Tuesday, January 29, 2008

News


When I was in third grade, everyone knew the Good News Bad News joke. It went something like this:

Here's a brief life update in "good news / bad news" format:
  • Good news - Our Crossroads Life Group is starting up again, after the winter break. It will be good to see our "empty nest" friends again, and share life together. Leader Steve Prout does an awesome job...

  • Bad news - Today marks the 11th day of my cold (sinus infection). Yesterday, I went to the doc and got a Z-Pack, which I started on last night. But instead of feeling better, I felt worse today than ever. Must have blown my nose well over 100 times today (TMI?). Anyhow, I want so badly to feel normal again...

  • Good news - This weekend, I'm going to SPBGMA (pronounced "spigma"). SPBGMA is a massive bluegrass event at the Nashville Hilton, and is one of the two biggest yearly events for pickers and grinners. Picture a huge hotel where the lobby, hallways, and rooms are packed with people jamming round the clock. There's also an auditorium where all the "big name" national bands are playing (all day), and a room with all the top-name luthiers and instrument builders. I went last year, and it was a blast. I just hope I am well by then...I'm praying for healing!!!

  • Bad news - Lots of car problems lately. New muffler for Zach's Accord, new front brakes for my truck, new thermostat for Cathy's CRV... But, it beats car payments! (Oh yeah, I still have one...bummer).
  • Good news - My bluegrass band, Last Road, may have found a replacement banjo player. We've been auditioning guys for the last month or so, and we're ready to get someone on board before we start up with spring gigs. Sounds like an easy task, but it is tough to find someone who is compatible musically, spiritually, and personality-wise...

Sunday, January 27, 2008

Proud


There are two kinds of pride...

The first is the bad one, the one the Bible speaks of so often, the one which creeps in as the most subtle of sins. You know, the self-centered self-focused kind of pride. The "look at me, I'm all that" type of pride. As Mirriam-Webster dictionary defines it, "an inordinate self-esteem." You know it when you see it.

The second is more benign -- it is the great feeling of well-being you get when you've done something well, or when you have accomplished something you never thought you could. It is the warmth you feel inside for a job well done, for being "best in class". It is the pride of a beaming parent.

Well, this weekend, I had two occasions to well up with pride - the good kind!

The first of these occurred Saturday morning. Cathy and I drove up to North Greenville University to watch our son Zach play in an ultimate frisbee tournament. His team, the NGU Ninja Geese, played seven or eight games Saturday in the chilly weather, and it was a lot of fun to watch. Good athleticism on display, as well as good sportsmanship. The Geese are really a class act.

As I watched the game, I realized I was proud of Zach for a number of reasons. I was proud that Zach had selected such a great Christian university to attend. I was proud that he is knocking the spots off his schoolwork, with all A's and B's (and straight A's last semester!). I was proud that he has surrounded himself with a great group of Christian buddies, the kind that make lifelong friends.

But I was particularly proud to see Zach acting in a leadership role, as captain of his ultimate team. He played this role well, finding the balance between challenging his teammates, encouraging them, pushing them to higher levels of performance, keeping his cool during tense moments, etc. It's hard to lead others and gain their respect, but I saw Zach doing just that, and boy did it make me proud. Zach, you're the MAN.

The second event took place exactly 24 hours later, on Sunday morning. This morning at church, David Walker was out of town, and our other son Brandon led worship at Crossroads. Not just led it, but really LED it. It was an awesome thing to watch.

As with Zach, Brandon has made me proud in so many ways over the past few years. I'm proud that Brandon graduated with good marks from North Greenville. I'm proud that he is a hard worker, working two jobs faithfully, day in and day out. I'm proud that he has worked and worked and worked to improve his musical skills, AND his spiritual walk, to the point where he leads worship as well as -- get this -- as well as Aaron Keyes and David Walker, who were his mentors. I'm proud to point out to people in the congregation, "That's my son, leading worship today." I'm proud that he trusted God to find him the perfect companion, and waited until the Lord brought him Megan. Brandon, you're the MAN too.

I realize of course that it's God (not me) who is working all things in our lives for His purposes... It is not my mastery of parenting skills that has brought Zach and Brandon to this point, oh no! I think we can all agree on that one, lol! It has been God working on them, shaping and molding them, building them into clay vessels for his use.

Is it wrong for me to feel such great pride as a parent? I don't think so. In today's world, with all the temptations and pitfalls out there, and with so many young people falling to them, I think I have every reason to be proud.

In fact, I'm sure of it.

God is good!

