Life-condensed

Wow. Haven’t Heard That Sound in a While

Remember these?

Typing Away

For those of you too young to remember, these are typewriters.

I’ll say it slowly – type-wri-ters.

Kevin and I had to go to the IRS office the other day to pick up some forms to fill out for his boss’ tax information. Though Kevin didn’t have to type the information into the forms, he says it’s more professional, so he had to go up into the attic and pull down our electric typewriter.

I forgot we even had the thing. In fact, Kevin bought the typewriter specifically for this reason – to fill out tax forms. (He’s an accountant – explains a lot, doesn’t it).

I remember spending half my day at the college library typing up my papers, and then spending the last half of my day correcting my papers. lol Talk about an exhausting process!

Oh you young kids nowadays – you don’t know how good you’ve got it with these new-fangled word processing programs. πŸ˜€

Christmas song #9 Little Drummer Boy by Josh Grobin

Life-condensed

Be a Santa to a Senior

Kevin and I just returned from our weekly lunch (we go out to lunch every Wednesday – we’ve been doing this for a few years now), and we stopped by an area Harter House, (the one on Republic Rd and Fremont if you’re from the Springfield area), to buy some Sprite for the kids (their stomachs are still a bit tender). I was on my way out of the door when I spotted a Christmas tree with tags tied to it along with a huge sign that said, “Be a Santa to a Senior!” (http://beasantatoasenior.com/). It’s set up like the Salvation Army’s Angel Tree program for foster children – you pick a tag, buy a gift (I think the senior tags actually have gift ideas listed), then return the gift, along with the tag, to the store hosting the program.

Kevin and I always pick two children, a boy and a girl, (usually teenagers) from the Salvation Army’s tree every year, but this was the first time I had seen a tree set up for seniors.

Isn’t that a GREAT IDEA?!? People that fall through society’s cracks just break my heart – they are so alone and in some cases forgotten. Can you imagine not having a loved one to share Christmas with, or a gift to open on Christmas morning?? That’s just so SAD!!

At any rate, I just HAD to share this program with you all and I hope you will find it in your heart to get involved. If not with this program, then another program that blesses your community.

Vodpod videos no longer available.


Tis the season to give!

Christmas song #8 Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas by Martina McBride

Abundant Life

Audio Teaching: Role of Women in the Church Part Two

by Sue Carlson
Women have been excluded from teaching and leading in the Christian Church, historically and currently. I Timothy 2:11-15 has been used to support this stance. This teaching clarifies the meaning of these verses by exploring the Gnostic “myths” and “false doctrines,” against which Paul was warning Timothy. Also in the teaching are some highlights of noted women in the Bible, and studies of Hebrew and Greek words which have been “watered down” in translation when applied to women

Listen to part one here.

Click the arrow to listen.

Handout | Transcription | Related Topic

Check out Truth or Tradition teachings on:

Facebook
Twitter
MySpace
YouTube
iTunes
Amazon

Life-condensed

Were They Poisoned?

A bump woke me up at 5:00 this morning. It sounded like a body being slammed into a wall.

It was because a body HAD been slammed into the wall.

Then I heard it, the tell-tale sounds of a kid being sick.

*sigh*

I stumbled out of bed to go see what was going on with Jazz (because I had assumed it would be Jazz).

I walked out into the hallway and to my surprise, was met by Dude.

Dude is never sick. And I mean never.

Apparently, Dude was up at 3:00 a.m. emptying the contents of his stomach, and then up twice more.

In fact, Dude told me that he got up to vomit and Jazz was already using the toilet to empty his stomach so Dude had to use the trash can.

Poor boys.

I made them sit up and drink a little water and nibble on some toast this morning to see if they could keep it down and go to school. Dude looked a little green and ate very little. Jazz ate his toast and drank some water, but promptly threw it back up.

I told the boys to go back to bed, there would be no school today.

