how boring must indiana be to think of this as fun

Message Bookmarked
Bookmark Removed
Not all messages are displayed: show all messages (377 of them)

*tera are you a writer? Cause if you ain't, you should be. These are some damn engaging posts :)

Rameses Street (Trayce), Tuesday, 2 August 2011 06:41 (twelve years ago) link

Than you, I am not a writer.

*tera, Tuesday, 2 August 2011 15:38 (twelve years ago) link

I did once write a piece for Para Mi Magazine on childhood trips to Los Mochis. I have done real cheesy freelance work for Demand Studios but I am not what I call a writer. I haven't written for Demand Studios in two years because I didn't think I was very good at it. I am just experiencing something right now and my girlfriends are all back in Texas so I write to feel better.

Every morning I wake up at 6am Petersburg, IN time, that is 5am, my old, home time in Austin, TX, to make breakfast and lunch for my Sweetie. I will then watch four episodes of I Love Lucy back to back and just hover over falling back to sleep. Around 8am I hear the theme song to The Golden Girls and wake up. I will clean up the top of the desk that doubles as my kitchen, straighten up the motel room then shower. There are some days when I have a list of errands to run, other days I will leave the room only to throw out the trash. I am happier in the room listening to music, television on but muted and face to face with my new best friend, my Mac. Lately I have been feeling I need more sleep. I usually drift off around midnight and it just isn't enough. So yesterday I didn't watch the Ricardo's or the Mertz's and was able to pick up three hours of sleep. I was in much better spirits the rest of the day.

This morning I was looking forward to the same. Around 8am there was a knock at my door and I thought it might be room service so I called out that I was okay today. They usually come around 1pm though. I heard a man and two women saying something about me being in here and how one of them heard me say something. I fell back to sleep before I could figure anything out and dreamt about my friend's wig shop. In the dream this old rotary phone was ringing and I kept picking it up but my hands were just going through it. I finally woke up and realized it was the motel phone across the room. Across the room! So I got up and answered it and caught the time 10:12am. I barely said a word assuming it was going to be a wrong number because no one would ever call me here. This lusty female voice kept repeating , "I'm sorry, hon, were you asleep?" I kept saying yes, yes, mmmhmmm, and couldn't make out who this was and what they wanted. Before I could ask the woman who she was or anything, she said she wondered if I wanted to make $15 and run to the Wal-Mart for her. I then realized this was the motel caretaker. It is not like we have become friends or have even had a conversation beyond weather chit chat. I wondered why she was asking me to do this. She said she was sorry for waking me and hung up.

I am left a bit baffled. Maybe it bothers her I don't leave the room until 12pm on those days I do leave. They don't pick up the room until 1pm and yesterday it was 2:30pm before they ever got here. The room is usually clean anyway with little two little tidy corners, one that holds luggage and the other a bag of dirty clothing. I did laundry yesterday so that corner is clean. There is a tote filled with yarn and knitting needles, a yoga mat and girly weights neatly tucked under the desk/kitchen. I would feel odd running an errand for someone I don't know anyway. I mean someone I haven't really had a real conversation with. She has a vehicle, a child and a husband. She is in her early 30's and she is friendly with a few other women I see around here during the day. Wal-Mart is in Washington, IN, 13 miles from this spot. No, today I do not feel like making $15 running to Wal-Mart.

*tera, Tuesday, 2 August 2011 16:47 (twelve years ago) link

I can't help thinking that she might think you need the money?

I wear a different dress every day. Though she may not see me every day. I packed for the duration when we came here not knowing when we could get back to Texas. I don't need the money. I still have a tiny bit of my divorce settlement still in savings...

*tera, Tuesday, 2 August 2011 17:00 (twelve years ago) link

Tera - these are interesting to read esp since I've never been anywhere near Indiana and am sort of fascinated by these sorts of towns. May I ask what you are doing there? My apologies if you've already said as much and I missed it. I mostly read your long posts and skimmed the rest in an attempt to catch up.

ladies love draculas like children love stray dogs (ENBB), Tuesday, 2 August 2011 17:33 (twelve years ago) link

Indiana - The Too Long; Did Not Read State

≝ (Pleasant Plains), Tuesday, 2 August 2011 17:36 (twelve years ago) link

The idea of staying in a "motel" -- almost by definition something small and crappy and occupied by drifters and the temporarily homeless -- in small-town Indiana in the summertime makes me need to go lie down and cry. There must be a reason you couldn't/didn't find even the smallest rental property with its own KITCHEN?? At least that way you could make some tea and look around you and be ALONE during the day.

