Archive for July, 2007

ending

Thursday, July 26th, 2007

I know how it all ends now.

So now what do I do?

me with my book

countdown to potter

Friday, July 20th, 2007

Oh my God, in less than 24 hours I will be holding the last Harry Potter book in my hand, reading it feverishly to Steven. It will be the last, the culmination, and then we will all know . . . I have a steak dinner bet on the ending . . .

So . . .

Carrie’s kinda excited, so don’t be a-callin’ her wanting to go see a movie or something, ’cause she might not even answer the phone this weekend. There’s a book to read.

Potter Potter Potter Potter . . .

the bathroom mirror

Tuesday, July 10th, 2007

I was going through my photo archive today and noticed that whenever I toured a potential new home, I got a shot of myself in the bathroom mirror.

Here I am checking out the bathroom mirror in our new apartment in Opelika. I look very happy with my Diet Dr Pepper. Steven actually found this apartment and I was most pleased. The cats loved the hallway.

Me in Opelika

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Not a year later we found a new house with a new bathroom in Auburn. I don’t look as pleased this day when I came out to photo-survey the place. At least I’m dressed better. Maybe I wish I had a Diet Dr Pepper. I loved the water faucets in that bathroom. I did not like how the sewer tended to back up into the bathtub. NASTINESS.

Me in Auburn

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Once again we found ourselves on the move — this time to Chelsea. Here I am in the guest bathroom. It’s the biggest guest bathroom I’ve ever had. If only my sister and I had this bathroom growing up! There’s even an excellent little skylight window above the bathtub.

Me in Chelsea

We’ve been here a little over a year and, knock on wood, there’s been no rumors of moving.

cemeterying

Monday, July 2nd, 2007

Yesterday my parents and I went on a Sunday afternoon driveabout just like we did with my grandparents when I was young. We went cemeterying.

Mainly we went to look at family. Yesterday we checked on my great grandmother, great grandparents, and two sets of great great grandparents. You go to make sure the cemeteries are being kept up, the headstones are still there and legible . . . but you also go for the stories.

Stories about the people — and places — you’re visiting are bound to spring forth. Every time we visit Grandpap’s we hear about how he came to Alabama in a covered wagon. Here is where my grandfather saw his first airplane — he saw it crash — and he could not pedal his little bike home fast enough he was so scared. Here is the cemetery where my grandmother would stress DO NOT TOUCH THE FENCE IT IS ELECTRIC! every time. I’m still scared of that blasted fence.

The story I set out to remember yesterday was not that of a relative though, but of a person who met a unique, untimely death. My grandmother told it to me and my sister when we were still kids. My memory is of her reading it out of some book or newspaper, then she got excited and said, “I know where that cemetery is; let’s go!”

My memory of the story was vague on names and places but vivid on gory detail. They had been doing blasting work nearby but something went wrong with a warning alarm. A man in a house did not have enough time to take decent cover so he ran around in circles a bit then stuck his head in the chimney.

A rock from the blast arched up across the sky then headed back toward the earth, threading itself delicately through the opening of the chimney, down the flue, then THWACK! right on the poor man’s head taking refuge there. I think it’s safe to say this story stuck with me.

The real morbid part, and the reason my grandmother wanted to find his grave, was they put the chimney-threading rock that killed him on top of his grave. He was buried a short drive away so off we went on that Sunday afternoon and, would you believe it, there it was. Rock and all.

My childhood imagination swore I saw blood on it still.

Last week I was reading things and I came upon this type-up of a newspaper article:

Columbiana Sentinel, Columbiana, Alabama, Thursday, November 29, 1906
“Accidental Death. Mr. Robt. L. Kendrick, who has been keeping a little store at the Narrows in beat 8, was accidentally killed about 2 o’clock last Monday, by a piece of falling rock from a blast. Parties were blasting rock about four hundred yards from Mr. Kendrick’s store, and it appears they had put in an unusually heavy charge. After the explosion it was found that a piece of rock about the size of an ordinary wooden bucket, and which had been thrown from the blast, had fallen through the roof of Mr. Kendrick’s store, striking him on the head, killing him almost instantly. The deceased was about 50 years old, and a man of family. The funeral occurred on Tuesday.”

Oh my goodness, there it was, his name and everything. He was killed when they were blasting to create Highway 280. I knew the cemetery he was buried because every time we would drive by it Mom would say, “There’s where that man’s buried that was killed by the rock.” It’s not two miles from my house.

So off we go, and once again there it was, the same as before. I didn’t see any blood on the rock this time. I wouldn’t want that rock to come down my chimney, though.

The Rock on the Grave