Bag of Randomness
Monday, December 1, 2025

And counting.


I really wasn’t looking forward to Thanksgiving this year. It wasn’t my year to have the kids. One Thanksgiving that happened after my family was broken up, I didn’t want to be alone like I was the previous year, so I somewhat invited myself to a Thanksgiving dinner. I hated that meal, but the people were loving and caring, which I appreciated. First of all, when I walked in, I noticed an anti-Fauci book prominently on display, so I had to be very careful about what to talk about, and I hate being around people with whom I have to think before I speak to avoid any friction, instead of just being able to be myself. Also, there was nothing traditional about the meal. We ate a baked chicken breast. There was no stuffing, mashed potatoes, dressing, gravy, or even a roll. I left that meal thinking that spending holidays all by my lonesome might be better than the alternative. And, it’s something I’ve started to embrace. Again, that lesson a friend taught me, “Acceptance is the answer to all my problems,” proved true.

This year, my good friend, whom I’ve reconnected with, invited me to Brownwood, but they were having their dinner on a Tuesday. I politely declined and told him I was making a turkey dinner for one this year and planned to lean into it. I’m glad I stayed put, because the day before Thanksgiving, the mother of my children called, saying she needed to fly to one of the coasts as a member of her new husband’s family was going into hospice, and asked if I could take the kids, as she didn’t know when she might be back. Well, of course, the kids are the priority in my life. An hour or so later, BoyGeeding and DaughterGeeding were at my house, and I was off to the grocery store to shop for ingredients to cook a Thanksgiving dinner for three.

I’m grateful I had this opportunity, even if it wasn’t the whimsical experience I was hoping for. My children are teens now, and their attention is on other things; they don’t always have the best attitude when it comes to making the most of an unfavorable situation. And there was an expression of feeling like dropped-off luggage or being boarded up as a pet, rather than feeling like a priority in their parents’ lives. At least I was able to get them to drive with me to my parents’ grave at the DFW National Cemetery and place an American flag and some poinsettias on it.


DaughterGeeding wanted to binge the latest season of Stranger Things. It was much better than I anticipated. I really got into it.


Three weeks ago, a good friend and I were talking about the upcoming Aggie vs Longhorn game. All he could talk about was the Aggies’ undefeated season and how they looked unstoppable. I told him to bet the farm on the Longhorns because everything was setting up to be a typical Aggie letdown. It’s just in their DNA. They still haven’t been to an SEC Championship game, and Texas made it in their first year. However, Texas has to call Georgia “Daddy” because they can’t get past that powerhouse.

As for if Texas should get into the playoffs, I find arguments on both sides completely valid. I’m torn, though my heart leans a tad more one way than the other. While the Longhorns may feel great beating both the Sooners and Aggies by double digits, it would be strange for them to make the playoffs and Texas be sidelined. They have proven they are the better team.


Talk about a bad Thanksgiving.

College freshman deported flying home to Texas for Thanksgiving, despite court order

A college freshman trying to fly from Boston to Texas to surprise her family for Thanksgiving was instead deported to Honduras in violation of a court order, according to her attorney.

Any Lucia Lopez Belloza, 19, had already passed through security at Boston Logan International Airport on Nov. 20 when she was told there was an issue with her boarding pass, said attorney Todd Pomerleau. Immigration officials then detained the Babson College student and within two days, sent to Texas and then Honduras, the country she left at age 7.


Texas teen uses candle business to pay off school’s lunch debt


Rock Mistaken for a Gold Nugget for Years Turned Out to Be 4.6 Billion-Year-Old Meteorite


Yesterday, a CBS Sunday Morning segment began with a young woman who obtained her commercial driver’s license through a scholarship set up by the heavy metal band Metallica. It turns out, the lead singer’s father was a truck driver, and it was one way he wanted to give back. The rest of the segment focused on their foundation, which helps people attend trade schools, become laborers, and feed the hungry. It all started because they didn’t know what to do with all the leftover food after one of their concerts.


Bay Area teacher wrongly ID’d as convict, pulled from class due to last name ‘Smith’


Magician forgets password to his own hand after RFID chip implant


This video has some great aerial shots of the Baker Hotel in my hometown of Mineral Wells. It’s a bit slow, but you get a history and a bit of an idea of the progress of the restoration. It’s obviously narrated by AI.