Um. People who take vacations stay in motels all the time.

kkvgz, Tuesday, 2 August 2011 17:41 (twelve years ago) link

Motels? Or hotels? Maybe it's just because of the small town and the "caretaker" at the front desk that I'm imagining it like some ramshackle one-story thing with rooms you walk to outside, and bed spreads dating from 1979.

That's about all there is out in the boonies!

mh, Tuesday, 2 August 2011 17:50 (twelve years ago) link

I love those kinds of places. & I have a friend who travels the nation in search of those places; he's a kind of amateur photojournalist of that lost America, without irony.

Euler, Tuesday, 2 August 2011 17:52 (twelve years ago) link

xp I know! Those pictures are from a motel in my home town.

Laurel, Jesus. For family vacations, my dad used to drive a few hours out of town, register at a motel with a pool, and call it a day. And it would be awesome. If there was an arcade nearby it would be doubly awesome.

bamcquern, Tuesday, 2 August 2011 17:53 (twelve years ago) link

You're not gonna fool anybody though when you hide the money in the air-return vent.

≝ (Pleasant Plains), Tuesday, 2 August 2011 17:54 (twelve years ago) link

those places can be really good, or they can be a total nightmare, depending on who owns/operates the hotel

it was pleasant and delightful, just like (La Lechera), Tuesday, 2 August 2011 17:56 (twelve years ago) link

Jeez, okay, sorry! I never knew anyone to use anything like that, and we had several right in town. They always seemed like their heyday ended in 1967 and no one had cleaned anything in them since.

pp, are you referencing a movie? there's something on the tip of my tongue but I just can't think of it.

kkvgz, Tuesday, 2 August 2011 17:56 (twelve years ago) link

If I were in a small midwestern town, and it was well-maintained with no visible criminal activity in the parking lot, sure, I'd stay there.

kkvgz, Tuesday, 2 August 2011 17:57 (twelve years ago) link

No Country for Old Men!

mh, Tuesday, 2 August 2011 17:57 (twelve years ago) link

do not stay at one that is within a half mile of a strip club

it was pleasant and delightful, just like (La Lechera), Tuesday, 2 August 2011 17:58 (twelve years ago) link

Sound advice.

kkvgz, Tuesday, 2 August 2011 17:58 (twelve years ago) link

I drove across Indiana on a cross-country road trip when I was ten. I remember absolutely nothing about it.

publier les (suggest) bans de (Michael White), Tuesday, 2 August 2011 17:58 (twelve years ago) link

3rded/4thed notion that you should be a writer, tera. i read ilx at work, so posts as long as yours usually wouldn't get read. but i've read every one here.

A True White Kid that can Jump (Granny Dainger), Tuesday, 2 August 2011 17:58 (twelve years ago) link

I am in Petersburg, IN because my boyfriend works on pipelines and he is doing work on a line here. We haven't been together long and this is the second job I have been with him on. The first job was only a few days in Columbus, TX. That was a teenie town but it was still Texas and the place had a lot of character. It was close enough to Austin,TX and so I had my girlfriends come up to see me.

This is the first job out of state and it is a few weeks. I have always been into small town America and open to it but I naively forget I am Hispanic and look it too. So these little towns may not always be the places they are to my boyfriend who is White. Now that I have had this little culture shock I will be more prepared for the next small town. Although I don't want to be one of those people who is always on the defensive about racial issues.

There is more at play here to. I have always worked at least two jobs since 1995. I had a steady job for 13 years in Austin,TX and now I don't work. I planned on finding jobs here and there as we would travel (like Tod and Buz on Route 66) and now see that I am the type who should be working because my mind just needs to get busy with something or it turns in on itself. The library in town was not too friendly and claimed they didn't even need volunteer work. I haven't seen any help wanted signs and we aren't going to be here long enough anyway. Then of course, would I even want to try and get a job in a place like this? I hope to find a job as soon as my boyfriend finds a job that lasts several months. It may be in another place just like this but I feel that I will be better at dealing with it and will find something to do, volunteer work or real employment. I just hope we don't encounter these places that often. Vincennes, for example, has a whole other feel so I am hopeful. Still, despite everything I am okay with this experience for the most part. I just like experiences even though they might get a bit too frustrating or weird, I know I will look back at them later and be cool with it.

