Monday, September 30, 2019

Country Life in Texas



Country life in Texas. What's it like, so called LSP? Well I'll tell you, it's much like any other sort of life except that people are mostly friendly, you don't have to sit in traffic on some kind of hideous commute, and it's searing hot, like a preheating oven. That's Texas for you.

But what's it really like? Foreigners, Germans, say, bless 'em, think of rural Texas as some kind of Wild West cowboy free for all, which is understandable because of the yeehaw PR. But the reality? I'd describe it as hard. 


A Typical Texas Porch Scene -- Get a Haircut, Fool

And no wonder. The climate's a fierce 100*++ for 6 months of the year and the people who live under it, just a step removed from the pioneers who settled this place, are accordingly tough. Country Texas isn't about safe spaces, onesies and the appalling New York Times.

That in mind, country Texans almost always tend to be more polite, friendly, considerate and, per England, sussed, than their urban cousins. They're also smart and haven't bought into our modern myths.


Remember the Alamo not the hideous Riverwalk

Viz. Removing statues of Confederate Generals will make persons of color flourish and prosper, paying a Climate Tax will cool the sun, gender's a construct, and getting rid of all your guns will make you safe. 




Did I say Frontier Spirit? There's that too.

God bless,

LSP

15 comments:

  1. Sounds a lot like rural Colorado once you get out of the Denver/Boulder/Aurora area.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I can imagine it would be, drjim, though I don't know Colorado well. Pretty much just driven through.

      Delete
  2. Sounds a lot like it is around here, except it isn't quite so hot.

    ReplyDelete
  3. It does get hot here, Jim...

    ReplyDelete
  4. The River Walk in San Antonio: hideous? I kinda like it, you'll have to fill me in on what's so hideous about it, Reverend.

    I'm thinking you might see it as a Sodom/Gomorrah- type thing, I might be wrong, here.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I might have to walk that back, Fredd... it's been a while since I visited!

      Delete
  5. I'm with Fredd - I think the Riverwalk is nice. I guess it went through some rough times, but it's all cleaned up now. I was first there when I was in my twenties so I'm sure it's changed and been added to.

    However, nothing compares to the Alamo...

    ReplyDelete
  6. Adrienne, I was really struck by the Alamo and wasn't expecting to be. Moving.

    And I probably need to revisit tbe RW, probably like it now.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. *delete 2nd redundant "probably" and replace with something better. Ed.*

      Delete
  7. Reverend: I was there last year for the first time, when we were checking on our property in Kerrville (in Hill Country, perhaps you have heard of the place). Lots of great restaurants on the Riverwalk, great outdoor seating, outstanding for people watching, and YESl it be hot in the Lone Star State. It was 100 degrees out in San Antonio that day, and nobody down on the Riverwalk seemed bothered by it. Including me....

    ReplyDelete
  8. Being in the Alamo is like being in a church. Gettysburg is the same way.

    The RW always seemed a bit like old Europe to me.

    ReplyDelete
  9. LSP - leaving Fayette County TX and the influx of Houston AND Kaliforina $$ and headed to Bandera County as fast as we can

    ReplyDelete
  10. Perhaps Texans prefer to do their time in Purgatory first?

    ReplyDelete