@jonny.goodday

Beneath the Dust is the story of @thebakerhotelandspa in Mineral Wells, told from the inside. We walk the lobby, climb to the top, and trace how a spa town built a landmark, how it thrived, why it went quiet, and what it will take to bring it back. This is the past, the present, and the future of a Texas icon. If this story speaks to you, share it with someone who remembers the Baker or wants to see it come alive again. #bakerhotel #mineralwells #texashistory #historicpreservation #architecture #spanishrevival #abandonedplaces #documentary #jonnygoodday #texasfilm

♬ original sound – Jonny Goodday – Jonny Goodday

I’m sure I’m the only person interested in this video, and it’s only because my father worked in this building for over 20 years when the Palo Pinto Community Service Corporation called it home. At the time, the Catholic church owned it, and Dad told me that the church leased the building for one dollar a year to the non-profit, which I thought was cool.

@jonny.goodday

Nazareth Hospital: From Lifeline to Legend in Mineral Wells | A seven story brick landmark once delivered babies, fought polio, and sheltered the poor of Mineral Wells. Then modern medicine moved on, the lights went dark, and the legends took over, fires, basement wards, and the elusive Blue Nun. This film traces Nazareth Hospital’s full arc: hopeful 1930s origins, four decades of nonstop care, abrupt shutdown, brief haunted-house experiment, and its uncertain future as a protected, but padlocked, historic site. Stick around to the end of the film to hear a custom song I created with suno just for this story. Every lyric and note is drawn from the building’s century long pulse. Disclaimer: All interior footage was recorded during an authorized visit. Nazareth Hospital is private property, structurally unsafe, and secured against entry. Trespassing is illegal and dangerous, please respect posted warnings. Share the video if you think this slice of Texas history deserves fresh eyes. And if you’d like to fuel the next deep dive for just a buck, my Facebook page offers a $1/month subscriber option that keeps the camera rolling. Thanks for coming along.. plenty more untold Texas stories ahead. fyp urbex abandonedplaces hauntedtok texashistory mineralwells nazarethhospital ghoststories historytok urbanexploration

♬ original sound – Jonny Goodday – Jonny Goodday


 

Posted in Personal | Comments Off on Bag of Randomness
Monday, December 1, 2025

Bag of Randomness
Monday, November 24, 2025


I actually had a great week last week, one of the best I’ve had in a while. Last Monday, I posted about going to my friend’s church in Mineral Wells. Well, his daughter happened to be playing in a basketball tournament just a half hour away from my little dwelling, so I attended all four of her games on Thursday, Friday, and Saturday. The drive, getting out of the house, and rebuilding a friendship did wonders for me. I’m so proud of the man he grew into, and made sure to thank his wife for helping to get him there. On Friday, he mentioned his favorite treat my mother used to make, peanut butter Rice Krispies treats. I surprised him with a batch on Saturday morning. It’s been two decades since he’s had them, I hope they lived up to his memory.


The Cowboys sure were lucky with that win yesterday, and are playing with a bit of momentum. These Eagles fans probably aren’t taking the loss well.

In case you were wondering how close Camden, New Jersey, is to Philly, it’s just across the Delaware River. You know the river, Washington once crossed it on a very cold Christmas.

Cowboys quarterback Dak Prescott set the team record for career passing yards in Sunday’s 24-21 upset of the Eagles. He refused to celebrate the moment until the comeback was complete.


Talk about buried news. The Texas Rangers Baseball Club released a statement during the Cowboys game that they had made a trade.


I did a lot of research to make sure this wasn’t fake or some sort of AI.

I’m sure many of you are unaware that the Chinese have their own space station, and you can follow it on Twitter.


For billions of years, Earth has rotated in the same direction as the sun — but what if that direction were reversed?

Deserts would cover North America, arid sand dunes would replace expanses of the Amazon rainforest in South America, and lush, green landscapes would flourish from central Africa to the Middle East.

Yup, the Sahara would no longer be a desert.



A bit of a lost art.



Caroline Kennedy lost her father on November 22, 1963.

On November 22, 2025, Tatiana Schlossberg, her 35-year-old daughter, published a candid essay in The New Yorker about her battle with acute myeloid leukemia, which was discovered last year after she gave birth to her second child. She has less than a year to live.

