HELLO
Mom to Iris. Wife to Todd. Our little family lives at the foothills of the Ozark Mountains in Fayetteville, Arkansas. We love it here and I love sharing little bits of our life.

© 2014 sarahfortune.

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Posts Tagged: midtown

We Like The Nightlife

Just got back from a three night
stay in Memphis.
We stayed up late
and were lazy all day.
Pretty stellar agenda
if you ask me.

Filled our time with
good friends.
watermelon.
40s (excuse me, 32s).
dive bars.
stupid sunglasses.
no sleep (not before 4 am anyway)
sweet tea vodka.
swimming pool.
fried food.
more beer.
the river.
the bo-keys.
bbq.
even more beer.
and dancing at wild bills.

Our cute little pit stop.

MEMPHIS

MEMPHIS

After being officially welcomed into Tennessee,
GLand I met up with old friends at
The Cove

MEMPHIS

MEMPHIS

MEMPHIS

MEMPHIS

MEMPHIS

Lil @bethykins

MEMPHIS

And good ole Cory Branan

MEMPHIS

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MEMPHIS

The Lamplighter

MEMPHIS

MEMPHIS

MEMPHIS

MEMPHIS

MEMPHIS

MEMPHIS

MEMPHIS

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MEMPHIS

MEMPHIS

MEMPHIS

I promise I’m not scaring this guy.
He asked me to use my camera.
Although, I’m pretty sure he thought it was a video camera
(despite the flashes).
Cause we got a pretty good song out of him.

MEMPHIS

The P&H

MEMPHIS

MEMPHIS

MEMPHIS

MEMPHIS

MEMPHIS

MEMPHIS

MEMPHIS

MEMPHIS

MEMPHIS

MEMPHIS

MEMPHIS

MEMPHIS

MEMPHIS

MEMPHIS

MEMPHIS

MEMPHIS

MEMPHIS

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MEMPHIS

40s & Watermelon.
The new Champagne & Cupcakes.

MEMPHIS

MEMPHIS

MEMPHIS

Girls dinner

Me and my BFF @kerrisnead

MEMPHIS

MEMPHIS

MEMPHIS

My other Memphis BFF, Brandy.

MEMPHIS

The talented Nina

MEMPHIS

…Who took this purty picture

MEMPHIS
©Nina Westervelt

The damage.

MEMPHIS

The legendary Wild Bill’s.
If you’ve never been,
you should.

Wish I had taken more photos,
but I don’t think I could have
captured it properly anyway.

MEMPHIS

MEMPHIS

MEMPHIS

Recovery the next day.
(with the help of sweet tea vodka + a new friend’s pool)

MEMPHIS

MEMPHIS

MEMPHIS

MEMPHIS

MEMPHIS

Last night in (mid)town.

MEMPHIS

MEMPHIS

Blues on the Bluff
Memphis music by the Mississippi River.

MEMPHIS

MEMPHIS

MEMPHIS

MEMPHIS

MEMPHIS

Goodbye breakfast
at Otherlands.

MEMPHIS

MEMPHIS

MEMPHIS

MEMPHIS

It was so great to spend
a bite of the summer
in my old town.
Now I’m back towards the Ozarks
worn the eff out.

Nineteen in Memphis

I didn’t fully appreciate my life at nineteen.
In Midtown. In Memphis.
Looking back, through a full decade
I can see the fun that was had.
Impressed I made it through
with very little damage.
Escaped with just a couple
etched black tattoos.
My proud little midtown scars.

Nineteen meant a duplex with
a best friend, instead of a mom.
Bike rides at midnight with
tall boys of beer
and boys of all kinds.

Lucero shows at the Hi-Tone.
Standing up front with
whiskey sours and sweaty girls.
Arms around each other,
swaying and singing like best friends forever.
For the night everything was perfect.
Tomorrow we’ll be back to talking shit.

So-called rock stars at the Deli
in town recording at Ardent or Easley.
From Kate Moss to Cooper Young.
Wondering what the hell they think
of no one thinking about them.

Working the opening shift
at Otherlands on Saturday mornings.
Half the staff still three-quarters drunk.
Slinging bagels, downing coffee and
Tom Petty sing-a-longs.
Word at the coffee grinder
was that you got extra tips
if you were extra mean.

Black and white checkered walkway
leading into the Map Room doors.
Bottled beer and no IDs.
Flaunting our fashion
without much thought at all.
Tank tops from A-Schwabs
before the words American and Apparel
ever sounded cool.
Silk screens on well worn t-shirts,
thrifted on Summer Ave.
And the ugliest shoes ever
bought from those coffee shop tips
at the Oak Court Mall.

Weekday afternoons
sifting through seven inches
at Last Chance Records.
Then thumbing through LPs
at Shangri-La.

Adventures to the old bridge,
draped over the Mississippi.
Everyone knew about the door
a little less than half way across.
A broken lock and a ladder leading down.
We’d wait till dark when
the scary climb was well worth the view.
Laying on our bellies,
head hanging over the side.
Nothing between our young faces
and the steel blocks of barges
gently pushing past the city lights.
We’d end the night running
to the Arkansas line and back
just to say we did.

