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Tuesday, May 31, 2011
Comfort Zone
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Monday, May 30, 2011
Memorial Day 2011
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Friday, May 27, 2011
Check 50
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Just for fun, I decided to categorize my ramblings and thoughts over the last several months, amounting to 50 posts. This is what I found:
- Personal struggles - 11
- Observations - 9
- Book reviews - 16
- Anecdotes - 3
- Humor - 7
- Religion - 4
Thursday, May 26, 2011
Burnout
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Burnout can overtake us as well when our routine becomes rote and meaningless. When we can't remember why we are doing what we are doing. Activities and feelings that we were once passionate about only leave us numb and unsure. We devote significant time and energy and spirit to volunteering only to feel unappreciated, unimportant, and unnecessary. We kill ourselves year after year at work on project after project but none of it really matters and nobody else seems to give so much of themselves. We go to church on Sundays and spend time in our devotionals, and we try to transform how we live to become something that we weren't. All too often we are plagued by doubts and uncertainties and often miss what we have left behind.
But how do we proceed when we are struck down and afflicted? Burnout rocks us and steals our joy and our purpose. It can make us feel like we have wasted our precious resources of time, money, and mind. No deposit, no return. Staring at lines of regret across our faces. But withdrawal and closing in on ourselves is likely more destructive than anything else we could do. Going through the motions and continuing forward on the same worn path is also no way to live. But maybe there is something that we can take away from the season of burnout to balance out the ledger. Could it be that exploring our position, to appreciate who we are really volunteering for, who we honor when we work to the fullness of our abilities, and why we strive to live transformed lives even if we are not fully successful, might just help us to resettle attitudes and priorities, as well as to devise more personal answers to questions that rattle our minds? Only then can we appreciate that the fire from burnout might be present not to burn us to ashes, but to forge us into something stronger.
Wednesday, May 25, 2011
Graceling
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Graceling is a fantasy/adventure tale by author Kristin Cashore set in a land of seven kingdoms, each ruled by a king. Five of the kings are wicked and selfish, prone to border skirmishes and displays of power. However, two of the kingdoms, that of Leinid and Monsea, are ruled by kings with a reputation for fairness and strong leadership. Leinid is an island, well separated from the others, which affords its people distance from the mainland battles. Monsea is separated from the other lands by an unforgiving and brutal mountain range.
Among the people of these lands, who were united in days of long ago, exist a handful of misbreeds. Men and women, boys and girls who are born with extraordinary talents. They are called "gracelings", as they have been graced with superhuman abilities for sword fighting, swimming, archery, running, and a host of others talents. The gracelings are feared, shunned, misunderstood, and avoided by most of the people. The heroine of the story is a strong-willed teenager named Katsa, the niece of the Middlun king. She is graced with an unparalled ability for killing and combat. Her uncle uses her to settle disputes or extract quick and merciless revenge on his enemies. He keeps her and commands her as he would a savage dog, and this control keeps her down and in chains. However, as Katsa matures, she starts to come to grips with who she is and how her grace can help bring justice to the lands. She forms a secret Council with other sympathizers and they undertake missions of mercy. On one mission to rescue a kidnapped prince from Leinid, she meets a graced fighter named Po. There is an immediate spark between Po and Katsa that surprises her, as nobody has ever intringued her in that way before.
Ultimately the Middlun king pushes Katsa too far and she refuses to obey his barbaric and unscrupulous orders. As she must flee her kingdom, she decides to travel with Po, who we learn is also looking for the Leinid prince, who happens to be his grandfather. Po is the seventh son of the Leinid king. Katsa and Po set out on a quest to unravel the truth of the kidnapping. Their journey takes them to Monsea, where they must pass across the rugged mountain border. On the long and treacherous journey, Po and Katsa fall in love. The beautiful scenery is outshone only by the transformation we see in Katsa due to Po's love and gentleness. Slowly he helps Katsa to dispel the notion that she is a monster, and that she is so much more than her grace. He helps her to blossom into who she was meant to be. A harrowing tale takes place among this romance of a battle with the king of Monsea, who is actually truly wicked and cunning. They help to save the king's young daughter Bitterblue from murder by her own father's hand. This was a vivid and wonderful journey with well developed characters and scenes that filled the imagination and the spirit. Highly recommended.
