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Send Isaiah Davis birthday cards today

Scott Walker October 15, 2017

Let's all send Isaiah a birthday card for his third birthday on October 22, 2017-address below

(Scroll Down for Interview) Two year old Isaiah Davis will celebrate his third birthday at Vanderbilt Children’s Hospital in Nashville on Sunday, October 22, 2017 and not at his Christiana home. Isaiah was recently diagnosed with Leukemia.

Isaiah’s mother Jessica stays by his side 24/7 as he goes through his treatments.  However, it is sometimes hard for Jessica to muster up the energy to hold her son’s hand as she too is struggling.

Of course, any mother watching their child go through Leukemia treatment would suffer emotionally, but for Jessica it is completely draining.

Both mom and Isaiah have similar feeding tubes and both find themselves sleeping most of the day away due to a lack of energy because of their medical circumstances.  

While Isaiah has Leukemia, Jessica has Cystic Fibrosis. She was diagnosed with the disease at age twelve and she too went through extensive treatments at Vanderbilt. Today, Jessica is in need of a double lung transplant, but that is the last thing on her mind. Instead, she is focusing her energy on making sure that Isiah has a room filled with birthday cards. The soon to be three year old loves to look up at his wall as he falls asleep and see all of the brightly colored cards that arrive in the mail from time to time.

Jessica is asking people both locally and around the world, to send Isaiah a birthday card… if you are able to.

Birthday Card Address for Isaiah Davis s:

Vanderbilt Children’s Hospital
6th Floor Isaiah Davis
2200 Children's Way
Nashville, TN 37232

Below you can hear a brief interview with Jessica and her son: 

More ways to help: 

https://www.youcaring.com/jessica-brandon-616748

In people, People Tags Jessica, Isiah Davis, Vanderbilt, Vanderbilt Childrens Hospital, Nashville, Music City, cancer, Leukemia, childhood, Christiana, Murfreesboro, Cystic Fibrosis, Sony, Sony Alpha, Alpha, Sony Images, Scott Walker, Isaiah Davis
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The Heart is Lonely

Scott Walker October 11, 2017

Lonely is defined by the Merriam-Webster dictionary as a state of being without company, cut off from others or producing a feeling of bleakness or desolation.

Emotions are not always easy to spot, but when you see lonely you know it. It is interesting, lonely is one of those feelings that you can feel while surrounded by hundreds, thousands or perhaps even millions.

In prisons, some wardens utilize solitary confinement as a form of punishment leaving an inmate alone in a small chamber for 22 to 24 hours at a time. Some prisons call it “Segregation” while others use the term “Restrictive Housing.”

In 2006, a study by Stuart Grassian led to a report on the “Psychiatric Effects of Solitary Confinement.” The report was released by Washington University Journal of Law & Policy. The research showed that such confinement can cause severe psychiatric harm with long term consequences.

While those in prison who are forced into a tiny cell for hours upon hours face some of the most severe outcomes psychologically speaking, the report listed other major groups that have the same negative outcomes without being held in a 6 by 9 foot cell. Those groups included patients with spinal cord problems that are not mobile, patients who are held in intensive care units for extended periods and patients required to wear ear and eye patches for weeks to months at a time, just to name a few.

That being said… would it be fair to say that many outside the walls of restriction isolate themselves within their own mind for years if not centuries without meaning to? The self-isolation equates to a sea of loneliness or depression which can equal a feeling of not being loved by anyone.

One man felt so deprived of loving human contact that he invented or founded the “Free Hugs” movement. His name, Juan Mann.

The movement of free hugs was started by Mann in Australia in 2004. He started the movement after an ongoing feeling of loneliness, depression and isolation. He quickly found that giving and receiving hugs to complete strangers felt good and actually cheered him up. It also helped others and the movement grew rapidly around the world.

Isolation leads loneliness which leads to depression which turns into feelings that you cannot be loved. It threatens our well-being in hundreds of ways. Be it isolation within ourselves, in the prison system or within medical settings, isolation is more dangerous than it was once thought to be.

“Loneliness is my least favorite thing about life. The thing that I'm most worried about is just being alone without anybody to care for or someone who will care for me.” - Anne Hathaway

In people, People Tags free hugs, lonely, people, movement, street photography, Sony, Sony Alpha, Alpha, Sony Images, black and white
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Urban Decay: The death of an amusement park

Scott Walker October 10, 2017

It was like walking through a bad movie set in California… At the same time, it felt as if someone was watching my every step.

