggest, “Build higher buildings.”
The road from Main Street to the graveyard is easier to follow in Junction, but nothing else is less complicated than anywhere else.
Old Jules
Posted in 2012, America, Current Issues, Government, History, Politics, Texas
Tagged 9/11, Confederates, culture, economy, government, History, Human Behavior, humor, junction texas, Life, lifestyle, philosophy, politics, psychology, society, sociology
Hi readers. I don’t recall when I first discovered the joys of hanging out in cemeteries. I don’t remember ever not doing it. Somewhere back there I discovered that old cemeteries, tombstones and the ways individuals choose to remember their dead tells a lot about the communities, the local histories and priorities.
Vandalism’s a problem in a lot of the older graveyards, has been for a considerable while. But up-keep of some of the older graves where the families have died or moved away also reveals itself.
A visitor’s left to mull over how those folks standing beside the hull of someone they cared for enough to construct this managed to forget so completely. A few generations, a few wars, depressions, and something went away. Every cemetery in the US, probably in the world, has a lot of graves of 1918 flu victims. Frequently they’re all grouped together, but this one’s not arranged in that way.
The Junction cemetary has 50-100 graves of Confederate Civil War veterans, mostly marked by government-provided stones, each with a Confederate Battle Flag, Confederate flag, or Texas Confederate flag.
A dozen-or-so Texas Rangers are also buried here. Most were also Confederate veterans.
I’m wondering whether this one mightn’t have been a relative of Sherrod Hunter, commander of the troops that occupied Tucson. The world was a smaller place back then.
Sometimes the survivors had the stones marked with the life experiences of the dead they considered most important, sometimes the nicest things they could think of so say about them.
Sometimes just the way the dead wished to be remembered.
But Junction people have another, more visible way of remembering their dead. This one’s nearer the center of town. Almost certainly a lot of those antlers were contributed by people now residing in the cemetery. Thrilling moments of their lives, or mundane moments in hard times, bringing home meat for the table.
Old Jules
Posted in 2012, Adventure, History, Texas
Tagged cemeteries, cemetery, culture, History, junction texas, Life, lifestyle, psychology, Relationships, society, sociology
Hi readers. Thanks for coming by.
Every year in TimeWarpVille on Christmas day a posse of local horsemen armed with modern weaponry meets at this spot, where they display their determination to never forget Isaac Koontz.
After passing around all the new firearms they got for Christmas they somberly climb these stairs to the now-somewhat-neglected shrine.
Surrounding the shrine, they kneel and remove their hats, whispering among themselves what a fine lad Isaac must have been, though none have a distinct recollection of him.
After five carefully timed minutes they descend the staircase, mount up and the elected leader shouts, “Forwarrrrrd, HO!” Waving a Texas flag, he motions forward. “Let’s KILL us some INDIANS boys!”
They ride to the top of the hill behind the monument searching for Comanche spying on the highway and the monument.
Finding no hostiles there they gaze respectfully down at the monument, pass around their hip flasks, swallow solemnly, and descend the hill. Usually no shots are fired.
As they load their horses into their stock trailers they ask how Aunt Tillie’s doing, order one another to have a merry Christmas and happy new year, gun their engines and return to their families, better men for having remembered something they didn’t experience and someone they never knew.
Their lives more secure in the knowledge the Comanche haven’t killed anyone around TimeWarpVille in recent centuries thanks to their vigilance.
Old Jules
Posted in 2012, History, Human Behavior, Texas, The Lone Psychiatrist
Tagged culture, History, Human Behavior, humor, junction texas, philosophy, psychology, society, sociology
Good morning readers. Thanks for coming by for a read this morning.
Civilization is seeping into TimeWarpsVille, and it’s rearing its ugly head in the Junction City Park.
Enjoyment is facilitated by clarifications and footnotes to entrance rules.
But who the hell wants to swim at his own risk?
Several safe flying saucer tiedowns are provided.
I didn’t feel much like skinny-dipping at my own risk and suspected I was having more fun than the law allows. Decided it was time to head for the graveyard or one of the museums. Maybe look over some historical marker sites.
Old Jules
Posted in 2012, Adventure, Gambling, Government, Police, Texas, The Lone Psychiatrist
Tagged adventure, civilization, culture, entertainment, environment, Human Behavior, humor, junction texas, Kimble County Texas, Life, lifestyle, philosophy, psychology, security, society, sociology
Hi readers. Thanks for coming by for a read.
Trucking down mainstreet toward the courthouse I immediately noticed the flags are gone, and of the dozen-or-more of these signs there a month ago, only three are left.
Bad sign, thinks I while ignoring inconvenient puns. Might mean there are some intelligent, ethical people in Junction, Texas, with some class. People who aren’t allowing themselves to be brow-beaten by kneejerks to backhandedly exploit the dead for some obscure political message.