Ten years later and I’m officially planted
on the other side of that bridge.
The view is just the same.
Lots of love,
but always a little better
when you’re looking back.

Old photos / Memphis skyline

Midtown

My last post got me thinking.
And missing.
My home city.
My home neighborhood
of Midtown
Memphis.

Memphis - Girl Trip!

I lived on 12 different streets
in my 20+ years there.
I got to know it well.
Midtowners tend to move a lot,
but never far.

Trading up
for hardwood floors
from just down the street.

Many move to Midtown,
but being raised there is something.
Something different.
For better or for worse…

I was addicted to coffee by the age of 10
thanks to the Seessel’s on Union Ave
who put their fresh brewed pots
by the free butter cookies.
With sprinkles.

Witnessed my first shooting
while I was in junior high.
Saw a drive-by
by the time I was in high school.
A woman shot a guy
in the butt.
At the Mapco on the corner of
Cooper & Central.

Speaking of school,
Mine was across the street from the
Memphis Zoo.
At the time it seemed normal to hear
monkeys while in class.

My parents were hippies
who played music at the P&H.
Tagging, dragging along
my six-year-old self stretched out in the booth
fighting sleep
staring up at the scary cartoon characatures
painted on the ceiling.

Fifteen years later,
I sat in the same booth.
Drinking beer.
Listening to my friends play
instead of my dad.
No need to fight sleep.
But still creeped out by the paintings above.

Discovered punk rock at age 15
with my best friend.
Too young, but together
we took flyers for shows
like they were golden tickets.
We’d get dropped off by our moms
outside of Barristers.
And just hang out
hoping there was a show.
Often there wasn’t.

Late night robberies.
Matched by late night runs to
Video Magic and Baskin Robbins.
There was a bullet hole in the glass
that always caught my eye
while I sat in my pink chair and
ate my sugar cone.

Piggly Wiggly parking lot.
And the graveyard ’round back.

Barefoot in the riverwalk on Mud Island.
Face painted with primary color balloons.
Stubbing little toes
on the ridges of the Mississippi replica.

Summer camp consisted of
the stage at Playhouse on the Square.
Instead of cabins and canoes.

Now-n-Laters for 10 cents
from the Barksdale 8 till Late supermarket.
Hard as a rock.

Saturday mornings spent
hiding in the record shelves at WEVL
while my mom did her storytelling radio show.
Only coming out to read PSAs
on air.

Pre-school mornings at Cooper Cottage
complete with field trips to the Midtown Mini-Mart.
Afternoons spent with my dad
at the Morris Garage by the train track
overpass on S. Barksdale.
Eating pork rinds
and drinking Coke out of glass bottles.

The cold smell of books
in the old library on Peabody.
The giant tree bench in the children’s section
kept me company after school.

There’s a dogwood tree
on Meda Street in Cooper Young.
My parents planted it there
when I was born.

There’s a parking lot
just a little further down.
Where a friend of mine was
shot and killed
years later.
While delivering pizza.

Little holes torn in the tarp of the tunnel
on the Libertyland Log Ride.
Letting way too much light in.
And letting the scariness out.
One year it caught fire
and it made the news.

In 6th grade I discovered I needed glasses
while at Lupe & Bees Mexican Restaurant.
Across the street from what would become
the Lucero Warehouse.
Of which, I saw a lot of.

Summer days at Overton Park.
40s bought by bums.
If you bought them one too.

Milkshakes at Wiles-Smith.
Grilled cheeses at Dinos.
Toothpicks at Hueys.
Homework over bad coffee at CKs.

Most of these memories have been replaced
by adult ones.
On the same streets,
in the same places.

Either way.
Midtown,
I am yours.
For better or for worse.

My grandma Dorothy
and grandfather Ransom
in Midtown.

Old Photos

(no. 2) Loving Memphis, Leaving Memphis

Number two of my top ten list of the 2000s (in no particular order).

In January of 2001, I packed all of my belongings in a Uhaul and drove towards Washington D.C. with my mom. She had moved there the previous year and I had finally decided to try living somewhere brand new. Up to that point I had lived my entire life in Midtown Memphis. The only people I knew in the DC area were my mom and new step-dad, but I quickly found a job at Urban Outfitters in Georgetown and even made a few new friends. I lived there for almost two years and spent the entire time busy. At one point I had three jobs and went to school full time at a local community college. I worked at a natural foods deli during lunch, at an after school program during the afternoon hours, and at another clothing store in Georgetown on the weekends. Whew! That makes me exhausted just thinking about it.

I certainly learned a lot about myself during my first move away from my hometown, but the most memorable part of it all was living there on September 11th. I had an early class that day and had already taken a seat at my desk. The professor came in and mentioned that “because of all the plane crashes, we’re going to have a short class today.” Someone raised their hand and asked what in the world he was talking about. He bluntly stated, “two planes crashed into the World Trade Center, one into the Pentagon, and another one in a field. There are still planes in flight, so they might hit elsewhere.” I was trying to comprehend what he had just said and what that meant for our area, but he just moved right along and began going over our class material.