Man, Caroline lost her father to an assassination, her brother to a plane crash, and will lose a daughter to cancer. That woman can give you a lesson on how to deal with grief and unexpected death.


It’s Thanksgiving week. Schools are not in session; thus, thankfully, there will be no school shootings this week.

This was a tough segment to watch.

Since the mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut, 13 years ago, more than 160 children have been killed in school shootings across the U.S. They’ve left behind devastated families, and friends, and empty bedrooms they once filled with life. For many parents, these rooms have become sanctuaries: a tangible link to a child they can still feel but no longer hold. Steve Hartman, a veteran CBS News correspondent, and Lou Bopp, a photographer, have spent the last seven years asking parents whose children have been killed for permission to take pictures of the empty rooms they’ve left behind. No easy task; they are, after all, portraits of a child who is no longer there.

Posted in Personal | Comments Off on Bag of Randomness
Monday, November 24, 2025

Bag of Randomness
Tuesday, November 18, 2025

Something BoyGeeding found in our refrigerator.


ESPN is being brutally honest with Dallas Mavericks fans.


Last weekend of the year for free guided nature walks at Dallas park

Did you know there’s a 15-acre park in the heart of Dallas?

The Laura W. Bush Native Texas Park is open for self-guided tours from sunrise to sunset. Master Naturalists will lead a free guided tour this Saturday at 10 am, weather permitting.


Ghost Jobs Exposed: The Companies Posting Fake Job Listings (With Proof)

  • On the flip side, Seattle has the lowest percentage of ghost jobs at 16.6%, followed by Boston at 18.7% and Dallas at the third-lowest rate.


According to Washington Post reporter, here’s a Navy ship update for the Caribbean as of yesterday:


China will dominate the world one day.


The Juris Doctor (JD) degree was first awarded by the University of Chicago in 1903 to replace the Bachelor of Laws (LL.B) degree. The change was promoted by the American Bar Association (ABA) starting in the early 1900s and gained momentum after World War II, when law schools became professional graduate-level programs, with most schools adopting the JD by the end of the 1960s to reflect its advanced, post-baccalaureate status.


Trump now wants to paint the ornate natural granite and slate Eisenhower Executive Office Building white.

 


MacKenzie Scott has donated more than $740 million to HBCUs this year. See list.

What Is MacKenzie Scott’s Net Worth? Inside Her Massive Fortune After Donating Over $19 Billion to CharitiesFollowing her 2019 divorce from Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos, MacKenzie Scott has donated billions to more than 2,000 organizations

Scott’s net worth is approximately $34 billion as of Nov. 17, 2025, per Forbes.


Man who cryogenically froze his wife faces backlash after finding new love years later


DMagazine Link

Posted in Personal | Comments Off on Bag of Randomness
Tuesday, November 18, 2025

Bag of Randomness
Monday, November 17, 2025


Anyone catch last night’s 112th CFL Grey Cup between the Saskatchewan Roughriders and the Montreal Alouettes? The score at the end of the first quarter was 7-1.

How do you score a single point in the CFL?

https://youtube.com/shorts/NbuAi7F6Lcs?si=Q_Eo1euLG1DgVRkk


Yesterday was one of the better days that I’ve had in a while. Since my church wasn’t having Sunday school, which is what I enjoy most about it, and was having a special chili-cookoff event instead, I thought I’d drive to Mineral Wells to hear a childhood friend preach at a church he’s served for about 25 years. Not to mention, the Cowboys weren’t playing. For the longest time, I told myself I would never step foot in a Baptist church again. I’m glad I’ve let go of much of that pride and bitterness and worked on my brokenness. But I still have protective boundaries.

The drive out there was great. In a way, it was a spiritual journey of sorts, especially when I started to see the “mountains” around Mineral Wells. I was able to stream and listen to CBS Sunday Morning and then found a great playlist. Interestingly, the YouTube Music playlist I set to random played a Jars of Clay song popular during my late teens, which added something as I approached his church.

I arrived four minutes before the service started and chose to sit in the far back. It’s hard to kill the backrow-Baptist in me. I like to try to support my friends in their endeavors, and I didn’t want to be a distraction. However, his wife saw me when I walked in. So during the first song, I saw him walking all around trying to find me. He gave me a big ‘ol bear hug and invited me to sit next to his family. But I told him my intent on being supportive and not a distraction, and I just wanted to sit back and be a fly on the wall.