*tera, Tuesday, 2 August 2011 17:59 (twelve years ago) link

do not stay at one that is within a half mile of a strip club

― it was pleasant and delightful, just like (La Lechera), Tuesday, August 2, 2011 1:58 PM (15 minutes ago) Bookmark

lol

I LOVE motels like that but they have to be well-maintained and clean ones and not all of them are. There's something so distinctly American about them that I find really appealing. Also, they're creepy as hell which I sort of love. I would not, however, want to spend an extended period of time in one.

ladies love draculas like children love stray dogs (ENBB), Tuesday, 2 August 2011 18:17 (twelve years ago) link

I've stayed in many good ones but enough bad ones to be able to spot them from the looks of the front desk and location/proximity to skeevy places. Parking lot can tell you a lot too.

I had a horrible toothache in one of those once and I think the nightmares are still with me. Also, one word: bugs. The movie Bug, in fact.

it was pleasant and delightful, just like (La Lechera), Tuesday, 2 August 2011 18:22 (twelve years ago) link

*tera, re the weird racist vibe you're getting, I would say...cautiously... that you're probably not wrong? When I was in gradeschool my parents became friends with a couple from Mexico City through my dad's job, and I remember that the woman found it very challenging to keep her temper while dealing w people in West Michigan. She probably left out the gory details since I was young and impressionable, but I heard enough. They stayed for a couple of years, so she had time to get involved with the art museum, charities, volunteering, (it was a larger town, obv) but when she was out at stores and around town, she was still asked if she was a migrant worker. Or people would be amazed that her English was "so good", etc.

Otoh we also hosted an exchange student from Mexico when I was in high school, and she joined right into everything that all the other HS girls did and was far more popular than I was at my own school. :D So it's really entirely about being seen as an outsider vs an insider, no matter where you're from.

I actually love the motel room. It is very comforting now and my little womb, I sometimes find myself going fetal. It is very late 1940's and the bathroom looks original and well preserved. Other construction and pipeline workers stay here and they are all cool, working men who come home, have a beer, listen to music, sit outside and talk about their wives back home. I like catching those conversations. Makes me realize that at some point, everyone is met with the same batch of problems no matter what their socio-economic level is. If you manage to escape 1/2 of them count yourself lucky and not banal. It isn't a creepy place when they are here. It is very alive. It's pretty empty during the day. I wouldn't say it is creepy, only desolate. The room is my favorite place right now. I do catch myself wondering who has stayed here over the decades and what did they talk about, why were they here...

You can view pics here. http://www.flickr.com/photos/tera/sets/72157627216956133/

We stayed at a hotel that housed section 8 tenants in Houston twice. Just over night, it was $29.99 a night. There was always a cop in the lobby. People never went to sleep there. I'd wake up at all hours and there would be so much activity, talking, yelling, babies crying. One night, it was on our second stay, I woke up to a fight next door. There was furniture being thrown against the wall we shared, a baby in the room screaming, people yelling and a few people crying loudly. That is when I noticed how thin the walls were and how a bullet could easily penetrate the sheetrock, the flimsy head board and then our bodies. At that point I thought we were pushing it by staying there even one night. It looked like it was once some really nice place back in 1969. It was clean. It was really creepy though, well, downright scary.

*tera, Tuesday, 2 August 2011 18:35 (twelve years ago) link

You didn't mention that you had Chartreuse with you. : )

kkvgz, Tuesday, 2 August 2011 18:40 (twelve years ago) link

I have always been a huge fan of the show Route 66 so motels, small towns, driving around the country, experiences..it all appeals to me. In fact, it just occurred to me that this is a Route 66 episode. If Tod and Buz were here they would totally help me out with the race issue. I'm sure I would easily be Buz's type too...oh the drama that would ensue before everything got worked out. Teehee. Love George Maharis, he was so, so dreamy!

*tera, Tuesday, 2 August 2011 18:42 (twelve years ago) link

HA! I do have Chartreuse and it is glorious. Makes everything so nice and wonderful and all of a sudden I have the world on a string. But then it's over....I drank a small 200ml of vodka the other day straight from the bottle and when I was done thought, oh dear, this is how you end up at those meetings. So I am not touching the booze. I had a tequila shot in Washington and realized I had a drive home and I'm a lightweight. So I am hitting the horchata instead.

