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Living in the woods of Costa Rica

Scott Walker March 16, 2016

Born and raised in Costa Rica she doesn't have much, but she was all smiles. In the background is the place that she and her family call home.

The makeshift house is built of tarps, old fabric and metal roofing material. The home sits in the woods and is within a short walk to Pacific Ocean. There are over 800 miles of coastline in Costa Rica, much of which are made up of bluffs and steep rocks.

It is often necessary for the woman of the residence to stay home with young children as the average wage is about $10 per day, the highest in Central America. However, that is not enough to afford childcare.

Because her home is in the woods, she see's Iguana's and monkeys on a daily basis. While most Costa Ricans don't eat monkey and iguana meat, they do in neighboring Nicaragua. In fact, the government of Nicaragua encourages residents to eat iguana as opposed to chicken because iguanas are cheaper to raise when income is scarce. Plus, iguanas offer more protein than chickens. Iguanas have 24% protein compared with 18% in chicken.

In people, People, Places Tags Costa Rica, Pacific Ocean, Fuji, Fuji X, X100s, FujiFilm, Third World, third world
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Barefoot on hot concrete in Granada, Nicaragua

Scott Walker March 16, 2016

He was walking through the streets of Granada, Nicaragua with no shoes. The pavement was burning hot as the sun beams down on the city of about 130,000 residents. He was asking locals for money and many obliged handing him several córdoba’s or dollars.

Granada was founded in 1524 and is one of the oldest settlements among Latin American countries. Granada is located along the coast of the Lake Nicaragua. In the early days of formation it was the location of huge battles as English, French and Dutch pirates tried to take control of Nicaragua.

While the economy is better in Granada compared to other cities in Nicaragua, the U.S. Government warns American’s to use caution when traveling in the city. Political unrest often leads to demonstrations in cities like Granada as the next Presidential and National Assembly election will take place in November of 2016.  Sometimes political demonstrations turn violent as tempers escalate quickly.

Due to political unrest in Nicaragua and high crime, all U.S. Government personnel who travel to the area must be pre-approved because of safety concerns. Off duty government workers are not allowed to enter certain outdoor market areas due to increasing crime. 

The U.S. Bureau of Diplomatic Security announced in 2015, “The number of reports of burglary increased 63 percent from 2013 to 2014. The most frequent locations where non-violent crimes were reported to occur were restaurants, hotels (60 percent increase), roadways (700 percent increase), and on buses. There were also significant increases in reports from beaches and tourist areas. The majority of non-violent crimes were reported to occur during the day.” The U.S. also reported, “The municipalities with the highest rates of criminal complaints per 10,000 inhabitants were Bluefields, Granada, Puerto Cabezas, Managua, and Diriamba.”

In Places, people, People Tags Granada, Nicaragua, street photography, Scott Walker, homeless, Fuji, Fuji X, X100s, third world, Third World
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Ice Cream in a Third World Country

Scott Walker March 16, 2016

His face was badly weathered as if he had spent every waking hour in the hot sun. The man who appeared to be in his late 70’s, was a hard worker.

He rode his three wheeled bike through the streets of Masaya, Nicaragua selling ice cream out of a large cooler attached to the back of his bike. When he saw a crowd of people he would stop and hold up different flavors in hopes of selling a few treats.

The United States Government reports that Nicaragua has one of the poorest economies in the hemisphere. They also report that U.S. residents are often targets of crime when they visit the country. Furthermore, the Nicaraguan government works hard at suggesting Americans are not to be trusted, according to the U.S. Department of State.

When help is needed, the National Police Force of Nicaragua is scarce. One local resident told me that police are corrupt and some officers get paid only $2 per day. I later found that the average Nicaraguan police officer receives $120 per month for their services, which is the lowest pay among nearly all Central American countries. In other words, $2 per day would be on the low end of the spectrum for a new officer while $120 per month is the average of all officers.

Ronald Reagan once stated, "Violence has been Nicaragua's most important export to the world."