Now I’m trying to figure out what made them sick. We all ate ham and beans last night (well, I ate the ham, not the beans) and Kevin and I are fine. Well, not exactly. Kevin said he woke up nauseous last night but didn’t throw up. I’m fine. The ham was left over from Thanksgiving (we had frozen the left overs). Now we’re wondering if it was the ham.

But why didn’t I get sick?

It just dawned on me that the boys might have eaten cereal last night before bed. I wouldn’t know for sure because Kevin and I had already gone to bed when the boys shut their computers off and prepared for bed. They usually eat a bowl of cereal first and then take their showers. If they ate a bowl of cereal, I’m betting it was the milk.

Which I’ve already thrown out (the best by date was yesterday). I’ll have to ask them when they wake up. (They both fell back into bed after I told them they didn’t have to go to school).

I hate this. I hate that they’re sick and I don’t know why. (By the way, neither of them was running a fever). But I also hate them missing school, especially Dude. Dude hasn’t missed ONE day of high school – today will be the first. *sigh*

Oh well. These things can’t be helped. I just thank God our boys are as healthy as they are.

*Side note: The school administered flu vaccines yesterday, we decided against the vaccine for our boys – but I’d be curious to hear how many kids called in sick today from reactions. I heard a lot of kids had adverse reactions to the H1N1 vaccine last year. These are the kinds of things I wonder about.

Christmas song #7 Christmas Lullaby

ADDED December 8th: It’s been 24 hours since the kids puked their guts up and I still do not have any idea what made them sick. I questioned them about eating something before bed the night before last – Jazz ate some cereal, Dude didn’t eat anything. Hmm .. then I asked if maybe they shared some food with a friend at lunch on Monday – no. Hmm … If they had eaten something bad at lunch on Monday, they probably would have been sick at dinner Monday night. I don’t know, the only common denominator were the beans, which I didn’t eat. Can beans give you food poisoning? The culprit is still a mystery. They went to school today. Jazz was fine, once he got his headache under control. Dude … was borderline. He was running a 99.1 temp and felt a little queasy, but his headache was gone. I really think once he moves around (because laying around makes it so much worse sometimes), I think he’ll start to feel a little better. But I have my cell phone close, just in case. I HATE not knowing if I made the right decision! Aargh!

Politics

Taxing People Plus Extending Unemployment Equals a Weak Country

Warning! Political stuff.

Forgive me, but I read about this stuff, think about this stuff, see what others write about this stuff on Twitter and if I don’t write out my thoughts and feelings on these issues, I’m fairly certain my brain will explode all over your monitor.

If you don’t agree with me politically (I’m a moderate conservative [I’m pretty sure that’s an oxymoron]), then please skip this post. Thanks.

Bush Tax Cuts: let’s call it what it is, okay? Tax HIKES. Because if Congress allows these tax cuts to expire, then our taxes will GO UP. That means, LESS MONEY IN YOUR POCKET!

If the tax cuts are allowed to continue, it means .. nothing, basically. You will keep what you always keep and life will continue on as normal (or as normal as we can be in this country right now).

Considering that unemployment rose to 9.8 percent, marking the 19th consecutive month that our nation’s unemployment rate topped 9 percent, a post–World War II record, do you really think it’s wise to raise taxes on the few people who have jobs and are struggling to feed their families in order to pay for (now extended!) unemployment! How can anyone even consider putting more pressure on the American worker right now??

And may I ask WHY this administration is hell bent on starting a class war? What is up with this middle class versus upper class crap? What is up with forcing people who make over $250,000 a year to pay more taxes? I mean, it sounds good on the surface, and if they want to pay more taxes, then by all means, go for it, but why are we forcing them when they’re already paying out the nose as it is? Why are we punishing folks who make more money than we do? Has anyone ever stopped to consider that these people that make more money have worked their butts off to make that money? Who likely put in way more hours than we do, who rarely see their families because they’re busy making their companies stronger and who likely have WAY more stress than we do on a daily basis? Let’s stop and think about this a moment:

The wealthy create jobs. Have you ever gotten a job from a poor person? If the people who create jobs don’t feel safe to invest and grow their company, then they won’t. Which means, they will not hire new people.

