Opposed but not protesting

I am not in favor of SOPA or PIPA.

But I’m not “blacking out” bekahcubed in protest today.

I’m just busy.

The state is currently making demands on my professional life–such that I have little time to write.

Although, of course, I did take the time to write this, just so as not to give the impression that I’m “blacking out” as a social statement.

Not that I might not have made that social statement had I had the time to look into the topic in more depth.

:-)


Book Review: “Flora’s Very Windy Day” by Jeanne Birdsall

Flora rather wishes her little brother weren’t around–after all, he’s always messing up her projects and getting her in trouble.

When the wind almost blows her away, she tells it that it can’t get her since she’s wearing her super-special heavy-duty red boots. But Crispin, on the other hand… “You may notice that my little brother is wearing regular old purple boots.”

The wind takes Flora’s suggestion and blows Crispin away-and Flora kicks off her boots to join him. While flying through the sky, Flora and Crispin meet one thing after another. Each thing, whether a dragonfly or a rainbow or an eagle or the moon, asks if it can keep Crispin. It seems each could really use a little boy. Flora refuses each time “I’m sorry, but I can’t,” said Flora. “He’s my little brother and I’m taking him home.”

Each time, she hears the response “If the wind lets you.”

When Flora asks the wind why he wouldn’t let her take Crispin home, he responds that he thought she didn’t want Crispin around.

Flora realizes that maybe she does want Crispin around–and the wind kindly returns them both home.

This is a dear story about sibling relationships–sometimes hard, but ultimately worthwhile. Clearly, there’s a moral to this story–but it isn’t a moralizing tale. It’s just fun and real and wildly imaginative (all at the same time).


Reading My LibraryI’m still reading my way through the children’s picture book section of my no-longer-local library. For more comments on children’s books, see the rest of my Reading My Library posts or check out Carrie’s blog Reading My Library, which chronicles her and her children’s trip through the children’s section of their local library.


WiW: Dangerous Books

The narrator sums up his initial description of Don Quixote with these words:

“In short, our hidalgo was soon so absorbed in these books that his nights were spent reading from dusk till dawn, and his days from dawn till dusk, until the lack of sleep and excess of reading withered his brain, and he went mad. Everything he read in his books took possession of his imagination: enchantments, fights, battles, challenges, wounds, sweet nothings, love affairs, storms and impossible absurdities. The idea that this whole fabric of famous fabrications was real so established himself in his mind that no history in the world was truer for him.”
~Don Quixote, Part 1, Chapter 1

Don Quixote is a warning to book lovers, to fantasy immersers, to those prone to let their imagination run away with them.

“And so, by now quite insane, he conceived the strangest notion that ever took shape in a madman’s head, considering it desirable and necessary, both for the increase of his honour and for the common good, to become a knight errant, and to travel about the world with his armour and his arms and his horse in search of adventures, and to practice all those activities that he knew from his books were practiced by knights errant…
~Don Quixote, Part 1, Chapter 1

It puts me in mind of Anne of Green Gables, when Anne thoroughly scares herself with her imaginings of ghosts in the “haunted wood” (haunted woods are so romantic).

So enthralled they are with the beauty or the romance of the imaginary world, both Quixote and Anne make themselves ridiculous in the current world.

Quixote tilts at windmills and insists that monks are really bandits kidnapping a princess. Anne is truly terrified by the world of her own inventing.

Both led astray by a fiction not grounded in reality.

Does this mean all fiction is dangerous? Is imagination bad for us?

Certainly not.

But when fiction becomes more real than reality, we have missed the point.

Fiction can be a welcome escape from reality, yes–but truly good fiction consumed wisely is a means by which to better understand reality.

Escaping into a dream world can seem desirable (I certainly know I like it often enough)–but when the dream world seems more attractive than the real world, something has gone wrong.

In our imaginations, we have somehow forgotten the story currently being woven with our own lives–a true story more fantastic and romantic than even the most phantasmagorical fiction.