I was at Guntown Mountain Amusement Park in Cave City, Kentucky. The park opened in 1969 and closed down a number of years ago. It was later purchased by a Louisville, KY businessman who had big dreams in 2015. Will Russell renamed the park “Funtown Mountain” and reopened it with the idea of a multi-million dollar renovation plan set for the near future.

While the park was once again opened in 2015, the renovation plan was never executed.

The Courier Journal newspaper reported that Mr. Russell saw his plans threatened after a severe manic episode related to bipolar disorder. Later that year, the Cave City Police Department shut down Funtown after vandalism and looting were reported on the property. The article suggested that Will Russell somehow instigated the crime, but failed to report as to why that accusation was made.

The newly named Funtown was quickly closed for good when bank payments could not be made on loans to keep the park active. It was later sold at Auction in April of 2016 for less than $300,000. The new owner had grand plans of turning the property into a resort complete with zip lines, cabins and an indoor water park. Those grandiose plans have yet to materialize and the park sits like the movie set of an old Friday the 13th movie.

“We're all lonely for something we don't know we're lonely for. How else to explain the curious feeling that goes around feeling like missing somebody we've never even met?” 
― David Foster Wallace, American Writer (1962-2008)

In Places, News Tags funtown, guntown, amusement park, KY, Kentucky, Cave City, abandoned amusement park, abandoned, ghosttown, life, decay, Sony, Sony Alpha, Sony images, Sony A7SII, Scott Walker, empty places
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The photo, dark as the room... No flash utilized to emphasize the true feeling as you walk in.

His step father called him retarded over and over

Scott Walker October 9, 2017

They sat quietly in their small motel room rolling their own cigarettes to save money. Everything they own was inside the small 12 X 17 foot room that was coated in a smoke filled purple. Lamps lit the space occupied by the couple and their small dog.

Daniel told me the most painful thing he grew up with was his adopted father calling him retarded time and time again due to his learning disability. He said that his step father, who is actually his uncle that adopted him at age two, told him that he would amount to nothing.

Cassie said the most painful memory she has was that her father would tell her that she should not love her mother. Of course, she lived with her mother and three siblings. It was her mother that raised her, fought for her and held down a job while living in a motel so that Cassie and the others would have a place to sleep. 

Once you are down, it is hard to get back up. Cassie explained that not too many months back, she had to stay at the motel where her mother lives for two weeks while her mom was hospitalized. She stayed in her mother’s room to look after her two younger siblings that had to be in school each day while her mother clung to life with her kidneys and even heart slowly shutting down. 

Like Cassie, her mother is a fighter. She survived. But, it is one thing after another when you are at the bottom. A $20 bill can feel like a $4,000 bill. A $600 motel room is likely equivalent to a $5,000 house payment when you can barely afford food. Help for depression, it is almost nonexistent, as explained by Cassie while sitting in her dimly lit room.

Hear the entire story below (8MIN and 41SEC):

"It's not whether you get knocked down, it's whether you get up." - Vince Lombardi

In people, People Tags life, motel, dirty motel, motels, Richmond, Kentucky, KY, people, struggle, tough times, Scott Walker, Sony, Sony Images, Sony Alpha, Cassie, Daniel
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He plays the French Harp

Scott Walker October 8, 2017

Rick is from Syracuse N.Y., but later moved to Kentucky for the local university in Richmond where he says he taught up until computers were brought in as teaching devices.

“How old do you think I am,” he asked me. I did not know where to start guessing, which he could obviously tell as he blurted out, “71, No one believes me.”

He told me about his love for music and said, “I play the French Harp.” Surprised I asked, “You have a harp… Like a giant gold leafed harp?” He smiled and laughed… “They call the harmonica the French Harp. It is a name that dates well before your time.”

“How is it that music can, without words, evoke our laughter, our fears, our highest aspirations?” ― Jane Swan, former Professor of History at West Chester University in Pennsylvania (1925-2010)

In people, People Tags kentucky, KY, Kentucky, Richmond, music, street photography black and white, street photography, Sony, Sony Alpha, Sony Images, French Harp, French, harmonica, Scott Walker, scott walker
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Those expensive horses...