Tuesday, May 24, 2011
Not About Me
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This simple yet profound verse of scripture sums up the central truth of the book It's Not About Me by preacher and author Max Lucado. It was really the title of this book that resonated with me when I came across it in the library the other day. This simple mantra, "It's not about me", has been an important aspect of my walk and my daily devotional time. It is a notion that is definitely not native to my operating system, and so, I struggle with personalizing it. I must revisit this lesson again and again and again, like a student who continually fails the same course time after time. I don't seem to get it or to fully absorb it. My body seems to continually reject this seed. Yet, it's not about me. It never has been and never will be. Though I may fight and scratch and claw to put myself at the top of the stack, eventually I hope to truly, madly, and deeply learn where I belong.
In this book from 2004, we find a very typical set of sermons from Lucado about some relevant truth and teaching regarding our place. This work is separated into two sections, one called "God Pondering" and the other called "God Promoting". The first section is to help us to understand who we are in relation to our Creator and why everything we do should focus on glorifying Him and lifting Him up. The second section gives us some practical advice on how to fulfill our mission here.
Nothing too deep in this book. Just straightforward and practical easy-listening preaching that is the hallmark of all of Lucado's works. Ahhh ...
Monday, May 23, 2011
The Old Ways
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I have noticed just over the past six months that many things that my daughter and I used to do together no longer hold any interest for her. For example, I used to sing to my daughter as she brushed her teeth or she used to love for me to read to her before bed. These activities were staples of our time together. There were also several games that we used to enjoy playing together. Now, she has outgrown these games of youth. Several times recently we have been playing one of our regular games or doing one of our regular activities, and I have had the sense that this would be the last time that we did this. I'm not exactly sure of what tips me off. Perhaps something about her attitude or her approach. These feelings definitely tug at my heart strings.
I had this feeling recently when my daughter and I were playing a game of sword fight that we have played for years. She has a magnet construction kit called "Magnetix". In our game, we would each take a metal pole and hang magnetic links from its end. We would then swing the poles at each other and try to take the magnetic links of the other. The game was over when one of us got all of the pieces or we got tired from laughing and carrying on. As I put the kit in her closet in the evening after I had tucked her in bed, I knew.
Friday, May 20, 2011
Marketing Ploy
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You may ask, "What could they possibly be up to?", to which I would say, "I'm glad you were astute enough and good-looking enough to ask." Well, I don't know for sure and can only wildly speculate. Actually, at this point, I feel compelled to wildly speculate. It's my calling, it's my gift. My initial guess was that the toy marketing gurus were hoping that the lonely housewives who watch daytime television would be put under a testosterone spell and sprint to their local Toys R Us and purchase all of this junk. However, it is much more likely that there is an important marketing demographic of Navy Seals and Army Rangers out there who are just an inane commercial away from spending their full military retirement on cheap plastic crap because they sense a kindred spirit with the tough guys they see on the tube. You might have other theories, but I can assure you that you could not be more wrong. Even though I am creeped out by these commercials, I am learning to live with them, after all, I feel it is important to support our troops.
Thursday, May 19, 2011
Leprechaun's Gold
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Here is my list of leprechaun's gold. I hope this spurs you to stop, be still for a moment, and hopefully start to learn to recognize what is right in front of you.
- Talking with my daughter as she swings in her hammock.
- A long lunch with a good friend.
- A lively and Spirit-filled Bible study group meeting.
- Making myself a nice dinner because I am worth it.
- Doing something for my daughter and having it recognized.
- Catching all the lights on the way home from work.
- Falling into a good book and losing myself for a few hours.
- Sharing a side-splitting, tears-in-your-eyes laugh with an old friend.
- Connecting personally with the message at church.
- Turning on the T.V. to unexpectedly find a favorite movie just as it begins.
Wednesday, May 18, 2011
Young Adult
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Over the past several years I have thoroughly enjoyed savoring my time with two YA series in particular. The first was the Hunger Games trilogy by Suzanne Collins that I read last year. The second was the 6-part Dreamhouse Kings series by Robert Liparulo that I just finished reading. Both had very original plots and made me really care about the characters and what happened to them. You know you are connecting with the story when you miss the people as you reach the end of the book. But if you press me for what is missing in a typical YA book, I can admit they are missing any unnecessary foul language and gratuitous sex. But, you know, that's O.K. with me.