The true story is one of a brave knight slaying a terrible dragon, of a great sorcerer banishing the dark forest’s haunts, of a bridegroom seeking a bride. The true story is of a God seeking worshipers, a King establishing a kingdom, a Father making a match for His Beloved Son.

Every book that causes me to escape this reality is a dangerous book.


The Week in WordsDon’t forget to take a look at Barbara H’s meme “The Week in Words”, where bloggers collect quotes they’ve read throughout the week.


2012: Week 2

Daniel's Birthday CardRust-colored Cow
Daniel’s Birthday Card (49), Pictures of Cows (52)
  1. Remove It Looked Different on the Model by Laurie Notaro from my TBR list
  2. Wear my blue felt hat
  3. Teach Ezekiel
  4. Make Maple-Dijon Pork Tenderloin
  5. Have folks over for Sunday dinner
  6. Make Candied Acorn Squash Rings
  7. Play UNO (deep and dirty)
  8. Close out children’s picture books by Phil Bildner
  9. Close out children’s picture books by Jeanne Birdsall
The Little Miss and MeGrace in her show choir duds
The Little Miss and me (63), Grace after her show choir showcase (62)
  1. Close out children’s picture books by N. M. Bodecker
  2. Make Borax Crystal Snowflakes
  3. Cut paper snowflakes
  4. Send a birthday card to Daniel
  5. Make Savannah Red Rice
  6. “Poke” Joshua
  7. Take pictures of cows
  8. Make Ranch Popcorn
  9. Make Toffee Bars from Betty Crocker
  10. Listen to Straight Thinking Podcast #129-Thinking about Near-Death Experiences
Cream Colored HatTriple Braid Pocahantas
Patchwork Toes
Top Row: Cream Colored Hat (68), Triple Braided Pocahantas (67)
Bottom Row: Patchwork Toes (66)
  1. Listen to Straight Thinking Podcast #130-Atheist A.J. Ayer’s Near-Death Experience
  2. Listen to Straight Thinking Podcast #131-OKC bombing and Conspiracy Theories
  3. Listen to Straight Thinking Podcast #132-C.S. Lewis: Life and Conversion
  4. Listen to Straight Thinking Podcast #133-C.S. Lewis: Christian Apologist
  5. Listen to Straight Thinking Podcast #134-C.S. Lewis: Christian Writer
  6. Listen to Straight Thinking Podcast #135-C.S. Lewis: Strengths and Weaknesses
  7. Go to Grace’s Show Choir Showcase
  8. Take picture with the little Miss
  9. Write a Death and Dying Flashback
  10. Go to work Christmas Party
Reupholstered chairsCandied Orange Peel
Reupholstered chair (74), Candied Orange Peels (73)
  1. Paint Patchwork Toes
  2. Do hair in a Triple Braided Pocahontas
  3. Wear Cream Knit-Covered Hat
  4. Teach Daniel
  5. Have a white chocolate peach steamer
  6. “Work out” at a “gym”
  7. Make Roasted Red Pepper Hummus
  8. Make Candied Orange Peels
  9. Reupholster kitchen chairs
  10. Play “Just Dance”

Because I was unsuccessful in completing 77.4 projects before midnight last night (38.7 projects per week), I have determined to recalculate and see if I can figure out a way to still say I’m on track.

Considering the 2012 has 366 days, I should complete ~5.5 projects per day; which would mean 82.5 projects by midnight tonight.

Okay, not going to happen.

What if I calculate by months and say I’m halfway through one month? That way I’d have to complete 83.8 projects by noon tomorrow.

Also unlikely to happen.

Okay, so I’m probably going to have to use those 366 allowable “sleep” projects. But, eternal optimist that I am, I’m not willing to add them quite yet!


Flashback: Brushes with Death

Prompt #2: What was your first encounter with death? Was it a person or an animal? Did you have any rituals or otherwise “do” something with you grief? Or did you even understand what was going on?