Scott Walker October 8, 2017

“I’ve been coming here since I was a baby,” he told me while standing inside the back entrance to the Keenland Racecourse in Lexington, Kentucky. The track is a Thoroughbred horse racing facility that was first opened in 1936.

With a history that spans over 80 years, lots of residents in Kentucky have memories growing up around the track. “My daddy worked here for years with the horses,” he explained.

*(Sorry for the language, not mine, but his statement) I asked him, “Have you ever dreamed of racing them or raising a race horse?” He seemed irritated at my whimsical question as if only the chosen could raise such a thoroughbred, “Oh hell no – Shit no, Shit no! Those things - - That would cost over a million dollars… Seriously? WTF…” He then walked off and I could only grin at the thought of how much pride, excitement and honor has been placed on these race horses and track over the years.

“The racehorse, by virtue of his awesome physical gifts, freed the jockey from himself. When a horse and a jockey flew over the track together, there were moments in which the man's mind wedded itself to the animal's body to form something greater than the sum of both parts.” ― Laura Hillenbrand, Seabiscuit: An American Legend

Tags seabiscuit, racing, race horse, Keenland, Kentucky, Lexington, life, street photography, horses, sony, sony alpha, sony images, Scott Walker, KY, kentucky, lexington kentucky
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Off to the Races

Scott Walker October 8, 2017

Race horses are bred for one thing… to run. 

If you have ever been to the races, have you taken the time to watch the muscular horses make their way to and from their stalls? They fight their handler all the way in. They show their teeth, they pull away, they strut the opposite direction, and they sometimes rare back onto their hind feet. 

The Thoroughbred race horse resembles its historic Arabian descendants. It is a horse that is stout and quick to jump, run or escape the rider in some cases. 

The American Quarter horse is a popular breed in races as well. The smaller, muscular horses have sometimes been clocked at speeds of 55 miles per hour. The life expectancy is usually around 27 to 30-years of both Quarter horses and Thoroughbred’s, assuming no serious injuries end that life early. 

When I think of race horses, I think of that old school jazz infused big band style of music. I think of Dean Martin, Frank Sinatra and Betty Grable. 

“Gal is like a racehorse, I play her to win
But if I should lose her, another may come in
Love can be like heaven, love can be a joke
But it's worth a gamble so, hey, I go for broke”

- Dean Martin, “Who’s Got the Action”

 

In people, People, Transportation Tags Keenland, horses, race horse, quarter horse, racing, running, thoroughbred, Sony, Sony Alpha, a7sII, Sony Alpha a7sII, KY, Kentucky, Lexington
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Love is all you need

Scott Walker October 3, 2017

Nashville: Some pictures of “LOVE” need not be explained.

“There's nothing you can do that can't be done. Nothing you can sing that can't be sung. Nothing you can say but you can learn how to play the game. It's easy…

Nothing you can make that can't be made. No one you can save that can't be saved. Nothing you can do but you can learn how to be you in time. It's easy…

All you need is love”

-Written by John Lennon and credited to Lennon–McCartney in 1967. Producers of a television program called "Our World" asked the Beetles to come up with a song that contained a message that could easily be understood by everyone. The band took on the project and later released, "All you need is love."

In people, People Tags Nashville, music city, love, love is all you need, people, struggle, struggles, life, street photography, no flash, homeless, Sony, Sony Images, Sony Alpha
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Street Photography

Scott Walker October 1, 2017

No flash, no special production. Just me and a camera at night in Nashville, TN.

When doing street photography I may look odd or like some type of weirdo - but, if people only knew what I was seeing in that small glass behind my camera... the beauty, the romance, the life, the time standing still, the passing people or cars, the businesses - I think they would understand.

No, it is not just the person in the photo, it is the entire surrounding that makes the picture in street photography. It is everything.

“To me, photography is an art of observation. It’s about finding something interesting in an ordinary place… I’ve found it has little to do with the things you see and everything to do with the way you see them.” – Elliott Erwitt, Street Photographer

In people, People Tags no flash, street photography, people, life, night life, Nashville, Music City, TN, Tennessee, Sony, alpha s7sII
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The name of my home planet

Scott Walker October 1, 2017

He held up the small partially painted rock in his right hand and looked at it as he stated, “This is a rock from my home planet.”

