Wednesday, June 18, 2025

"What?"

            My hearing issues with tinnitus span decades of “that’s the way it is” acceptance. A few years ago, large groups and noisy classrooms meant I guessed at words and phrases unless the speaker stood straight before me. Frankly, once I stepped away from crowded rooms, I stopped noticing the decline in my hearing ability.            
            Until this last year, that is. When I sit in the back seat of the car, any conversations from up front dodge back to me with uncertainty. At first, I excused my inability to discern conversations because music played around us, and my family members faced forward. Explanations I chimed to myself to avoid the inevitable. The other day, I begged my husband to repeat numbers to me as we worked our monthly budget. “Was that a five? Or a nine?” If he doesn’t turn to face me directly, I’ll have to ask again.            
            I know that’s clearly a sign that things have changed more than I’d like to admit.  I need to have a long talk with my physician during my annual exam this summer. I can convince myself that not having to ask “What?” a billion times a day will add quality to my life. If hearing aids become my newest dip into elderly fashion, I will embrace them with cool self-confidence. After all, it’s still better than all of those years I wore braces!



Copyright 2024 Elizabeth Abrams Chapman 

Monday, June 16, 2025

“Cluster Fuck: Flooding in San Antonio”

 

Lake does its job!

            The City of Live Oak, Texas designed a huge flood control park in 1971, that evolved over the years into a facility that offers 75 acres that enhance family life for all in the area. The overall focus of the park, though, is water management. I don’t know how many times I’ve bragged that Live Oak doesn’t flood when the rest of San Antonio deals with the sudden rivers of flashflood devastation. Wide concrete culverts crisscross our small town with the purpose of collecting rain water during flooding and funneling everything to the Main City Park. This system has worked successfully, with only a few homes that sit on lower streets getting water into their homes if a deluge of daily rain descends into the San Antonio area. Most of us sit high and dry even when the culverts flow like a river to the park.
            On the night of June 12th, more than seven inches drowned various sections of San Antonio. The usual areas that suffer from flash flooding predictably found cars trapped, and thirteen people died from fast rising water tossing their vehicles like toys into creeks. Massive highway construction down the I35 corridor brought a river of water into our usually safe neighborhood. The barriers guarding the roads funneled the torrent onto the first available culvert, which filled rapidly, and spilled onto two streets. The green areas around our highway no longer exist as mountains of gravel and concrete grow instead. Equipment necessary for construction blocked every area of green, forcing runoff into new and unexpected areas.
            The tragedy of progress translated into deaths and destruction.

Family flooded out


Bridge damaged from water


Gravel from highway construction






Copyright 2025 Elizabeth Abrams Chapman