In people, People, Places Tags Masaya Nicaragua, Nicaragua, third world, Third World, Fuji, X100s, Fujix, street photography, Scott Walker
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Motorcycle Pilot

Scott Walker March 8, 2016

He was soft spoken and kind. When I asked him what was his favorite memory, he told me he was a “Motorcycle Pilot.” Confused I asked, “What’s a motorcycle pilot?” That was when he went into detail talking about the fun he had racing motorcycles. He talked about it with a passion that brought him to life, describing other people he raced with in his younger days. He then told me about the bikes he built from the ground up. As he talked my mind wandered… What if that passion were to return to him the way he is able to described every vivid detail to me.

His fault? He told me he can’t say no to anything. I took it as people have taken advantage of him over the years. I don’t know if that is true or not, but I could tell by the sound of his voice and the way he came across as being humble, that he would be the first to help someone in need.

His life today leaves him living in the back of an old pickup truck with a makeshift camper made out of wood and tarps covering the bed of the truck. He is 64-years old.

“The connection to place, to the land, the wind, the sun, stars, the moon... it sounds romantic, but it's true - the visceral experience of motion, of moving through time on some amazing machine - a few cars touch on it, but not too many compared to motorcycles. I always felt that any motorcycle journey was special.” - Antoine Predock

In people, People Tags motorcycle pilot, Indiana, Evansville, street photography, Scott Walker, homeless, Fuji, 35mm, FujiFilm, XT1
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What is your purpose in life?

Scott Walker March 8, 2016

He was once a respiratory care nurse and said that he grew up during the hippie generation, but he was never a hippie. “I was into cars,” he told me, “I had a Mustang once, but my favorite was my Super Sport Camaro.”

As we talked he said that he is currently living in a motel. He is from Kentucky, but is stuck in Indiana after his daughters car broke down. “I don’t have enough money to get back, so I am staying here until I do,” he said. “My social security check should be here in a few days, once I get it I will head back to Kentucky,” he reassured me.

As I was about to walk away, the 61 year old stopped me. “Have you found yourself yet,” he asked with much curiosity. Confused I responded, “Have I found myself?” He looked at me and said, “Yea, I mean you – your purpose – you?” I paused, “I uh, I don’t know – I guess - - Have you?” He looked at me with curiosity, scrunched his nose and said, “I have not found myself yet, my purpose. I will let you know if I do.”

Tim Tebow stated, “Regardless of whatever I do, I know what my purpose is: to make a difference in people's lives.”

In people, People Tags Fuji, Indiana, Evansville, Kentucky, Scott Walker, street photography, people, black and white
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He forgave his father

Scott Walker March 7, 2016

“I just turned 30,” he told me. His life was far from glamourous, but he has come to grips with that as he ages.

“I was taken away from my parents at age 1,” he said with a glimmer of hope in his eyes. He went on to tell me that he has pins in his back and even a small plate of metal in his head, caused by the hands of his father. It was at that point that I began to understand why the Department of Children Services took him away from his mother and father at such a young age.

Apparently, he went into foster care and eventually back to his parents and then back into the foster care system and then back to parents. It was a tug of war between parents and people he didn’t know. Allen later became a ward of the State of Indiana.

“It never did heal properly,” he told me while talking about his child abuse and battle scars. I then asked him if he ever sees his father today and if so, has he forgiven him? He smiled, “I have forgiven him.”

While forgiving is one positive step, moving forward can take years. Allen is homeless and living in shelters some nights when the temperature drops while living on the street other nights.

By the way, Allen told me that when he told his father that he forgave him, his father responded, “I appreciate it, but there is nothing I can do about it now.” 

In people, People Tags CHILD ABUSE, child abuse, Indiana, street photography, Fuji, X100s, Scott Walker, people
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We are truly all friends

Scott Walker March 7, 2016

He was marching, dancing and walking up and down the sidewalk of Riverside Drive next to a small park along the banks of the Ohio River in Evansville, Indiana. His old school Sony Walkman cassette player was firmly held around his neck by a belt strap, the cassette door held shut with rubber bands. A church flyer with the word “Faith” on it was in his left breast pocket along with a handwritten note.