My family didn’t keep pets so animal death didn’t really enter my equation–and my Grandpa Menter died before I can remember. So my first experience with death was when I was seven years old and my aunt delivered her daughter Melinda–stillborn.

I remember sitting at the kitchen table, crying and crying and crying. Of course, I’d never met Melinda, never had the opportunity to. But I grieved for her, for my aunt and uncle, for our family.

In my young grief, I’m not sure I was the best comforter, but I wrote my aunt a letter nonetheless. I wrote of my sorrow and grief-but I also told her I was praying that she would have another daughter, a daughter just like Melinda to fill the hole.

The funeral was just a blur for me. All I remember was being cold, standing outside in January.

My second really memorable experience of death came much later, when I was already in college and my Grandma Menter died.

She’d had Alzheimer’s for years and we’d had some forewarning of her decline as she moved from independent senior living to assisted living to an Alzheimer’s ward where she eventually went on hospice.

We’d visited her the weekend before, said what we knew would be our last goodbyes. She wasn’t eating or drinking at that point-she was clearly at the end.

The news came for sure on a Wednesday, over my lunch hour, right before my health aide class. I must have cried a little or something, because I ended up telling my instructors that she had died–and they encouraged me to go home. I pooh-poohed them, said nothing was to be gained by my going home. But I could only handle half of the class and ended up leaving before the three hours were up.

I’d expected to be ready, you see. I’d had plenty of time to settle into the idea that Grandma was dying. The Grandma I’d known as a child had left long ago, leaving a new Grandma more like a child than an elder.

But the preparations for the funeral brought me to the end of myself.

I couldn’t help. I couldn’t do anything. My parents and aunts and uncles were busily making arrangements and I could do nothing.

My siblings, all of whom had dealt with their grief long before Grandma died, went to a movie.

I felt helpless in my grief, guilty for not having done more when I could, angry that I couldn’t do anything now, even more angry that none of my siblings seemed to care.

I’d always been close to Grandma. I didn’t know it at the time, but Grandma attributed her decision to finally move to Lincoln (where her sons and their families were) to a conversation she’d had with the pre-teen me. Whatever I’d said had convinced her that yes, it was safest and best for her to be near us.

She’d started going blind before she moved, but we noticed the dementia progressing rapidly once she got to Lincoln. It got to the point we worried that she was eating properly. I went over to Grandma’s townhouse and cooked for her. She fell in the bathroom one day and I went over to help clean her up and make sure she was okay. While she was at the senior living townhouse, I was a caretaker and companion of sorts for her.

And then she went to assisted living. I didn’t visit her there, only saw her when we picked her up for church activities on Sundays and throughout the week. Anna and I picked her up for our home group, and laughed along with her while she shared her slightly rambling stories of childhood.

She wasn’t in assisted living long before she had to move further. We were blessed to have gotten a spot at a wonderful Alzheimer’s facility in town–wonderful for my Grandma and for the rest of the family, I know, but devastating for me in a way I didn’t realize until after she’d died.

You see, when Grandma went into the Alzheimer’s care facility, she ceased needing me, at least in my mind. I couldn’t do anything there for her. There were professionals there doing all the stuff I used to do–feeding her, helping her walk, pushing her wheelchair, helping her to the bathroom. I was helpless, so I withdrew.

I still saw her once a week when we picked her up for church and took her to dinner afterward, but our interaction was changed. She didn’t remember me by then, barely even remembered my dad. She knew he was important to her, but could only come up with “relative”, not “son”.

When she died and I could do nothing with the funeral, the weight of my helplessness in those last days fell upon me. I wept and wept and wept, blessed by the help of others, but feeling guilty at the same time.

I did nothing. I did nothing. I did nothing. My mind ran it over again and again. I left her before she died, left her in degrees. And now she was gone and I’d left her.

