All posts by: Caroline Castillo Crimm

About Caroline Castillo Crimm
Retired Professor Emeritus from Sam Houston State University, interested in writing novels and speaking about topics such as the history of Latin American. Would like to share the AMAZING world of the 18th century in Northern New Spain, that's Spanish Texas and Mexico!
June 3, 2018

This New Advertising Technology

I’m probably not telling you anything you don’t already know. But this new advertising has been a real eye-opener for me. Even Alfred G on CNET, (https://www.cnet.com/news/heres-how-quickly-facebook-re-built-its-profile-on-me/?ftag=CAD-03-10aaj8j) evidently a very techie guy, was amazed at how fast Facebook rebuilt his profile. I guess I am not the only one staggered by the new technology. Only […]

General
May 31, 2018

For Love of Gardening

I went over to my friend Pauline’s yesterday to take her a bottle of Concha y Toro Pinot Noir as a thank you for saving my life. Without her, I would probably have been eaten by vultures or wound up in our Forensic Studies Body Farm. I found her out watering her trees—with a stop […]

General
May 30, 2018

On Positive Thinking

  It seems one CAN get lost in the Limberlost. Several months back I went exploring on the 300-acre wooded property belonging to our university. It had at one time been a Works Progress Administration fish farm and still had large concrete ponds and canals to channel the water into and out of Harmon Creek. […]

General
May 28, 2018

Texas Trucks

There is a commercial on TV just now about the battering that trucks take in the course of their lives. Dents from bulls running into them, scratches from barbed wire, gouges from hitting fences. Of course, I should specify, these are ranch trucks. And we have one of those–a 1992 Dodge Ram with a big […]

General
May 27, 2018

On the Benefits of Service

As we honor our veterans, several of you mentioned the idea of serving our country during a “gap” year. The Israelis require it as do the Mormons. It is certainly a good idea since service in the military has declined after Vietnam. Very few of our legislators are veterans or understand their needs. Fortunately, there […]

General
May 26, 2018

On the Road Again

On a happier note, it’s summer time! The gas prices may be going through the roof, but that doesn’t mean we can’t find a way to get out on the open road, even if just for a few days. And not by car. There is always the Sunset Limited! A TRAIN! Yes, there are still […]

General
May 25, 2018

On Graduating

Graduation parties. Graduation cards. Graduation corsages. Graduation balloons. They’re everywhere! They’re everywhere! For many students this time of year is the culmination of years of hard work, whether high school or college. Some of our college grads will be going out into the “free” (as our local prison population calls it), to find real world, […]

General
May 24, 2018

Of Fairs and Festivals

The Square and Pop-ups–two inventions that have changed the world. Okay, perhaps not quite as important as sliced bread or the internal combustion engine, but certainly those two inventions have revolutionized the lives of vendors and fair-goers. It is true, admittedly, that technology had to reach a certain plateau before these inventions could even be […]

General
May 17, 2018

Mom and Mother’s Day

It’s the silence, the unending quiet that reminds us of our loss. Last week, in celebration of Mother’s Day, our church sent out cheerful, kindly invitations to a Mother-daughter luncheon. For the first time in my life, there was no one to go with me. It surprised me that I felt the loss so deeply. […]

General
May 14, 2018

On Genealogical Societies

Why spend hours on the Internet to find your ancestors? Last week, I sat down with a friend who is helping me complete my application for membership into the Daughters of the Republic of Texas. She was fascinated, and it wasn’t even her own family. Hunched over the keyboard, fingers flying, she scurried from site […]

General, Historical