He then explained what planet he happened to be from. I could not fully understand the name, but he definitely did not say earth… it was the name of someone or something. I guess that mysterious name would be his mysterious home planet.

After the click of my shutter he disappeared into the dense crowd of downtown Nashville and into the night.

Address at Rice University on the Nation's Space Effort, September 12, 1962:

U.S. President John F. Kennedy said in a speech about space exploration, “There is no strife, no prejudice, no national conflict in outer space as yet. Its hazards are hostile to us all. Its conquest deserves the best of all mankind, and its opportunity for peaceful cooperation may never come again.”

In people, People Tags space, outer space, planets, earth, people, life, struggles, street photography, no flash, Sony, Sony Alpha, A7SII
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What are you looking for?

Scott Walker October 1, 2017

Some people who seem lost, also seem to be in amazement by so little and so much...

“You'll never find a rainbow if you're looking down” ― Charlie Chaplin

In people, People Tags street photography, people, homeless, struggle, mental illness, Nashville, Music City, Sony, Sony Alpha, no flash, black and white, night photo
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The Drifter

Scott Walker October 1, 2017

He was sitting on his bike outside of a bar in downtown Nashville. "LOVE" and "HATE" tattooed to his fingers... He looked like the type who drifted into town with the thought of one night, but likely turned into two and later three.

By ten that evening, he was laying down on his ride with his feet hanging over the rear tire – his head on his handlebars. It was as if he owned the street and if he was told to move on, with a spit he’d say no and sit tight.

The type most would not approach in fear of not being able to walk away, he sat alone as the traffic around him blurred past.

"Got no strings to tie me down
Got no cause to hang around
What difference does it make which way I go
Got an empty feelin' down inside
Still I need to stay alive
Who can tell what waits beyond this road
I'm a drifter, lonesome drifter"

- Johnny Cash, “I'm A Drifter” (Version 2)

In People, people, Transportation Tags Harley, Harley Davidson, drifter, life, people, tough, toughness, street photography, no flash, Sony, Sony Alpha, Sony Images, Sony Alpha a7sII, Nashville, Music City, love, hate
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The phone call confirming Stage IV Cancer

Scott Walker September 28, 2017

Imagine contracting Lime Disease upon your move to Tennessee… possibly from a tick bite. Then, after battling that for a full year imagine a diagnosis of breast cancer that spreads to the bones in your back, your pelvis and even your ribs. That is the life that Cathy Hoag in Murfreesboro has experienced in recent months.

Cathy, who lives in the Barfield area, was diagnosed with Stage IV Breast Cancer this past August.

Looking back, after noticing something was not quite right with her breast, she made an appointment with her doctor. The test results of a mammogram appeared normal, but more questions needed to be answered due to the extremely dense tissue that did not allow for a proper diagnosis. So, more testing followed which ended in a single phone call on a sunny afternoon.

It was a call that no one wants. Cathy, a wife, a stay at home mom of two boys ages 7 and 10, plus a home school teacher – heard the phone ring. She answered it and soon found herself in tears while closing the door of her bedroom. Her doctor informed her that she did indeed have cancer. It was soon revealed that the cancer had spread from her breast to her bones and it was given the title of “Stage IV.”

Prior to the diagnosis, Cathy had mammograms annually. But, the start date of the cancer was not fully established. Regardless of when it formed, she is moving forward with treatment at the Cancer Centers of America in Georgia.

A short 12 minute audio interview with Cathy is below:

"Remember how far you've come, not just how far you have to go. You may not be where you want to be, but neither are you where you used to be." -Stuart Scott

The GoFundMe page for Cathy is HERE.

Tags cancer, the c word, Cathy Hoag, Murfreesboro news, cancer sucks, breast cancer, Cancer Centers of America, Nashville, Music City, survivor, cancer survivor, life, Sony, Sony Alpha, Sony Images
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These Hands and me

Scott Walker September 28, 2017

The above photo and below description is part of the Rutherford County Domestic Violence & Sexual Assault Center “These Hands - Hope and Healing," photographic journal project that showcases domestic violence and sexual assault survivors.

These Hands

"I am a survivor of domestic violence and child sexual abuse. This year I used these hands to write A Call for Help and I’m So Sorry."