Motorist would drive by honking their horns and waiving at him. He would respond by waiving his American flag in his left hand and waiving his hand on the right. It was as if he were a fixture of Indiana and everyone looked forward to seeing him on their commute home.

As I approached I could see his smile grow from ear to ear. He was so excited to talk. He started talking to me before I was close enough to hear what he had to say.

Scattered on the ground before him were toy motorcycles, cars, newspapers, magazines and books… all neatly lined together. “What’s this,” I asked while pointing at a small toy car. “That’s my Ferrari, my brother gave it to me,” he said with a laugh. “What about this one,” I asked. “Oh, that’s my motorcycle – I used to ride, but now I ride a bike.”

As our conversation continued he stopped to think about his childhood. Pointing at the river he said, “One time when I was a kid, I swam in that river. It was a good thing I knew how to doggy paddle, because those currents got me.” He then told me that he is 66-years old and has always lived in the Evansville area, sometimes living on the Kentucky side of the river.

“I use to go to the Masonic Temple in Newburg. I then became a Jehovah Witness. I am now Muslim, but I go to all the churches, I like everybody, we are all friends,” he said with a smile.

American Author Bryant H. McGill once stated, "One of the most sincere forms of respect is actually listening to what another has to say." Some of the folks I have met, all I can do is sit and listen. I honestly don't know how to respond at times.

In people, People Tags Evansville, Indiana, people, street photography, black and white, black and white street photography, Scott Walker, Fuji, X100s
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He was struck by a car while on his bicycle

Scott Walker March 7, 2016

“I was an Army brat growing up,” he said. When asked how he landed in Evansville, Indiana, he told me that he was living in a smaller city where he was involved in an accident.

Russell said, “I was riding my bike when I was hit by a car. The injuries were too bad to be treated there, so they flew me to the hospital here (Evansville, Indiana).” The 48-year old was flown to the Deaconess Hospital in Evansville.

After being treated and released from the Deaconess Hospital, he had no choice but to live on the streets of Indiana… homeless.

He does not have the funds to take a trip back home, so Indiana is where he will stay for the time being.

“In tragedy, it's hard to find a good resolution; it's not black and white: it's a big fog of gray.” - Paul Dano

In people, People Tags homeless, Indiana, Evansville, street photography, Fuji, XT1, 35mm, Scott Walker, people
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I buried my best friend yesterday

Scott Walker March 7, 2016

“I was born in California,” he told me, but has lived in Evansville, Indiana his entire life. As we talked more, I realized he was placed into the foster care system at age 6. A woman in Indiana later adopted him.

“My mom (talking about his adopted mother), was like Aunt Bee on the Andy Griffith Show,” he said with a smile. As he continued to describe his parents he commented, “My dad (adopted father) was an Evangelist.” I could tell he was proud of the parents who raised him in life, but he was struggling. A string of bad choices mixed with a little bad luck landed him on the streets. Today he is 48-years old.

The conversation then took a downturn. “I buried my best friend yesterday,” he said while looking down. When I asked who died he said, “My mom. My dad died last year and my mom passed away this past week, she was 88.” He told me she was the best woman ever.

“No language can express the power, and beauty, and heroism, and majesty of a mother’s love. It shrinks not where man cowers, and grows stronger where man faints, and over wastes of worldly fortunes sends the radiance of its quenchless fidelity like a star.” - Edwin Hubbell Chapin

In people, People Tags Indiana, Evansville, Fuji, homeless, Street photography, life, X100s
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It was once one of the largest Army and German P.O.W. Bases in the South

Scott Walker March 6, 2016

Prior to World War II, a large military base formed in Union County Kentucky. The United States Government came in and gave farmers below what would be considered fair market value at the time for their land. The flat acreage where you could see as far as 16-miles proved to be the perfect training grounds troops to learn war weaponry of guns and tanks. The rural area is a little over an hour away from Clarksville near the Indiana state line.

Camp Breckinridge in Union County was the headquarters of the 506th Regiment of the 101st Airborne Division in the 1930’s and 1940’s.