I remember being there for his very first sermon as a college student in the tiny town of Albany, near Abilene. It’s been close to 20 years since I last heard him preach. I remember writing him a handwritten letter about how proud I was of him the last time I visited, and how far he’s progressed, and how little distractions like preteens walking past him to use the restroom fazed him. This time, it was much the same, minus any disruptions. He’s even more polished and almost a mirror of his father, who was our pastor. Again, I am incredibly proud of how he’s followed a calling and succeeded at it, with a lot of humbleness. So much nostalgia hit me that, at times, I thought I was a high school kid back at his dad’s church.

His church is doing a ministry very similar to one that my church is doing. On Tuesdays, my church will pay for the laundry and help at the local laundromat. What got my attention when I heard the ministry leader speak about it was how much it meant to her to “give people the dignity of having clean clothes.” Dignity. That really stood out, and I think overlooked.

At the end of the service and as the crowd thinned, I tried to slip out, but he playfully called me out. I’m not sure the exact words he used, but he introduced me to someone as his best friend or a childhood best friend. Dude, that touched me; it really pulled at my heartstrings. I’ve always wondered if someone considered me a best friend. It’s one of those things I was too scared to ask because I didn’t know if I could handle the truth. Also, when you get blindsided by a brutal divorce after 17 years of marriage, you find out that a lot of the things you thought you were certain of turned out not to be, and you’ve been nothing but placated or lied to. That stuff gets to you, and you start to question everyone’s sincerity because you don’t want to feel like a fool again or have the rug pulled out under you. Because you carry that hurt, and it’s hard to let go. So, to hear some unprompted validation of your worth to somebody means the world. Not to mention, he graduated and got married right around the time my father died. He was transitioning into this new phase of life, and I thought he wasn’t there for me when I was mourning the loss of my first parent at twenty-two. But let me tell you this, the way he supported me through my divorce and three spinal surgeries, he’s more than redeemed himself. Again, I’m so proud of the man he has become. I also made sure to let his wife know that I’m proud of the man she helped mold him into.

He and his wife drove me into town and paid for my lunch. We had a great time, sharing all sorts of stories. And, it was amusing to hear how one of their sons went on a date with the daughter of one of our closest friends and how he totally crashed and burned when he tried to hold her hand. Long lunches in which you can take your time and not feel rushed while talking are underrated.

The drive home was also great. There are times I miss driving. I got a chance to stop by and buy some childhood comfort food in Weatherford that my folks would always buy me as they drove back and forth to Fort Worth, shopping at Carswell AFB. I introduced it to my kids years ago and made sure to pick up some for them. So, my day ended with time with my daughter, surprising her with some of her favorite food, then picking up my son to spend the week with me.

Oh, then my son was in a talkative mood before bedtime. Teens don’t often open up to parents, so you have to take advantage of it when they are willing. One thing he shared was that he was thankful that I got him into “classic” cartoons like He-Man and Voltron.

Hopefully, I can finally land a job this week.


Jimmy Kimmel had a touching monologue eulogizing his childhood best friend and his show’s band leader. Of all the things that stood out was a reference he made to Miller’s Outpost. Man, I haven’t heard of a Miller’s Outpost reference in forever.

Whatever happened to them? The company was sold in 1980 and, in the late 1990s, changed its name to Anchor Blue to reflect its own clothing brand. Following the name change and poor sales, the company filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in June 2009 and closed its doors permanently in early 2011.


The Cowboys haven’t played on Sunday in NFL weeks 11, 12, or 13 (this week). As a matter of fact, of the eight games they have left, only four are on a Sunday.


It feels like I can’t escape Kristi Noem commercials on the radio or television.

Firm Tied to Kristi Noem Secretly Got Money From $220 Million DHS Ad Contracts

The company is run by the husband of Noem’s chief DHS spokesperson and has personal and business ties to Noem and her aides. DHS invoked the “emergency” at the border to skirt competitive bidding rules for the taxpayer-funded campaign.


For those looking for investment property in the UK, here you go.

Posted in Personal | Comments Off on Bag of Randomness
Monday, November 17, 2025