I saw no pay phones in Yangon, the capital city of Myanmar. Very few cell phones, either. Instead, people can cheaply make or receive calls at street side tables such as this one on a crowded street in the Indian Quarter. To tell this story, I brought my 24mm wideangle lens within inches of the three soiled telephones, creating a foreground anchor layer that tells the story of hard and long use. I build my middle ground layer out of the paper and pen this woman uses to record her business activity and the tea she drinks to keep her going. In the background layer is the proprietor herself, passing the time between calls by studying. She brings her hand to her mouth nervously, no doubt wondering what I am doing there with my camera. A garbage dumpster fills half the image. She does not acknowledge its existence. Nor do her customers. It is life on the street in Old Rangoon, and the wideangle tells its story well.