I still look back with sorrow on how I withdrew from Grandma once I could no longer help her. But I also see how God used my grief surrounding Grandma’s funeral to chip away at my self-reliance and make me realize my need for him and for the body of Christ.

In my grief over my helplessness and how I’d failed to do what I still could have done (be a companion), God reminded me of my utter helplessness in so many things. He reminded me of how I fall short of holiness. He reminded me that I need Him.


Flashback Prompt: Death and Dying

A dear friend of my late Grandma died this week.

Hazel was a faithful friend to my Grandma as my Grandma experienced the progression of Alzheimer’s.

Hazel was a wonderful woman, always full of joy and life, even in the midst of her own great pain.

And today Hazel walks on streets of gold, standing in the presence of the Almighty God. I’m rejoicing for her, set free from this body of sin and death–while all the while weeping for those of us left on earth, separated and still bound.

Tomorrow’s question:

What was your first encounter with death? Was it a person or an animal? Did you have any rituals or otherwise “do” something with you grief? Or did you even understand what was going on?


Thankful Thursday: A Securely Anchored Pole

Thankful Thursday bannerHave you ever had one of those weeks where you feel just a bit off?

Like a flag with only one corner attached to the halyard, leaving the rest to be twisted and tortured by every breath of wind.

It’s disconcerting on calm days, terrifying when the icy blasts of winter decide to let loose at last.

That’s why I’m thankful for a securely anchored pole.

This week I’m thankful…

…that God is omniscient
He sees everything coming–and is there before it arrives to usher it into the proper place.

…that God is omnipotent
He is strong enough to bear my every weakness.

…that God is omnipresent
He is there wherever I go.

…that God is loving
He desires my best–and my best is conforming me into the image of His Son.

…that God disciplines those He loves
He is willing to do whatever is necessary, regardless of the pain, to make me like Him.

…that God does not break a bruised reed
Because some days I feel like one.


When do I become an adult?

Just yesterday a nurse and I were reflecting on the passage of time, exclaiming that it was already the tenth of the month.

Even as I spoke, I knew how very adult I sounded, how old.

“Time flies” the nurse said, “and it flies faster the older you are.”

That was in way of warning.

When did I become an adult?

When am I going to become an adult?

Somehow I’ve managed to settle into those mundanities of adult life without attaining what I thought was the reality of adult life.

The letters behind my name say I’m an adult, a professional. I have a career. Doctors take me seriously when I write recommendations. They consult me. Sometimes they even give me order-writing privileges.

Do they know that I’m not an adult inside?

The class that’s under my care says I’m an adult. I’m a Sunday School teacher, a believer entrusted with second and third-grader’s minds and hearts.

Do they know that I’m not an adult inside?

Somehow I thought that being an adult would mean I’d have everything figured out–or at least that my questions would move on to a more theoretical plane since the practicals would become easy.

Somehow I thought that being an adult would mean I’d want to do the same thing day in and day out, and that I wouldn’t get bored. Somehow I thought I’d outgrow the hunger for novelty.

Somehow I thought that being an adult would mean it’d be easy to keep my room clean, to fold my laundry as soon as it comes out of the dryer, to do the dishes before they pile up beside the sink.

But somehow one side of adulthood has found me and the other eluded me.

It makes me wonder if “adult” is really all I made it out to be.

Maybe adulthood
doesn’t mean getting over the boredom. Maybe adults simply keep going despite the boredom.

Maybe adulthood doesn’t mean keeping the house in tip-top shape all the time. Maybe adults just keep on working towards order when everything gets out of control.

Maybe adulthood doesn’t mean knowing all the answers. Maybe it means continuing on even when you don’t have all the answers.

Maybe the emotional roller-coaster never will stop. Maybe adults just pop and Dramamine and get down to business despite it.

I don’t know.

When do I become an adult?