As World War II broke out in 1937, the U.S. Army quickly realized they needed a place to house German Prisoners of War. The base in Union County became the official P.O.W. prison camp housing 3,000 Germans.

The base population stood at about 45 thousand residents prior and during WWII and later the Korean War. The large base was also home to basic training for new Army recruits in the 30’s and 40’s.

Today, the population in Union County, Kentucky is about 15,000 residents. Of course, that is a drastic drop compared to the 45,000 military residents and 3,000 inmates that called Union County home between 1930 and 1950.

Most of the old World War II era barracks that were left standing were sold to investors in the 1970’s as the land was divided, but the majority of the military classrooms, prison walls, prison cells, cafeteria’s and stores on the massive base were torn down when the government shut the base down. Investors later hired contractors to perform low cost renovations on the interior of the 1930 era barracks dividing them into duplexes so that they could be rented out to residents of low income brackets.

As we drove through what was once the base, every 50 to 100 feet you could see large smoke stacks protruding through heavily dense wooded areas that were to my right and left. I then stopped the truck and walked into the woods to further examine the stack's. I could still see the concrete foundations to old military buildings that probably went for miles. There were 50 or more stacks on the land in the area near the old barracks.

A railroad once ran between the military base and the Ohio River, which was only about 7 miles away. Supplies were shipped to the base on barges and by rail. 
On the banks of the river, we found a massive chain that may have once been used to tie off the barges while they unloaded. The large chain was about six inches in diameter.

As you look at these photos, imagine it a base that was once alive and vibrant.

In News, Places Tags Camp Breckinridge, 101st Airborne, Union County, Kentucky, KY, Fuji, X100s, XT1, 35mm, Clarksville, Ohio River, Army, WWII, German POW Camp, POW Camp, POW, Korean War, boot camp, urban decay, empty places, Empty Places
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Free Rabies Shots and More

Scott Walker March 5, 2016

I was fortunate enough to go out with Beesley Animal Clinic in Murfreesboro again on Friday. We randomly knocked on doors in local trailer parks to see who needed a rabies vaccination for their dog or cat. A local vet then gave the shots for free. 

I love doing that. The anticipation of who is going to open the door and what their story maybe fascinates me for some reason. I find it interesting.

In People, people Tags Murfreesboro, Beesley, Fuji, Scott Walker
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Voodoo and more in Haiti

Scott Walker March 2, 2016

He was standing on Voodoo grounds in Haiti and did not say anything to me as I snapped the photo, so I took the picture and walked away. Does he practice VooDoo? I do not know as I do not speak French Creole.

Voodoo grounds outnumber viable church grounds by a huge percentage in Haiti. Voodoo is the religion of the majority in Haiti and it is taken very seriously.

Did you know that some witchdoctors in Haiti have what believers call a black magic voodoo death spell? It supposedly is the most lethal of spells and leaves the person who received the spell dead.

Voodoo derived from West Africa. The original West African Voodoo religion was called. This religion honors a god with a dual nature, both masculine and feminine. It also pays honor in a form of worship to so called spirits in rocks, rivers, trees, and more. Voodoo can also include animal sacrifices.

What is odd is that Voodoo in Haiti is blended with West African practices as well as aspects of Roman Catholicism. Of course, the Bible condemns the practice of Voodoo in a very strong manner, so how can the two intersect?  

Deuteronomy 18:10-12 states, “There shall not be found among you anyone who burns his son or his daughter as an offering, anyone who practices divination or tells fortunes or interprets omens, or a sorcerer 11 or a charmer or a medium or a necromancer or one who inquires of the dead, for whoever does these things is an abomination to the Lord.”

In people, People Tags voodoo, Haiti, third world, Third World, street photography, Fuji, X100s
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The Old Fashioned Way is All We Know

Scott Walker March 2, 2016

Drying clothing the old fashioned way takes time and patience. Or does it? You would never know by looking at those who work hard in Haiti. 

It is amazing how much work the mothers and house wives do in Haiti. For example, when they cook dinner they have to build a fire outside in most households. They then cook over that open fire, which takes considerably longer than simply turning on the stove. When they wash their clothing they do it all by hand, often in streams of polluted water. 

