Tag: Witness_Testimonies

  • Castle Rock, Gas Pumps, and the Art of Getting the Order Wrong (Until You Don’t)

    There are days when life in Castle Rock feels simple. Big sky. Dry air. A quiet rhythm to everything if you know where to look.

    And then there are gas pumps.

    If you know, you know.

    Two years after a stroke, I’ve learned something kind of unexpected: it’s not the big stuff that trips you up—it’s the tiny, invisible sequencing problems hiding inside everyday life. Give me a conversation, give me a long thought, give me meaning and memory and reflection—I’m good.

    But put me in front of a modern gas pump?

    Suddenly I’m in a four-step escape room designed by someone who hates me personally.

    Card in.

    Card out.

    Zip code.

    Select grade.

    Wait—no—don’t touch that yet.

    The machine changes its mind more than I do.

    The real issue isn’t the task. It’s the order. That invisible “what comes next” thread that used to run quietly in the background of everything… now occasionally tangles.

    So I do what works: I slow it down. I run a script.

    Card.

    Zip.

    Grade.

    Nozzle.

    Simple. Repeatable. Human-scale.

    And weirdly enough, that’s been the theme of a lot of life lately—breaking things down until they stop arguing back.

    Castle Rock is full of small tests like that

    Even the culture here has its own sequencing rules. First rule: if you’re going to call yourself local, you’d better know how to spell it.

    It’s Castle Rock. Two words. Always.

    Not “Castlerock.” Not “Castle rock.” Those are immediate tells. Like showing up to a job site with brand-new boots and no dirt on them. Technically fine… socially suspicious.

    And honestly, it’s funny how those little details matter here. Because this place is a mix of old Colorado rhythm and newer “did I move here last summer?” energy. You learn to spot the difference pretty quickly.

    The factory store economy of survival gear

    Then there’s the other Castle Rock institution: the outlet mall.

    It’s not really shopping here—it’s logistics.

    You don’t “browse” so much as you re-equip for reality.

    And one store in particular has earned its reputation: Columbia.

    That place isn’t about fashion. It’s about endurance.

    Jackets for wind that feels like it has a personal agenda. Layers for days when Colorado forgets what season it’s pretending to be. Gear that isn’t trying to impress anyone—it’s just trying to survive.

    It fits a certain mindset perfectly: buy it once, use it hard, keep it alive as long as physics allows.

    There’s a quiet pride in that. The kind of pride that shows up in a jacket that looks like it’s seen things… and is still refusing to retire.

    Everything becomes a system eventually

    The gas pump. The town spelling. The gear you wear. Even the errands you run.

    It all becomes sequencing.

    Step one. Step two. Step three.

    And when your brain doesn’t always trust the order anymore, you build your own version of the system. Slower. Clearer. Less automatic, more intentional.

    It’s not about fixing yourself. It’s about adapting the flow so life stops tripping over itself.

    Small wins still count

    Some days the win is big and obvious.

    Other days, it’s just:

    No mistakes at the gas pump.

    No frustration spike.

    No reset needed.

    Just clean execution of a tiny, ordinary task that used to feel like a moving target.

    And that’s enough.

    Actually—it’s more than enough. It’s how you stack stability back into place.

    One sequence at a time.

    Castle Rock

    CastleRock

    sequencing

    Stroke

    The Columbia Store

    Frustration spikes

  • THE FULL “I WANT TO BELIEVE” ROSWELL EXPERIENCE

    👽 1. International UFO Museum and Research Center

    This is your mothership.

    • Original reports of the Roswell Incident

    • Government cover-up theories

    • Witness testimonies

    • Newspaper clippings that’ll make you go “hold up…”

    👉 Pro move:

    Go in a little skeptical… and watch that slowly dissolve.

    👽 2. Alien Walk of Fame (right outside the museum)

    • Plaques for UFO researchers and “experts”

    • Feels like Hollywood… if Hollywood believed in abductions

    👉 Vibe check:

    You will absolutely take a picture here. Resistance is futile.

    👽 3. Alien Zone Area 51

    This is where things get… wonderfully unhinged.

    • Life-size alien scenes

    • “Captured human” photo ops

    • You can pose in cages like you’ve been abducted

    👉 My take:

    It’s ridiculous. It’s perfect. Lean in.

    👽 4. Roswell UFO Spacewalk

    Blacklight alien tunnel trip.

    • Glow-in-the-dark sci-fi walk-through

    • Feels like walking inside a low-budget but lovable alien movie

    👉 Expect:

    “What am I even looking at?” → followed by → “Okay this is actually awesome”

    👽 5. Galactic Gems

    Because every alien town needs crystals.

    • Meteorites

    • UFO-adjacent rocks

    • “Energy” stuff that may or may not realign your chakras

    👉 Even if you don’t believe:

    You’ll find something cool to hold onto.

    👽 6. Downtown Alien Hunt 🛸

    Main Street is basically an open-world alien game:

    • Alien streetlights

    • Murals of gray beings everywhere

    • Random statues watching you like 👀

    👉 Side quest:

    Count how many aliens you spot before you lose track (you will lose track).

    👽 7. Little A’Le’Inn (Roswell-style vibes, not local but iconic idea)

    Okay this one’s not in Roswell—but if you find anything similar locally, go.

    In Roswell instead try alien-themed menus:

    • “Galaxy burgers”

    • “Alien blood” drinks

    👉 Rule:

    If it has a bad pun, order it.

    🌌 NIGHT MODE: WHERE IT GETS REAL

    🌠 Desert sky outside Roswell

    This is where the joke stops feeling like a joke.

    • Zero light pollution

    • Massive sky

    • Dead quiet

    👉 Do this:

    Drive 10–20 minutes out of town.

    Sit. Look up. Don’t talk for a minute.

    Your brain will go:

    “…okay but what if?”

    🛸 Bonus: Make it weird yourself

    You seem like the kind of guy who’d appreciate this move:

    • Start a fake “sighting report” in your notes

    • Narrate it like it’s real

    • Add details as the night goes on

    By the end you’ll either:

    • Have a hilarious story

    • Or accidentally convince yourself something happened 😄

    🧠 Real talk

    Roswell works best when you:

    • Commit to the bit

    • Don’t overthink it

    • Let it be cheesy and mysterious at the same time

    It’s not about proof.

    It’s about the feeling of:

    “Something weird happened here… and nobody really knows what.”