#oak cliff

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happy saturday  I don’t know about the rest of the world, but I am just finishing up my classehappy saturday  I don’t know about the rest of the world, but I am just finishing up my classe

happy saturday 

I don’t know about the rest of the world, but I am just finishing up my classes and am heading into finals week. (which means I just took a bunch of tests just to get me to this point). This is the first day in a long time that I haven’t been rushing around, and I am so excited I have time to go to the gym for longer than a 30 minute study break. Yes, the gym was my only allotted time to get my head out of the books. 

The weather is beautiful, my dad gets in today from California, and I am sipping my latte. ohhh today is gonna be good

listening to//lusting over//craving


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BangBang - RayTboss feat Guapostarr(short version)


Pay Attention - This howz pose-too-b donE

#raytboss    #tripled    #trill game    #dallas texas    #hip-hop rap    #oak cliff    
Family legend has it that my great-grandmother, Rindia, gave her church a large insurance settlement

Family legend has it that my great-grandmother, Rindia, gave her church a large insurance settlement that her son S.E. received after being terribly injured in a car accident when he was only 17.

Afterward, my mom says, Rindia and S.E. were too poor to buy food or firewood. My mom remembers going with her mom, my granny, to their little house in Grand Prairie, on the outskirts of Dallas, to give them provisions long after Granny had divorced my mom’s father (another of Rindia’s sons), Robert.

Rindia and S.E. went to Bethel Temple in Oak Cliff. The church was or would soon become “the largest Assembly of God Church in America.” Although my grandfather evidently reviled the minister, Albert Ott, for taking the money, my mom says Rindia herself never complained.

Several years back, I found documentation of the accident in the Dallas Morning News archives. “Skull is crushed as truck is hit,” one story read.

Then, last year, I visited the Dallas Public Library and unearthed court documents showing that the full settlement, awarded on May 5, 1936, was $4400 (about $75,000 in today’s dollars). The court held on to the funds until May 12, when the lawyers received $1466, and the doctors received $934. Later that year, Rindia petitioned for distribution of the remaining $2000 (about $34,000 in today’s dollars), which must be what she gave to the church.


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