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At the end of the road is the road... I used to live in a town, but all that remains is empty storefronts and peopleless porches, hardly a community. Strangers on the streets do not know their neighbors and never will. The woods and creek banks where I hunted pheasants and fished for trout are overgrown now with McMansions full of bloated consumers. All the orchards grow houses instead of fruit. The only country left is corn and soybean fields, slathered in pesticides, about as natural as ****** Now it is two towns, the one remembered, and the one that is. I live in the latter, but prefer the former. I would leave, but six years ago I fell into a man-trap and haven’t figured out how to escape yet. Not that it much matters. We all end up exactly where we are.
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Feb 6, 2017
Feb 6, 2017 at 8:45 AM UTC
Zen Road
At the end of the road is the road... I used to live in a town, but all that remains is empty storefronts and peopleless porches, hardly a community. Strangers on the streets do not know their neighbors and never will. The woods and creek banks where I hunted pheasants and fished for trout are overgrown now with McMansions full of bloated consumers. All the orchards grow houses instead of fruit. The only country left is corn and soybean fields, slathered in pesticides, about as natural as ****** Now it is two towns, the one remembered, and the one that is. I live in the latter, but prefer the former. I would leave, but six years ago I fell into a man-trap and haven’t figured out how to escape yet. Not that it much matters. We all end up exactly where we are.
mike-essig
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Feb 6, 2017
Feb 6, 2017 at 8:45 AM UTC
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