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My friends call me Ted. I was born in 1949 at Oklahoma City, OK. We lived there for a couple of years while my dad was serving in the Navy during the Korean War. My first sister, Karen Susan Dodson Litsey, was born in 1951.

I was raised in the Lake Highlands area of Dallas and I attended Victor H. Hexter Elementary School from 1st through 5th grades. Our family moved to Spring Valley Rd., Dallas, TX., in 1960. I went to the 6th grade, Jr. High and High School at schools in the Richardson School District, which included the area of far north Dallas where our family lived. I also attended the Oklahoma Military Academy for most of my high school junior year (1965-1966). My second sister, Karla Jean Dianne Dodson, was born in 1961.

I was a rebellious teenager and spent a lot of time in trouble. I liked to party and left home several times before I was 18. I attended El Centro College in Dallas, but dropped out after the 1st semester. I became a "hippie" and co-founded one of Dallas's very first "communes" located on Junius St. in 1968.

I was a lead singer and rhythm guitar player in several bands. I moved to San Francisco during the last of the hippie days and started writing my own songs. I moved back to Dallas and was playing solo when "discovered" by Kent Mathias from Elektra Records. He sponsored my audition in New York City where I met Jim Morrison of the rock group The Doors. As it happened, Elektra Records was acquired by Asylum Records and I came back to Dallas.

My son, Noman North Dodson was born in 1971. His mother was Deborah Jane Nichols whom I had dated during high school. We were divorced after about 3 years of common law marriage. I attended SMU and was enrolled in a special program where I majored in the newly established Multimedia Production. I then moved to Oklahoma City and started Ted's Flowers . We sold flowers on the street corners and from retail locations starting in 1973 until 1985.

I married my second wife, Pamela Sue Delaney in 1974 and we were divorced in 1979. I also owned several restaurants and bars in OKC including: The Hobbit House; The Rose; Razzle Dazzle; The Okie Smokehouse; and The 16th Street Deli. I became involved in theater and produced plays including Whistle Stop Goodbye and The Book of Joel. I founded a Psychedelic Rock band called The Apes of Wrath and recorded a vinyl record in 1982 by the same name.

In 1985, I sold my Oklahoma businesses and moved back to Dallas to attend El Centro College where I earned degrees in Computer Science and Information Technology. I then taught there for 50 semesters from 1987 until 2007 as an adjunct professor. While attending El Centro College, in 1985, I began working with my dad (James K. Dodson), helping to digitize his oil and gas industry database.

I married my third wife, Tommie Lou Nipper Hjort Dodson,  in Las Vegas Nevada. While working in our family business as an analyst, I helped develop the Mechanical Risk Index that is utilized to benchmark drilling performance by most of the oil industry's major operators. I helped market and sell our services to the petroleum industry, (in addition to helping design our database and programming the analytical applications). Our business was acquired by IHS in 2012, about the time our dad died, November 29, 2012.

I retired in 2015 after successful transfer of intellectual property from our company, Dodson Data Systems, to IHS. I went back to playing music and produced a CD/Digital Release in 2015 called "Something For Everybody".  My autobiography called "Theodore is Open" was published Octobrt 16, 2018.

Tommie and I have 13 grandchildren counting 8 of my 2 son's children and the the children 5 born of Tommie's 3 sons from her previous marriages. We raised Nichole Ann Hjort, daughter of Tommie's youngest son, Phillip, and we helped raise my son's and his first wife's daughter, Destiny (DD) Dodson.
My second son was unknown to me until we found each other in 2023 through a geneology website when our DNA matched. He was born in 1978.