If I Had A Billion Dollars, I'd Buy Back My (Neighbor's) Old Room
Since there are only about six of you who read this blog, I'll be lucky if two people get the lame reference to the song
Making Fun of Bums that titles this post.
When I finished high school my mom sold the house I grew up in since I was four, and she moved to a new neighborhood. When I was in Texas last week I went for a run through my old neighborhood, past my old house, for old time's sake.
One of the nice things about running past the old house, is everything looks pretty much the same, aside from some minor lanscaping changes (a few trees have been removed, some bushes have been mercifully trimmed, things like that). The house is still the same color, and some of the very same plants are still in some of the planter boxes.

It's comforting to see something as remote and abstract as my childhood home still more or less intact.
So it was most unsettling to run past the old house, with everything looking pretty much the same, and then see that the house next door had been completely razed. Imagine my surprise when I saw this.

A red 1950s rambler used to be in that lot. That house has been burned into the folds of my memory, so it makes no sense to my eyes that it is no longer there.
The Ls were an elderly copule who used to live in that house. Mr. L had about eight dogs (no exaggeration), who enjoyed life in a heated dog house in his back yard. Our two houses alone must have dropped the property value of the other houses on our block by a good 20%. He had all those dogs, and we had five ducks and two of our own dogs.
I don't remember too much about the Ls. They had two granddaughters that my sisters and I used to play with (I can't remember their names), but I didn't see them much after I was around seven or eight years old. You know, I thought girls were gross, and I actually was gross. So that pretty much ended any friendships I had with those two girls. I also remember Mr. L often cleared his throat by hawking a big loogie and spitting it out as he walked out to check on his dogs. I know this because we could hear him from inside our house, even when our windows were closed.
I didn't see much of the Ls as I progressed through high school. One Saturday afternoon I heard an ambulance pull up on our block. I walked outside to see what was going on and the ambulance was parked in front of the Ls' house. I was going to walk over to see if everything was okay, but Mrs. L just waved "hi" to me and calmly walked in the house with the paramedics. That was the last correspondance I would have with her. A few days later my mom told me Mr. L had died.
According to my family this lot has been vacant for about a year. So the tear down part is done. I wonder what kind of house will eventually take its place. I know that neighborhoods evolve and houses get replaced, but it was still such a stark change to run by.

As the old saying goes "you can never go home again," and I don't really want to. But even so, it is unnerving to have such concrete proof right in front of your eyes.