Friday, January 25, 2008

41



Woo-hoo! Today's my B-day! I'm 41 years young...

Today I was reading an article, and it had a suggestion I really liked. It said that once a year, on your birthday, you should make a list of things you are thankful for. The number of items on your list should equal the number of years old you are. It makes sense - the older you get, the more you have to be thankful for...

So here it goes: 41 things I am thankful for (not necessarily in order of importance!)
  1. My wife, Cathy
  2. Thick socks
  3. Heated blankets
  4. Our king-sized bed
  5. My dog, Rupert
  6. Running water
  7. Indoor heating & AC
  8. Clean towels
  9. Hoodies
  10. Wireless broadband
  11. Jesus' obedience to the Father
  12. The written Word, translated in modern English
  13. Men who put up vinyl siding (shout out to Zach!)
  14. My job at Michelin
  15. My office window (great view)
  16. Funny family stories (peanut butter, Community Cash, Zach & Betty, etc)
  17. Christmas
  18. Easter
  19. My siblings - David, Teresa, Angela
  20. iPods
  21. cell phones
  22. Music
  23. Children, in general
  24. My sons, Brandon and Zach
  25. My daughter-in-law, Megan (and Sarah too!)
  26. Heath bars
  27. Butterscotch haystacks
  28. My bluegrass band, Last Road
  29. Police officers
  30. My country
  31. The Constitution
  32. My extended family (Bob, Sherry, Fran, Steve, Mama, etc)
  33. Guitar Hero
  34. Family game nights
  35. Rupert's snaggle tooth
  36. Megan's apple pies
  37. My salvation
  38. My daily routine
  39. Good Christian role models
  40. Billy Graham
  41. Our 1911 house
Obviously, some of these are more important than others in the big scheme of things... But I have so much to be thankful for.

God is good!

Tuesday, January 22, 2008

Cold


Cold is an appropriate title for today's post.

Not only is it really cold outside...but I have come down with my twice-a-year cold.

Regular as clockwork, I seem to get an "upper respiratory infection" twice a year, once in the summer and once in the winter. Nothing too awful, just runny nose and sinus/chest congestion that lasts about ten days, no matter what medicines I take. And that awful energy-drained "blah" feeling.

This time, the "magic cure" was Mucinex. Someone at work told me it was the bomb, so I bought some ($10) and after seven hours, I'm not too impressed. In fact, I don't think it has done much at all. Oh well, live and learn.

As Brandon's post today stated so well, we take our good health for granted until the Lord removes it from us for a while. Our bad days should make us all the more thankful for the good days...

Well, the brain is tired too, so no deep thoughts for today. Stay healthy.

Monday, January 21, 2008

Anyone?


Today, a buddy emailed me a link to the trailer for a movie coming out this February...

The movie is called "Expelled", and it's a documentary-style movie which exposes the fear and loathing of the established scientific community toward anyone who would dare question Darwinistic evolution. This intriguing flick is the work of none other than Ben Stein.

Now, Ben Stein is one interesting character!

If you are familiar with the name, you probably know him from one of three main appearances:
  • He was the boring economics teacher in "Ferris Beuler's Day Off"... You know, "Beuler? Beuler? Anyone?"
  • He is the guy on the Murine Clear Eyes commercials..."dry eyes, red eyes, clear eyes..."
  • He had his own game show on Comedy Central a few years back, "Win Ben Stein's Money"
But in addition to being a popular actor and TV personality, check out some of the rest of his resume:
  • Graduated with honors from Columbia University with a degree in economics (1966)
  • Graduated as Valedictorian from Yale Law School, 1970
  • Speechwriter for Presidents Nixon and Ford
  • Professor of political science and law at American University, U Cal, Pepperdine University
  • Trial lawyer for the Federal Trade Commission
  • Author of 27 books (7 fiction, 20 nonfiction)
Basically, Ben Stein a pretty sharp cookie, intellectually!

Ben's latest passion is the Creationism vs. Darwinism debate. He is convinced, as I am, that the scientific establishment (i.e. most major universities, science journalists, etc) tries its best to squelch any opposition to its theories of neo-Darwinism and natural selection. Since this flies in the face of scientific method (which should encourage honest intellectual debate and challenges to existing theories), Ben has addressed it with this movie.

One interesting point made by Stein (who is Jewish) is the connection between the Holocaust and Darwinism. The Nazis took Darwinism to its ultimate end: "If we are just animals who are evolving toward a more perfect state, what is wrong with speeding up the process by eliminating the weak, the sick, the imperfect? Isn't it just part of the natural selection process?" This is sure to infuriate Darwinists, but it is a historical fact. For more info, see this and this.