As I tuned out whatever he was lecturing, my mind started reeling. The first thing I thought of was that my mom was working just a couple blocks from the White House. I wanted to get up and leave, but was frozen in my seat. Thankfully, he did let us go early and I set out on my journey home. Outside the classroom everyone was trying to figure out what was going on, where to go, and if their loved ones were okay. Cell phones weren’t working and the bus that I took home was over crowded with panicking people. I was one of the last people to squeeze into the bus and made it close to my home. During the final walk to my house, I kept my eyes peeled to the sky for fear that something else would come crashing down. There were still several planes zooming overhead, but they were clearly military jets. Still, very scary – if not scarier. It took a while for my mom to get home from downtown, but she and everyone else that I knew were safe. The next day school was closed, but the deli where I worked was open and serving free food and coffee to the National Guard, who lined the streets of D.C. From then on, everything just felt… different. My normal lunch hour on a park bench in front of the White House, turned into paranoid sessions of “what if” thoughts. My subway ride that always stopped at the Pentagon, just sped right through as I caught only glimpses of yellow police tape.

The following year I transferred to the University of Memphis and settled in again in my old Memphis neighborhood. It was good to be home, around my friends and familiar streets. It wasn’t until just couple years later than I packed my belongings in yet another Uhaul and headed west towards Fayetteville. I’ve been here ever since.

Pentagon smoking after 9/11

Pentagon smoking after 9/11

Where I worked at an afterschool program

Where I use to work. Thomas Circle.

Our old house

Our old house. Silver Spring, MD.

Dupont Circle. One of my fave neighborhoods.

Dupont Circle. Washington DC.

One of the best things about the area is that roadtrips are plentiful. This is me in front of Patsy Cline’s home in a nearby Virginia town.

Recently Found Photos

Just a few of the amazing shows I saw while living in D.C. (except for Elvis Costello. That amazing one was in Memphis.)

Old ticket stubs

And the main reason I moved back to Memphis…
I missed lazy, front porch days with my best friends.

Porch Days

Southern Girls Road Trip

Mississippi - Girl Trip!

I love a good road trip with girl friends. This past summer myself and three other friends hit the road and headed east towards my hometown, Memphis, Tennessee. Once we arrived at my mom’s house, we ordered take out from my favorite Vietnamese restaurant and visited with my favorite girls (and their babies) from M town.

Girl Trip!

Memphis - Girl Trip!

Memphis - Girl Trip!

Memphis - Girl Trip!

Memphis - Girl Trip!

Memphis - Girl Trip!

We spent the rest of our time in Memphis exploring thrift stores, visiting the Stax Museum, eating tons of delicious food, walking down Beale Street, and getting overdressed to go out to the local bars.

Memphis - Girl Trip!

Memphis - Girl Trip!

Memphis - Girl Trip!

Memphis - Girl Trip!

My mom trying to use my camera. HAH!

Memphis - Girl Trip!

Memphis - Girl Trip!

Memphis - Girl Trip!

Memphis - Girl Trip!

Memphis - Girl Trip!

Memphis - Girl Trip!

Memphis - Girl Trip!

Memphis - Girl Trip!

Memphis - Girl Trip!

Even with all that fun, my favorite part of the trip was heading down to Oxford, Mississippi for a spell. My dear friend Erin lives in an amazing 100 year house down the road in the tiny, yet oh so cute, town of Water Valley. We spent an afternoon in Oxford and then danced the night away at the only bar in Water Valley. We had to enter through an unmarked backdoor – no signs or anything. Turns out liquor sales aren’t very popular in this little southern town.

Outside of Erin’s house

Water Valley, MS - Girl Trip!

Oxford town square

Oxford, MS - Girl Trip!

B is for Brandy. S is for Sarah.

Oxford, MS - Girl Trip!

Window shopping on the square

Oxford, MS - Girl Trip!

Afternoon drinks at City Grocery

Oxford, MS - Girl Trip!

Oxford, MS - Girl Trip!

Erin with Penny

Oxford, MS - Girl Trip!

Tears at William Faulkner’s grave

Oxford, MS - Girl Trip!

How many Arkansas girls can you fit in a Mississippi phone booth?

Oxford, MS - Girl Trip!

Playing dress up in a toy store. Hillious moment of the trip was when Laura said, “Something is giving me a mustache.”

Oxford, MS - Girl Trip!

Cozy bar in Water Valley

Water Valley, MS - Girl Trip!

Water Valley, MS - Girl Trip!

The bar had awesome games.

Water Valley, MS - Girl Trip!

Water Valley, MS - Girl Trip!

Erin’s house

Water Valley, MS - Girl Trip!

Water Valley, MS - Girl Trip!

Water Valley, MS - Girl Trip!

On the drive back to Memphis from Oxford we passed a graveyard of bathtubs. We immediately made a U-turn and had an impromptu photo shoot.

Mississippi - Girl Trip!

Mississippi - Girl Trip!

Mississippi - Girl Trip!

It was a lovely summer trip. Lots of photos taken, with even more memories made. You can view the complete set of photos here.