Anne Spencer Lindbergh, author, aviator, and the wife of aviator Charles Lindbergh stated, "By and large, mothers and housewives are the only workers who do not have regular time off. They are the great vacationless class." (1906-2001)

In people, People Tags Haiti, Fuji, X100s, Scott Walker, street photography, Third World, third world
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Handing out leather coats on Hippie Hill

Scott Walker February 29, 2016

This was shot at Hippie Hill, a place where everyone is accepted. On this day, I had a chance to team up with a church and a company in the Nashville area to hand out brand new leather coats. It was an awesome day and the folks on the hill loved it. 

"My way of fitting in was through jokes and making people laugh." - Carrot Top

In people, People Tags Hippie Hill, Murfreesboro, Nashville, homeless, Fuji, X100s, FujiFilm
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Chilling on Hippie Hill

Scott Walker February 29, 2016

These ladies are relaxing at Hippie Hill in Tennessee.

Hippie Hill is a community for families that have no where to go. It's been operated in rural Rutherford County, near the Cannon County line, for more than a decade to provide the transient and homeless community temporary housing and basic necessities. Dwight Teagarden told me, "Many of the folks out here find that they don't fit in down there [pointing towards the city], but they fit in here - we love them." 

"The most basic human desire is to feel like you belong. Fitting in is important." - Simon Sinek

In people, People, Places Tags Hippie Hill, Hippies, Murfreesboro, Nashville, homeless, Fuji, FujiFilm, X100s
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The truck rolled down the hill

Scott Walker February 29, 2016

Dwight, who lives on Hippie Hill, told me this truck is used to haul water up and down the mountainside. "One time the guys were hauling water in a great big container and a wasp got in the cab - the guy driving started swatting at it and lost control. The truck rolled over on the hillside - but we still use it and it still runs." 

You have to love the durability of old trucks. They last forever. 

In Places, Transportation Tags Hippie, Hippie Hill, Hippies, Scott Walker, Murfreesboro, Fuji, X100s, FujiFilm
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Sidetracked

Scott Walker February 29, 2016

“My dad died of Alzheimer’s and we didn’t have no insurance. They took his place from me when he died and I was on the streets,” he told me while thinking back on his life. He told me that he is 41-years old and graduated from Smyrna High School in 1994. He later came to Nashville where he currently lives on the street.

“Do you stay at the mission,” I asked. “No, it is too much like a prison, but they have to keep it that way to keep it safe,” he explained. He went on to tell me that the mission is a good place for many, just not for him. “One guy got stabbed there like fifty times,” he told me. I suggested that many on the street have extreme mental illnesses or problems with addiction which you see magnified in some shelters.

Examining the Stabbing that he mentioned (My sidetrack):

In 2007, Frank Edward Nixon stabbed Joseph Mark Chandler approximately fifty times. The two were staying at the mission and were inside the building when the stabbing occurred. But, the stabbing was not a random event that occurred. One week prior to the stabbing, the two had an incident on the streets of Nashville. Evidently the victim tried to sell drugs to Nixon, but Nixon changed his mind and Chandler and another man beat up and robbed Nixon, according to court documents.

The stabbing took place at 7:30 in the morning on February 9, 2007. Nixon entered the shelter and headed to the TV room where he recognized Chandler from his previous encounter with the victim. Nixon briefly walked out of the shelter to smoke a cigarette and then re-entered first heading to his locker to retrieve a knife. He later went back into the TV room where Chandler had fallen asleep in a chair. Nixon then started stabbing Chandler.

With the first knife wound Chandler awoke and tried to run from Nixon, but fell to the ground where the stabbing continued. Homeless men in the shelter heard the commotion and rushed to the aid of Chandler. Those men held Nixon until police arrived. Their actions prevented Chandler from being stabbed to death. The victim was transported to Vanderbilt Medical Center where he spent four days in intensive care. He then spent three more days in the hospital recovering from surgery due to punctured lungs sustained in the attack.