- - -
Call for Help

"We were battered and abused
because my mother believed my father when he said,
I'm so sorry.

In 1920
when my mother was six
my grandmother
believed it, too.

In 1955
when I was six
my mother stopped
believing it.

Her willingness
}to Call for Help
destroyed the curses
of alcoholism and violence
and restored the blessings
of sobriety and peace."

- - -
I'm So Sorry

"Love indifference
Contempt regret

Where shame and guilt
Is what you get

Of all the lies
It’s a safe bet
I'm so sorry’s
The biggest yet"

- - -
About The Photo:

"By 1957 my mom and I were out of his reach and safe and sound. I was in the Cub Scouts when I made the plaster imprint of my hand. I gave it to my mom for her Mother’s Day gift. She loved it. It was a good day." - John Schmueser ©2017

Tags John Schmueser, These Hands, hands, hand project, Hand Project, Rutherford County Domestic Violence, Domestic Violence, Sexual abuse, sexual abuse, survivor, Murfreesboro, Nashville, Music City, Scott Walker, domestic violence, domestic, violence
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In search of life under the Lebanon, TN square...

Scott Walker September 25, 2017

After hearing people talk about homeless living “Under” the Lebanon, Tennessee square in a cave of sorts, I grew more and more curious about the scenario. I then searched online to find any information I could eventually locating an article in the Lebanon Democrat newspaper from 2013.

The article started with, “While it may come as no surprise to long time Lebanon residents, others are shocked to learn that an underground cavern runs along the creek bed beneath the Lebanon Town Square.” So, that got me even more curious as to what or who was under the Lebanon square.

For those who know me I am sure you also know what is next… I had to see for myself. Why? Well, because if you hear something or read something, you cannot take it as truth until you see that something with your own eyes.

Yes, I went to the Lebanon square with my friend Jeff Paul who is an avid cave explorer. With words like “Cavern” in an article, what cave explorer would not be in!

Cavern: a cave, or a chamber in a cave, typically a large one. Or used in similes and comparisons to refer to a vast, dark space.

Jeff and I made our way down an old concrete wall and descended into the creek. A small water snake scurried away and under a rock as I landed into the slop that was about 2 inches deep.

Headed towards the square we made our way under the decrepit Gay Street bridge. I say decrepit because those who travel over it likely don’t see the aging condition of it from below. The cracks, how it sits uneven, etc.

From Gay Street we make our way under a paved parking area beneath Quick Lane Tire & Auto Center. You can see where past floods have washed debris under the bridge and parking pad, but no signs of people.

From Quick Lane we ventured under the sacred Capitol Theater. No, it’s not really sacred, but it is pretty cool to still have a movie theater on your town square. Especially one that sits inside of a building that was built in 1900, according to property records.

The 10,665 square foot theater sits about ten feet above Sinking Creek. The building is supported with thick concrete and iron girders likely from pre-1900.

At some point, a concrete ceiling was added in the tunnel under the theater allowing for water to pass without actually touching the beams supporting the building. Over the years, that concrete chipped away now exposing a mixture of steel rebar, iron and/or steel.

Still looking for signs of life and a cavern… as in the large room of a cave – we have found nothing and we were not under the main portion of the Lebanon square yet.

Turning towards the square we ventured under several boutique type shops that occupy buildings on South Cumberland Street (231 South) at Highway 70 or West Main Street that all date back to the early 1900’s if not before. I question the property assessor’s dates as many buildings in counties all over the state are labeled as being built in 1900 even though they were actually built sometime before that date.

As we step through water sometimes up to our knees, we make our way under the Southwest side of the square… or at least the buildings on the Southwest portion of the Lebanon Square.

The first thing Jeff notices on the rear of one of the buildings (Public Square 132), is a door to nowhere. The door is on the rear of the building 15 feet above our heads. If you were inside the structure and decided to step out for a smoke, you would fall into the creek bed below that we were standing in.

Jeff Paul points out the metal workings of what was once was a walkway, a fire exit with steps or perhaps a bridge to the neighboring movie theater. But, there is no rear door on the theater building which is maybe 10-feet from the rear of the building on the Southwest corner of the square.

