Iāve lived in West Texas for most of my life, and Iāve grown tired of people who sneer and call it āthe armpit of Texas.ā You donāt have to love it like I doābut if youāre going to mock it, donāt be surprised when I take it personally.
My family moved from El Paso to Odessa on January 1, 1980. Dad came here to fly planes for oil companies. Aside from the missing El Paso mountains, Odessa felt similarāflat, hot, dry, and nearly treeless. Green grass? That was something you saw in magazines. And when it rained, youād stop and stare like you were witnessing a miracle. That horizon stretched out like foreverāwild, empty, and honest. It hooked me.
For a long time, in my youth, the word āOdessaā almost felt like a cuss word.
It tasted bitterālike something you didnāt want to admit out loud. But moving back and maturing changed that. I saw it for what it really is: grit, pride, characterā¦.a place unlike anywhere else.
Sure, weāve got oilfield traffic, dust storms that choke out the sun, and pumpjacks that dot the horizon. But this place holds something deeper than aesthetics. It holds home.
When we left the DFW area to return to Odessa so I could take the orchestra director position at Permian High School, people reacted with disbelief.
āYouāre leaving North Texas for⦠West Texas?ā
Like weād lost our mindsāor worse, our standards.
But what they didnāt get is this: West Texas isnāt for everyone.
Itās not easy.
Itās not polished.
But itās real.
Itās built on hard-working families.
Itās teachers, roughnecks, and student musicians who donāt need skyscrapers to feel tall. Itās Friday nights under the Ratliff lights. Sunrises and sunsets that set the sky on fire. And people who shake your hand and mean it.
No, itās not always prettyā¦.but itās ours.
I donāt love West Texas because itās perfectā
I love it because itās part of me.
Weāve got pumpjacks instead of pine trees, caliche roads, and skies that go from blue to brown in five minutes flat.
You definitely donāt move here for the view.
You stay because it makes you tougher.
And Iāll go to bat for her any day of the week.
So the next time someone calls the Permian Basin the āarmpit of Texas,ā
donāt be surprised if I take a step closer and ask them to say it againā
slower this time