In case you are curious, Nixon told the courts his marriage failed and he turned to drugs. He soon found himself homeless. Prior to his marriage failing, Nixon served in the U.S. Air Force and later the Air National Guard. He also spent several years in college at Savannah State University in Georgia. He testified in court that he originally turned to drugs to cope with “traumatic things that happened to [him] on Okinawa.” Prior to the stabbing he was a mentor to children at the Juvenile Justice Center and a “Volunteer Preacher.”

Today, Nixon is out of prison and 63-years old. He now lives in Georgia.

 

In people, People Tags Frank Edward Nixon, homeless, addiction, life, street photography, Scott Walker, Fuji, X100s, FujiFilm, Nashville, Georgia, Statesboro
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I am 32, no 33

Scott Walker February 29, 2016

“How old are you,” I asked. “I am 32… No, I just turned 33 - I just had a birthday,” she said with hesitation. When asked if she has a place to stay at night, she told me that she did. “I am staying with a friend,” she said.

“The quality, not the longevity, of one's life is what is important.” - Martin Luther King, Jr.

Dr. King is interesting and the quotes he has for life are often from his experiences in life. He was actually born with the name of Michael King, Jr. in Atlanta, Georgia on January 15, 1929. His father, Michael King, Sr. changed his own name in honor of the German Protestant religious leader Martin Luther. His son, Martin King, Jr., later decided to change his name to Martin Luther as well also in honor of the German religious leader who had a profound impact on the life of his family. What is even more interesting, neither of the two ever met the German man as he lived between the years of 1483 and 1546, long before the King family was formed.

On a Blog entitled The German Way & More I read:

Martin Luther, a former Augustinian monk and theology professor, began the Protestant Reformation by nailing his “Ninety-Five Theses” to the church door in Wittenberg, Germany in 1517.

Martin Luther From a 1533 painting of Martin Luther by Lucas Cranach. Although his original intent was only to reform the Roman Catholic Church, Luther’s actions led to a split in the Church, dividing it into the Protestant and Catholic branches. Today’s Lutheran Church (of which there are now several divisions, or “synods”) bears the name of the great Reformer (Reformator in German). Most of the countries of northern Europe soon became Protestant. Germany itself is today about evenly divided between Catholics and Protestants.

Besides his religious reforms, Luther also had an impact on standardizing the German language through his translation of the Bible into German. He was a leader in translating the Bible into the language of the people, rather than the traditional Latin.

This all proves my personal thought, one life can have a profound impact on the world.

In people, People Tags Scott Walker, Fuji, FujiFilm, X100s, Nashville, homeless, street photography
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Struck by a Car

Scott Walker February 28, 2016

I love the way street photography feels, the action you attempt to capture as it unfolds. I love the way you have to move in close when you are shooting with a fixed lens (X100s). I believe that street photography should be personal.

This woman, who could barely stand, walked into the path of the red car you see behind her. She was struck by the car and laid lifeless in the street for a few minutes before deciding she wanted to get up. Every time her husband tried to talk to the officer she looked at him and said, "Shut Up!"

Onlookers stared in disbelief that she was able to stand after the car verses pedestrian incident. Others were watching because her level of alleged intoxication was incomparable to others walking the streets.

“That's the problem with drinking, I thought, as I poured myself a drink. If something bad happens you drink in an attempt to forget; if something good happens you drink in order to celebrate; and if nothing happens you drink to make something happen.” ― Charles Bukowski

In people, People, News Tags Nashville, street photography, Scott Walker, Fuji, X100s, FujiFilm
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A little creepy

Scott Walker February 26, 2016

This is an old deserted home I came across recently. It was a little creepy, lot's of dolls lying around in the rubble. 

While I realize this was once a home, I could not get the thought out of my mind about all the waste we have in our heads. I know that sounds weird, but I saw the comparison with this house. Years of debris like the doll I found with the head ripped off... I don't think I will be back to visit this place. 

"If you leave the smallest corner of your head vacant for a moment, other people's opinions will rush in from all quarters." - George Bernard Shaw

In Places Tags urban decay, Empty Places, empty places, empty spaces, Fuji, X100s, Scott Walker, Tennessee, Nashville
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