Tuesday, May 17, 2011
No Time
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Through the years you grew and developed into who you are. Many things you learned from me, but many were also hard-wired into your being. Kindness, caring for others, laughter, silliness, and determination. From your first day of preschool through kindergarten, elementary school, and middle school. We have been through so much together, so many firsts. As much as I cared for you and looked out for you along the way, it feels like you have done so much more for me. At each stage I kept thinking that we had all the time in the world.
Today so many things have changed or stopped, so many lasts. From dependence to independence. Revolution and evolution. Over the period of what seems like just a few short months, so many of the little girl ways have been put away. Brushing teeth as I sang to you, reading together before bed time, screaming out whenever the clock read 7:11, going about town on our adventures, making me close the soap container, and caring for your zoo of stuffed animals. It has all flashed before my eyes so quickly. I always thought that we would have more time together.
Monday, May 16, 2011
Gardening at Night
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Now the previous scenario is one that I made up to make a point. Why do we oftentimes do really stupid, short-sighted things in a moment of haste that we would never dream of doing in our right minds? In fact, how many times have you done something really boneheaded and had it go awry? It is only when you sit back later after having regained your composure that you realize that if you had seen someone else doing what you did, you would ridicule them for being an idiot. But what if they kept repeating the same idiocy over and over again?
Case in point. The other evening past sundown, as I sat on my couch reading, I could swear I heard one of my neighbors start up a lawn mower. I kind of shook my head and was curious enough to investigate. Sure enough the man who owned the property on the other side of my back fence was out mowing his lawn. He had his back porch light on, but it was a feeble source and left nearly his entire yard constricted in blackness. Two minutes later he ran over something and the mower shuddered to a halt. I then heard a string of cussing that would have made Popeye blush. You would have thought that at that moment he would have ceased his risky activity. Yet not even ten minutes later he was at it again. Bang. Same result. More cussing and fussing. Again. Bang. Same thing. More cussing and outright screaming. I thought to myself, how many times would this man continue in his idiocy? Well after the last round of yelping and carrying on came to a close, I did not hear him or his mower again that night. Whether it was because he came to his senses or he finally destroyed his mower is unclear.
Friday, May 13, 2011
Blue Like Jazz
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As for me, there was a time I did a walk-through of the Kunsthistorisches museum in Austria by myself in under 30 minutes. Dry, musty, old. On my way out the door, I happened upon a friend who asked for some company to tour the museum. Many hours later we were asked to leave because it was closing time. Without the light of my friend, my eyes would have remained closed to a world of beauty and technique and grandeur. I would have taken nothing away from that afternoon. Yeah, I understand what Miller is saying. I get it, in a very personal way.
Blue Like Jazz is the second book by Miller, and was published in 2003. It is the story of Miller's own life as he moves in fits and starts toward finding a way to define his spirituality. It includes a series of stories, essays, and reflections of his life during his college years that detail his growing understanding of what a Christian is and is not, and how to live life as a Christ follower. The subtitle of the book is "Non-religious Thoughts on Christian Spirituality", yet that, in my opinion, is a bit of a misnomer. This subtitle really is used because Miller was seeking out an authentic relationship with God and Jesus, the sort that is completely removed from pretense and pretending. It is not the kind that is built on the ramblings of a mega-preacher, the finger pointing and rule making of the Pharisees, or the polite Christian-lite banter overheard in the church foyer before and after the Sunday service. Miller asked questions that I would like to think all Christians ask before devoting themselves to this path. His style is honest, straightforward, and filled with innocence and humor that most will appreciate and understand.
But like listening to jazz, had he tried to find his way alone, he might have walked away, without a taste for the medium. It was only in his experiences with other people did he learn to love it for himself, did he learn the language and music of his soul. This book was written with a very unique and personal voice that spoke intimately to me. At times I almost felt like Miller and I were sharing stories over coffee, and I was given my own nickname and was part of his circle. An absolutely wonderful book that I highly recommend. I look forward to reading his other works.
Thursday, May 12, 2011
House Matters
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- I am pretty sure that my vacuum cleaner will never die from overuse.
- I can make a single bottle of bathroom cleaner easily last for 5 years.