Will this movie be as entertaining as Pirates of the Carribean 3? Probably not. But if you have bought into the theory of evolution, and are convinced it is fact because "all the scientist pretty much agree on it", then you might be challenged by hearing what Ben has to say...

Anyone?

Saturday, January 19, 2008

Change

There's a book that's popular in the corporate world called "Who Moved My Cheese?" The story tells about two mice with different attitudes, who react differently when someone moves their cheese to a new location within their maze.

One mouse is set in his ways, used to his daily habit, and inflexible. The other mouse likes a challenge, is optimistic and highly flexible. As expected, the former mouse doesn't even try and go look to see where his cheese has gone, but the latter mouse sets out immediately to find it (and does).

The point of the analogy? Everything changes, and if you get stuck in the past, or even in the present, the world will pass you by. We must be flexible and constantly expecting change.

This is certainly true in the work world. Typewriter salesmen aren't making much money these days due to the the rise of the personal computer. Blockbuster is declining, Netflix is on the rise. AOL was huge in the early 90's, but almost nobody uses AOL anymore. Land-line phones are going away, replaced by cell phones. The world is changing rapidly, and we must be flexible enough to change with it or be left behind...

There's another similar book I've been reading at work which has really fascinated me. The premise of this book goes something like this (hang with me here...).

In the 1800's, the Industrial Revolution gave rise to the "factory worker", who spent long hours doing repetitive blue-collar work making things in factories. The result of this hard labor was a higher standard of living for most folks, who could now buy a variety of well-made stuff much more cheaply (think 1906 Sears catalog).

Over time, America's prosperity brought about new change. After WWII, much of the grueling factory work was sent overseas, to be done more cheaply in Japan. This gave rise to the white-collar "knowledge worker". This worker did well on the SAT test, went to college, studied hard, and landed an office job applying what he had learned as an engineer, lawyer, doctor, etc. The folks that succeeded at this were good at left-brained thinking, i.e. logical reasoning, cause and effect, mathematics, etc. These thinkers further raised the standard of living in America to the incredible level we enjoy today.

This is the America I grew up in. But, the author claims, another big change is just around the bend.

We are already seeing that, like blue-collar work 50 years ago, white-collar jobs are now being sent to low-cost countries like India and China. Many large corporations, like the one I work for, are sending their computer programming work overseas, to be done by well-educated Indian programmers earning less than a tenth of their American counterparts. It will not be enough anymore to be able to think logically and deductively -- there are people in third-world countries now who can do the same for much cheaper. Not to mention computers, which are replacing many repetitive "thinking" jobs.

So what will the successful worker of the 21st century look like?

This author claims that it will be those people who can do what the 3rd world workers and computers can't do: dream, create, and invent. The best jobs of the future will belong to those who have been looked down on during most of our generation: the artists, the musicians, the writers, the creators.

The future belongs to the dreamers, who thanks to technology are no longer limited by thoughts of "but how would I do that?" For example, PC software will make it possible for the least technical of us to create movies, produce music videos, create your own animated cartoons, etc. The technical side will no longer be the problem; we will only be limited by our own imaginations, our own creativity.

Soooo... what is the point of all this?

Well, for me, it has re-awakened in me the importance of creativity, of exercising the right side of my brain. I have decided to take some steps to re-awaken some of the creativity in me, the stuff we all thrived at when we were kids. Last week, I wrote a song (lyrics and music) for my band to play, and hope to continue to improve songwriting. Today at Target I bought a little sketch book, to try and get back into doing some drawing and sketching (which I have really neglected over the past ten years).

And last but not least, I did a little redesign of this blog page (in case you hadn't noticed). The images in the header all represent some of the things that interest me... sort of a visual representation of some of the things that make me...me.

Are you creating? Dreaming? Thinking about what could be? I hope so!

Friday, January 18, 2008

Album



The CD Album Cover Game

After yesterday's fairly heavy post, I thought we needed something a little lighter...


“1. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:Random The first article title on the page is the name of your band.
2. http://www.quotationspage.com/random.php3 The last four words of the very last quote is the title of your album.
3. http://www.flickr.com/explore/interesting/7days/ The third picture, no matter what it is, will be your album cover.
4. Save and edit the album picture, add the band name and album name in the fonts of your choice, and upload the final product to the flickr group “CD Cover Meme”

Go ahead and try it, you know you want to.