*tera, Tuesday, 2 August 2011 18:46 (twelve years ago) link

Tera - is your bf an ILXOR?

ladies love draculas like children love stray dogs (ENBB), Tuesday, 2 August 2011 20:26 (twelve years ago) link

NM - just answered my own question by spotting a pic in your flickr. I recognized you from one he'd posted of the two of you on WDYLL and I know he's told other irl people about ILX so I put 2+2 together. Sorry if that sounds creepy. I have an exceptionally good memory for small details including people's faces. Sometimes it's awesome but it can freak some people out sometimes.

ladies love draculas like children love stray dogs (ENBB), Tuesday, 2 August 2011 20:29 (twelve years ago) link

Yes... he is actually.

*tera, Tuesday, 2 August 2011 20:29 (twelve years ago) link

I can't be freaked out unless you you come at me with a cornbread salad walking like a sleestak and want me to go to Wal-Mart for you. Sorry....

*tera, Tuesday, 2 August 2011 20:31 (twelve years ago) link

:) LOL

This thread - or at least your updates to it - are awesome btw.

ladies love draculas like children love stray dogs (ENBB), Tuesday, 2 August 2011 20:32 (twelve years ago) link

btw cornbread salad is sort of mind-blowing to me. I can't even imagine what that is.

ladies love draculas like children love stray dogs (ENBB), Tuesday, 2 August 2011 20:33 (twelve years ago) link

Thank you.

It looked like just stuffing, like a real wet stuffing that was served cold and my bf said it was sort of sweet. He had a nibble. I refused to try it. I sort of believe in kinesiology, and everything in me was saying no.

*tera, Tuesday, 2 August 2011 20:43 (twelve years ago) link

Well the cat's out of the bag for us *tera. I've loved reading your posts, maybe with the next job is in Baltimore, things will be more exciting. We have found great records in Indiana! Maybe you should start a thread about life on the road?

JacobSanders, Wednesday, 3 August 2011 00:27 (twelve years ago) link

There are really great vinyl finds in Indiana. Actually, I also found that vintage Native American jewelry and 80 year old sterling stamped Taxco pieces from Mexico are quite the steal here as well. Practically giveaways. Practically the mother lode.

I hope to be so occupied with my camera, coffee houses, vintage and book stores, record stores and exploring the next place we will be in that I won't have time to dwell or even have a dreariness to write about. If it happens to be Vincennes, I will be so happy!

This morning I heard the lawn mower again. There is a strip of grass behind the motel that measures maybe 400sqft. It has been getting mowed every day. I kept hearing the sound of a lawnmower since my first morning here but would delegate the noise to that part of my consciousness that barely simmers on a low flame. A few days ago I looked out the bathroom window and saw a man stoically riding a lawnmower and mowing what seems like a very insignificant piece of land. Apparently the patch of grass is very important to this man. He is either dedicated to having the grass always look neat and trim or determined to never let it flourish or have it's way, not even for a mere 24 hours. The feeling I get from the grass is it is being oppressed.

*tera, Wednesday, 3 August 2011 16:17 (twelve years ago) link

I think one of my freshman-year roommates was from Vincennes. Hot-shot tennis player with a sly grin and a deep drawl.

jaymc, Wednesday, 3 August 2011 16:32 (twelve years ago) link

Out of curiosity, how is that town pronounced? Vin-senz?

publier les (suggest) bans de (Michael White), Wednesday, 3 August 2011 16:33 (twelve years ago) link

Vin-senz - yes.

sarahel, Wednesday, 3 August 2011 16:36 (twelve years ago) link

New Orleans can be so treacherous for me. After all the work to learn how to pronounce French correctly, the names all come to me that way and figuring out how to Americanize them is hard, especially since I'm often a wee bit temulent there.

publier les (suggest) bans de (Michael White), Wednesday, 3 August 2011 16:42 (twelve years ago) link

Indiana has both Vin-sinz and Ver-saelz

Jaq, Wednesday, 3 August 2011 16:55 (twelve years ago) link

the tomatoes are really great in summer though

sarahel, Wednesday, 3 August 2011 16:57 (twelve years ago) link

Vincennes has the Pantheon Theatre, patiently undergoing restoration. There was a large sign on the building requesting donations. It sounds like it was once something spectacular. I love the downtown area. I love those old buildings.

*tera, Wednesday, 3 August 2011 16:58 (twelve years ago) link


You must be logged in to post. Please either login here, or if you are not registered, you may register here.