Book Shorts: Humour

I’ve read three books in the “humor” category (Dewey Decimal 817) in the past couple of weeks, and wanted to share my general impressions, but in short form (longer than Nightstand blurbs, shorter than full reviews). So here goes:

Stick to Drawing Comics, Monkey Brain! by Scott Adams

Dilbert is often funny, occasionally hilarious. So I figured I’d be doing just fine picking up a humor book by Dilbert cartoonist Scott Adams.

The introduction almost convinced me to put down the book–since Adams basically spent the whole thing saying how great he is. Despite his attempts at humility “To put all of this [bragging] into context, I remind you again that I fail miserably about ten times for every one success”, he comes off as an absolute prig.

But I trucked on through, hoping that the body would be better than the introduction.

It was–at least, it wasn’t Adams being a blowhard, so it was better than that. And it wasn’t as dirty as I expected after the introductions “Some readers will wonder why I couldn’t write a book without all the vulgarity that you will find here…”

No, the problem wasn’t the vulgarity or the arrogance. The problem was that it just wasn’t that funny. Sure, a couple of the sketches were funny enough to evoke a chuckle or a read-aloud–but that was maybe five out of the roughly 175 in the book.

I really would rather the author had NOT ignored the helpful advice: “Stick to Drawing Comics.”

It Looked Different on the Model by Laurie Notaro

I put this one on my TBR list after reading Sarah’s review. Then I rather forgot about it until my last library trip, where I saw it on one of the features rack.

As promised, Notaro’s “epic tales of impending shame and infamy” are everywoman’s stories, except on crack. Not that she actually does crack. Really, she’s pretty much a good girl, even if her Mom disagrees (although her mom had to concede that if Laurie isn’t normal, the gals at the “bad daughter retreat” are REALLY not normal.) It’s just that everything you or I imagine or experience, she experiences just a little bit more.

I’ve tried on clothes that I had a hard time getting off. Laurie’s ended up with a bloodied blouse after trying for hours to remove it in the dressing room. You’ve gotten forwarded horror story scams from your mother? Laurie’s gotten dozens–with follow-up phone calls. You’ve gotten stuck after telling your children (or someone else’s) horror stories about what might happen if they did thus or so? Laurie ends up buying her nephew an entirely new wardrobe after she convinces him that he just poisoned himself.

This was quite funny, although with caveats. As with much humor writing (and especially the memoirish sort, it seems), the politics lean left and the morals lax. Not that Laurie’s celebrating adultery or whatnot, but she does find having her nephew touch Babe the Great Blue Ox’s blue, er… netherparts… hilarious. So if that makes you uncomfortable, so might this.

The Dangerous Book for Dogs by Rex and Sparky (Joe Garden)

A parody of The Dangerous Book for Boys, this volume contains everything a young dog needs to know to experience “the greatest joys of canine existence”.

It has descriptions (and pictures) of all the best things to chase, historical sketches of famous dogs, instructions for removing humiliating costumes, and Q&A’s answering such vital questions as “Why can’t I drink from the water bowl in the bathroom?”

This is funny whether or not you’ve read The Dangerous Book for Boys, but even more funny if you’re a fan of that book (or it’s female counterparts The Daring Book for Girls and The Double Daring Book for Girls).

Overall, this is pretty clean, although it is written from a dog’s point of view, where cleaning ones genitals in public or humping a stranger’s leg are common activities, and where “bitch” is an appropriate term used to refer to females. Generally, though, these aren’t regarded as humorous to the dog, but are stated in a matter-of-fact way: “A common myth held among humans is that we enjoy sticking our snouts into their crotches. False. Who on earth would think this is a pleasant experience? No, the truth is that we sniff crotches because it makes owners wildly uncomfortable…The real payoff comes when the people your owner is speaking with begin to scroll through a laundry list of questions in their minds… [like] Is he keeping a sandwich in his crotch?

I certainly enjoyed this book, and think that most readers who enjoy humor writing (whether they like dogs or not) would enjoy it as well.