- That cobweb floating from the molding by the front door will likely remain there until I move.
- I am quite proficient at dusting using the palm of my hand, and no, there is no need to move the knick-knacks out of the way.
- I have linoleum and tile floors in several rooms, but I don't own a mop. I can live with this situation.
- I could not imagine changing my bed sheets every week.
- Is once every other month (or so) a reasonable time period between vacuuming?
- You can learn to live quite easily with a bit of mildew in the shower.
- I have a carpet shampooer machine. It seems to prefer to remain in the closet.
- Home repair is for the weak minded. Neglect is strength.
Wednesday, May 11, 2011
A+ America 5
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Tuesday, May 10, 2011
Frenzy
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In this last installment of the series, the family chooses to jump through a portal to escape a murderous plan by the assassin. In a cool and telling moment, they land in Jerusalem and encounter Jesus carrying the cross that he would be nailed to later that afternoon. This moment is fitting because we have been learning throughout this series that the portals exist to take the gatekeepers back in history to where man's biggest mistakes were made. In essence, they exist to allow the gatekeepers to prevent where mankind went astray. Certainly the death of Jesus is the biggest such moment, and it is fitting that this is where they ultimately reunite with their mother and return home. Once home, their peace and joy are short lived as they must have one final battle with the assassin and his ogre. Through some clever thinking and strategy they lay a trap that leads to the antagonists being returned to their time without any direct path back to the present. The story ends with the family finally embracing their destiny as gatekeepers.
In an interview at the end of Frenzy, author Robert Liparulo tells us that he didn't want every aspect of the story to be wrapped up in a neat package. He didn't want the King family to kill the assassin, as this would make them too much like him. He also didn't want them to solve the problem with the coming apocalyptic end to the world engineered by the assassin. He wanted to end the series conveying to the reader that they had the skill, talent, ability, and will to change the past to positively affect the future. For now, that is enough. Have we seen the end of the King family? Likely not.
Monday, May 9, 2011
Whirlwind
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The King boys ultimately gain a deeper appreciation that their being brought to this house at this point in time is not just due to a decision by their father to search for his kidnapped mother. It is not just about the present search for their own mother. It is not some thrill ride to see how close to death they can actually position themselves and still escape. They begin to truly understand and embrace their legacy, their birthright, their destiny as gatekeepers. Not only are they to regulate who has access to the time portals, but they are to use them to correct the wrongs and mistakes of the past. The boys have already gotten a sense of this when they find out a girl they rescued from the Nazis went on to develop the vaccine for smallpox and when they saved the life of U.S. general Ulysses S. Grant. Their direct actions have resulted in the saving of several million lives!
Now the race is on to outwit the assassin and affect the past to avoid the bleak future that they have already witnessed in the trip to the future world. However, nothing ever seems to come easily and there is seemingly a heavy price to pay for every inch that they gain. As Whirlwind comes to a crescendo, the boys find out they have gone through a portal and ended up in Atlantis. They also learn that the assassin had his ogre henchman bring their mother there as a slave gift to the royalty in order to gain their favor. Now on to the conclusion of the Dreamhouse Kings series, "Frenzy".
Friday, May 6, 2011
In a Pit
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The title of this book is in reference to the man Benaiah who would ultimately become King David's military captain. However, before he got this opportunity he was proving his mettle and building his resumé by purposefully doing battle with a lion who fell into a pit on a snowy day. Of course most people would run from such a battle when assured of a very low probability of survival. Not Benaiah. He dove into that pit, took that chance, and gave God the opportunity to reveal His glory. Such is the message of this book. Lion chasers thrive in the toughest circumstances because they know that impossible odds set the stage for God's biggest miracles. Of course those of us in the majority who would run from such a challenge are robbing God of an opportunity to reveal Himself to us in a situation where success clearly and unequivocably could not be of our own doing.
I found that tackling this book in a different group leads to an altogether different type of discussion. Of course each group is different and the points raised and hashed out can be quite different indeed. I was at first a bit reluctant to read the book again and "waste" time within group on something that I had already been through. However, I was more than pleasantly surprised. Not only was I reminded of what a wonderful piece of writing this was by Batterson, but the group discussion was deep and fresh and uplifting and I very much looked forward to each and every week.