We then venture towards and then under West Main Street. The tunnels grow darker, the water deeper. At this point, there is no dry spot for anyone to live. Openings every 40 to 50 feet are on one side of the tunnels allowing for storm runoff water to enter from above.

An orange extension chord hangs above our heads going from the underbelly of one building connecting to another about 100-feet away. Tree limbs washed down by floodwaters cling to the edge of the walls and a mixture of rock, concrete and mud sit on the floor covered by water. Still, no campers and few dry spots.

The structures above are made out of wood, no iron or steel beams… only wood with concrete and brick sides lining the tunnels at this point. Keep in mind, the above buildings date back to the 1900’s if not before.

Lebanon, TN was incorporated in 1801 and named after the cedars of Lebanon in the Bible. By 1850, the city had a population of 1,554 residents. It grew to 3,659 in 1910 and by 1960, a little over 10,500 people called Lebanon home. Today, the population is closer to 32,000.

As for the Lebanon Square, which we were partially under at this point, it dates back to the 1850’s. Early photographs are stored at the City of Lebanon Museum and History Center along with the Vise Library at Cumberland University. Some photos are also at the Tennessee State Library of Archives.

One photo is believed to be from 1859 and shows the northeast corner of the town square. Perhaps the Southwest corner also dates to the 1850’s… which is wild to imagine we were standing in a historic creek under historic buildings that are over 100 years old – 167 years old to be more precise.

Walking in water we made our way under what is now labeled “Betty’s Couture,” a small clothing store on West Main Street. The tunnel was dark and emptied into a swampy mess behind a row of businesses that front Highway 70 or West Main Street. We then took a right to head deeper and again, back under the Lebanon Square.

Stepping over what looked to be the old tile floor from years past, we made our way down another dark tunnel of water.

Could this be the way to the cavern that is noted in that 2013 article found in the Lebanon Democrat? Unfortunately, no. There was no vast cavern in a cave. It was only the cavern of tunnels and places for storm water to drain under the town square.

But wait… At the end of the last tunnel with the Neddy Jacobs Cabin above our heads, we found the opening of what looked to be a deep underwater cave. However, it would take diving equipment and more to venture into the deep waters.

No one is currently living under the Lebanon square and we did not see anything that would lead us to believe someone had been living under the buildings. If they were living under the buildings in the past, they have since moved on.

In News Tags life, Lebanon, Tennessee, TN, Nashville, Music City, people, homeless, street photography, underworld, under city, gutter, cave, caves, Scott Walker
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The melting pot of the universe

Scott Walker September 24, 2017

A cellphone shot...

Perhaps it is the crossroads of society or the melting pot of the universe - - the diversity of customers at a Waffle House is always unique.

In the crowded parking lot sits a newer model Mercedes, an older 1990’s Ford F-150, a minivan, two Harley Davidsons… just to name a few of the vehicles.

Inside you see some customers wearing ripped up jeans as if they are attempting to make a fashion statement. You see people wearing ties and dressed in their Sunday best. You see those who look to be construction workers taking a short break while enjoying some good cooking. All backgrounds, all colors and all walks of life uniting for one reason. Food.

At the cash register is an expectant mother with her son who looks to be about 5. An older couple sitting at the counter look down at the little boy as if to remember when they were where she is today. “Are you going to be a big brother to a sister or a brother,” they ask the child. Mom chimes in with a smile and says, “He will be a big brother.” The stranger, in his slow drawn out country slur then explains the importance of protecting his future sister to the little boy.

In the kitchen area, I see a man working whom I recognize that lives in one of the nearby motels. He is making conversation with customers about the football game he watched on TV last night. “How did Virginia do,” he asked a customer wearing a West Virginia ball cap. The customer responds, “They pulled it off against Kansas.” The employee then says, “I grew up in Nashville – I’m always pulling for Vandy.” It was nice to see this man, who I met when he was at his lowest point 3 years ago living in the nearby weekly rental, in his element of people. He was smiling, living and working with others in a way that looked to give him that one little word that so few experience… joy.

By a window seat, two women who appear to be a couple sit quietly. They are enjoying overcooked and crunchy bacon, just as they requested. They later make their way to the cash register telling their waitress, "Thank you." The waitress lights up as if no one has told her those two words of praise since her shift started at 4 in the morning.