People who’ve thoughtfully arrived at the realization that some things are better forgotten.
Lousy people to have on juries. Might reduce my chances for getting exempted.
However, then I arrived at the courthouse. The place was strangely quiet.
Clock said it was what? 4:30 am? I’m there in plenty of time. But my watch says it’s 9:00 am.
But the sign on the door explains all.
But parenthetically adds we ain’t allowed to burn down the County Courthouse.
So, I’m free. Got time to kill, a whole town to stick my nose into. Gas gauge is showing empty, so first I swing in for a tank of cheap petrol.
$50 later I drift over for five minutes of free prayer and a Kow Kick. Hadn’t done any gratitude affirmations yet about jury duty being cancelled, and a non-Christian doesn’t get many offers for free prayer. Much less with a Kow Kick thrown in.
Sooooo. Off to the city park for a while, spent an hour or so in the graveyard, which is cool, had some Lum’s barbeque, examined various historical markers. All of which I’ll report to you in loving detail during otherwise dull moments of the future.
Meanwhile, feel free to forget. It’s surprisingly uplifting, cleansing, and clears the conscience of all that guilt for trying to exploit the dead. Helps make a classy individual of you. Might make people believe you’re intelligent, well-rounded and capable of thinking for yourself.
Old Jules
Posted in 2000's, 2012, Adventure
Tagged 9/11, culture, forgetting 9/11, History, Human Behavior, humor, junction texas, Kimble County Texas, Kimble Kounty Kow Kick, Life, lifestyle, musings, patriotism, psychology, remembering 9/11, society, sociology
While we all twiddle our thumbs in anticipation waiting to hear whether Old Jules is giving the lawyers a bad day or has gone fishing, here’s a very brief update from me, Jeanne.
I just realized I never showed you the final version of this particular mandala that I was working on in June, so here it is:
Those little shaded areas are actually a clear metallic ink.
I completed four good-sized works in June and July before I went on vacation. I’ll put the others up at some point, or Old Jules will. I entered an exhibit application showing those other three as examples of my work, and if one of them gets chosen, I’ll get that one matted and framed. I’ve been in the exhibit before, which is held in a local nature center building, but I haven’t heard anything yet for this year. I like this one because they let you put prices on your work and the Parks and Recreation Dept. actually makes some purchases themselves for their buildings throughout the county. So we shall see. I’ve never won any prizes or sold anything through this exhibit, but the judge this year is affiliated with our Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art (Kansas City, MO), so it makes sense to let one more art professional see my stuff. Usually the winners from this show are either doing photography or have some 3-D element in their work.
I took 2460 photographs on my trip, most of them in Oregon and Washington. If you want to connect with me on Facebook, you can see some of them (I’m there as Jeanne Bangs Kasten). There were some really great photos because I got a new camera, a Canon Powershot Elph somethingorother. Even just set on automatic, the pictures were great. I took pictures at Breitenbush Hot Springs, the Oregon beach, Tacoma, WA, Mt. Rainier, Ballard Locks (Seattle) and the Dale Chihuly Museum at the Seattle Center (right by the Space Needle). I have a ton of scenery and greenery photos, and I have an obsession (apparantly) with running water scenes. I haven’t passed on very many to Old Jules yet because it involves either re-sizing them all or putting them on a separate flash drive.
Well, back to work! And the rest of you can go back to twiddling your thumbs.
Jeanne
Posted in 2012, Admin., Adventure, Art, Jeanne Kasten, Mandala Dreams, Mandalas
Tagged Art. mandalas, misc. Jeanne Kasten, musings, travel
Good morning readers. Thanks for coming by for a read.
Drove that house out here at speeds that our great-great grandaddies would have fainted and revived themselves to know. By 19th Century standards it was a rush. By 20th Century standards it slowed down some. But it came down the 19th Century standards road from the pavement to the cabin as smoothly as a buckboard or stagecoach would have.
Didn’t require many miles to discover I’m gonna need to install some helpers for the rear leaf springs. Or replace the old ones. A cross-wind at 55 adds thrills a person couldn’t find on a drag strip or Daytona speedway.
Now, whenever this is, I’m going to have to see if it will climb back out of here, drive over to the County Seat at TimeWarpVille, Texas. Maybe turn loose a few criminals if I get selected for jury duty.
Civic duties, civic duties, civic duties! Just drives me crazy!
Old Jules
Posted in 2012, Adventure, Transportation, Trucks
Tagged 1983, 22R, country life, courts, criminal justice, culture, Human Behavior, humor, jury duty, Life, lifestyle, motor home, psychology, senior citizens, society, sociology, Toyota RV