Thursday, May 5, 2011
Gaol
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I know this to be true of myself as well, and I understand how this lack of forgiveness leads to deep-seated regrets that I can't let go. In fact, it sometimes feels that it is not me holding onto them, it is them holding onto me. Hence the image of a prison cell that I chose to accompany this post, for unforgiveness truly is a prison of sorts. We are trapped by painful thoughts and feelings and regrets that never seem to end. It is a cramped, dank, and putrid confine of our own making within the boundaries of our mind.
Although I do not fully understand what I am about to claim, and I don't know what it means in practice, I recognize the truth of my own words. Living in a prison cell of our own design is not the way God intended us to live. Life doesn't have to be this way. You see, we are the warden. We have the key to our cells and the ability to open it up at any time we choose. In fact, nobody else in the world has this ability or this authority. Only us. Forgiveness is the key to open that door, and it is the only key that will fit into the lock and engage the tumblers. It is not the passage of time. It is not trying to forget the past or bury it away. It is not numbing the pain with alcohol or drugs.
Wednesday, May 4, 2011
Timescape
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During this time the King family learns that one, and only one, portal leads to the future. Upon visiting this time, they witness a bleak, post-apocalyptic world occupied by humanoid mutants. This timescape of future history is being shaped by the actions of the assassin via his purposeful manipulations of the past. Yet, we don't know what his aim is. What is he trying to accomplish? Ultimately the King children make sense of Jesse's clue. He has given them the directions to find the portal that takes them back to meet him as a child, where he is busy with his father and brother building the house of dark shadows. The book comes to a close on a powerful crescendo as the King boys, Xander and David, who are trying to infiltrate the layer of the assassin, are trapped by the very man they were trying to outmaneuver. It is only at this moment that they realize how overmatched they really are, outflanked by an evil master of the game.
At this point in the series, we have experienced the characters and lived with them through countless ordeals that began only a mere few days ago. However, the personalities, tendencies, and strengths of the King children have been well developed. Xander (15) is brave, self-reliant, rebellious, and headstrong. David (12) is courageous, cerebral, and caring. Toria (9) is strong, tenacious, and more reliant on others. We are still left trying to understand the father Ed King. He busies himself but without really getting anything done. His caution is at times frustrating. Yet we understand how much he loves his children. Now onto the fifth book in the series by Robert Liparulo, "Whirlwind".
Tuesday, May 3, 2011
Gatekeepers
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Throughout, the King children continue to match wits with the mysterious assassin who is bent on killing them. Although the doors to their house are locked, he seems to have ready access whenever he pleases. We also learn that he commands several of the ogres who come and go through the time portals to carry out his bidding. We know his aim is for evil, but we don't yet know what is going on. Just when things start to close in on the children so that they fear they will have to flee for their very lives, the sickly old man Jesse arrives on the scene with his traveling nurse, a former army ranger named Keal. Keal knows how to take care of himself when needed. Jesse and Keal are just the allies that are needed when things look the darkest.
Before this book ends we learn that the DNA of the King family is somehow tied to the house of dark shadows. Their destiny is to live in this house and protect it, to act as the gatekeepers. Yet they feel overmatched. Just when they think they have found their mother, it turns out their have found their grandmother who was dragged away over 30 years earlier. Clues to the whereabouts of their mother, the path that leads to her, have completely vanished. While they rejoice in the return of their dad from jail and the rescue of their grandmother, Jesse tells the Kings that not all of the portals lead to the past. There is one that takes them to the future. It is through this door that they will come to understand the full impact of what the assassin has done to the past, and what inky blackness his wickedness has wrought on the future of humanity. Now on to the fourth book in the series, "Timescape".
Monday, May 2, 2011
Fashion Rules
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In this line of thought, I would like to consider the world of fashion. There are folks from all corners of the globe who have shared their vision for the world and received a heaping wad of kudos. Hilfiger, Lauren, Dior, Armani, Chanel. Then there are these fruit wads who I have come across time and again out in full view of the public. They can be spotted in our grocery stores, our malls, and, heck, even our fast food establishments. These include people who:
- wear shorts on top of their sweat pants
- wear baseball caps at non-standard angles
- obese women who wear mid-rift tube tops
- obese men who wear mesh tank tops
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