An older gentleman who looks to be in his eighties sits by himself and orders a waffle. “Make it overdone – burn it,” he says. I can only imagine why? Perhaps his late wife once cooked breakfast for him before he hit the tractor each day. Maybe she burned the waffles daily on accident and he wanted to remember her and the lifetime they cherished?

Burned waffles… An entire study was once conducted on taste memories and how there is a factual link between the brain and the fork. Well okay, perhaps not a link between the brain and the fork, but an area of the brain that can encode a specific taste and tie it to a time and place of where it was previously experienced. It is called “Food Memory.” The study was done at the University of Haifa in Israel.

“If you really want to make a friend, go to someone's house and eat with him... the people who give you their food give you their heart.” - Cesar Chavez, American Civil Rights Activist (1927-1993)

In People, people Tags people, wafflehouse, waffle house, food, life, melting pot, cellphone, cell phone, cell phone pictures, Samsung
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The relax after the ride

Scott Walker September 23, 2017

“A man went looking for America and couldn’t find it anywhere” - Easy Rider

In People, Campers, Transportation Tags easy rider, chopper, life, people, freedom, street photography, fuji, fujix, fujix100f, x100f, scott walker, tn, Tennessee
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Life is that quick

Scott Walker September 19, 2017

Life in the Click of a Shutter...

It was a breezy April 2014 night in Nashville. His guitar was strapped to his back while walking behind the Frist Center. It was as if time stood still during this photo - capturing his hair and beard floating...

The night will never be the same again for him and I don't even know his name, his age or where he is from. But, I do know that the second is etched in the past.

What if you only have 100 years or perhaps less? That's it - frozen in a moment only for what feels like a second when you look back, later in life - like the snap of a shutter.

"I'm fifteen for a moment
Caught in between ten and twenty
And I'm just dreaming
Counting the ways to where you are
I'm twenty two for a moment
She feels better than ever
And we're on fire
Making our way back from Mars
Fifteen there's still time for you
Time to buy and time to lose
Fifteen, there's never a wish better than this
When you only got hundred years to live
I'm thirty three for a moment
Still the man, but you see I'm of age
A kid on the way
A family on my mind
I'm forty five for a moment
The sea is high
And I'm heading into a crisis
Chasing the years of my life
Fifteen there's still time for you
Time to buy, time to lose yourself
Within a morning star
Fifteen I'm all right with you
Fifteen, there's never a wish better than this
When you only got hundred years to live
Half time goes by
Suddenly you're wise
Another blink of an eye
Sixty seven is gone
The sun is getting high
We're moving on
I'm ninety nine for a moment
Dying for just another moment
And I'm just dreaming
Counting the ways to where you are
Fifteen there's still time for you
Twenty two I feel her too
Thirty three you're on your way
Every day's a new day
Fifteen there's still time for you
Time to buy and time to choose
Hey fifteen, there's never a wish better than this
When you only got hundred years to live"

- Song by Vladimir John Ondrasik III, better known as Five For Fighting - Titled "100 Years"

In people, People Tags life, Scott Walker, street photography, Music City, Nashville, TN, Tennessee, people, music
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Enjoy life, no matter what

Scott Walker September 14, 2017

Some people say that if you don’t enjoy your job, perhaps you are in the wrong field. I say, if you can’t enjoy life, perhaps you’re in the wrong field.

“Lighten up, just enjoy life, smile more, laugh more, and don't get so worked up about things.”
-  Kenneth Branagh, Northern Irish actor, director

 

In people, People Tags life, Murfreesboro news, Murfreesboro Police, Terry Spence, happy, people, street photography, Sony, Sony Images, Sony Alpha, Scott Walker
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His mother called him Vernon

Scott Walker September 12, 2017

“My name is Vern and only my mom called me Vernon… God Rest her Soul,” he said when I accidentally called him Vernon misunderstanding his quiet whispers when he introduced himself.

He lives in a small apartment located in Nashville that looks more like a former motel. He talked about how crack dealers knew the hours of management and sold only certain times of the day.

“If I were asked to define Motherhood. I would have defined it as Love in its purest form. Unconditional Love.” -Revathi Sankaran

In people, People Tags Music City, people, mothers, poverty, struggle, life, Nashville, TN, Tennessee, Sony, Sony Alpha, street photography, Scott Walker, Sony Images, black and white
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