Like it or not, they need those tax cuts extended so that they can plan for the future of their company, so they can make projections and budget, so they can safely determine whether they first need to hire and then how many in order to keep their companies running smoothly and prospering. Companies need to know that the government will not spring something on them in the future – they need economic stability in order to plan and grow.

It’s called security. And if you stop and think like a businessman for a moment, you can see why these tax cuts must remain in place for everyone.

Now, let’s assume the tax cuts remain for everyone – companies have their stability (at least, when it comes to taxes – regulations is a different monster). They feel like it’s safe to come out and invest, hire more people and grow.

There are now jobs. People get hired. They pay their taxes. More revenue spills into the government coffers, we bring down the debt (assuming the government stops with the asinine spending because that’s like pouring water into a strainer).

We can stop paying out the nose for unemployment because there are fewer people who are unemployed. Consumer spending also goes up because people have jobs, SECURITY, so they feel comfortable enough to start spending more than they’ve allowed for living expenses.

Companies make money. They hire more people. There are more tax payers …

Why is this so difficult for people to understand?? That’s how economics works, folks!

I find it really hard to believe that Obama is too dense to understand that. So what does that leave? He wants our country in chaos? He wants people dependent on the country? He wants to promote a womb-to-tomb mentality (which means he wants people dependent on the government from birth to death) thereby converting people into Democrat voters because in order for them to continue living the life their living now, they must vote Democrat, because Republicans are too hard hearted to care about them.

*sigh*

Listen. The lame stream media want you to think that Conservatives/Republicans don’t care about you because it suits their agenda. The FACT is, Conservatives/Republicans care about people MORE because their goal is to open up opportunities to allow people to pursue their dreams, to be successful, to be independently strong. If people choose not to take those opportunities, if they choose not to work very hard for what they want, then that is their choice.

BUT THEY HAVE A CHOICE.

Democrats only want to takes choices away. They are not interested in seeing people succeed, they are only interested in keeping people dependent. They disguise this objective by pretending to be compassionate.

Take unemployment for example. People can now be unemployed for 99 weeks before they are forced to find a job. The government (that’s US, the working stiffs who are working long hours and sacrificing family time in order to pay our bills AND TAXES) owns these people.

Granted, I GET IT. I KNOW UNEMPLOYMENT IS HIGH! As one friend on my Facebook account said, “It’s not about the numbers, it’s about the people.”

Of course it is. But at some point, WE HAVE TO LOOK AT THE NUMBERS!! How exactly can we support the growing number of people on unemployment if the number of working Americans is shrinking?? We can’t snap our fingers and make money appear. Money does not grow on trees and contrary to popular belief, you can’t just print money, it DEVALUES our currency so that foreign countries don’t want anything to do with us.

When exactly do we draw the line on unemployment? And can you honestly tell me that if people are given the choice of staying home with their families for 99 weeks or going out and getting a job, having to get up at 6:00 every morning, work their tail end off and come home exhausted they’re going to choose option B?

OF COURSE NOT! It’s human nature to want things handed to us. It’s human nature to want to take the easy road. If we keep extending unemployment, then no one will ever go out and get a job because WHY?? It’s so much easier to allow the government to care for them.

I am so sorry for people who are without a job right now. My heart hurts for them and their families. It’s tough to not know whether you will have enough money to eat dinner, or enough money to put gas in your car. I’ve been there. I UNDERSTAND.

But at what point do we say, ENOUGH.

I don’t want people to hurt. I don’t want people to go hungry. And I understand extending unemployment now, especially around the holidays, but we have to be realistic, folks. We can’t afford to support 9.8 percent of the population indefinitely (and that percentage will go up if our government doesn’t get their head out of the butts and DO something to support our economy).

That’s why it’s CRUCIAL to mold a business-friendly environment so they will feel safe to expand, to hire people. Then those new hires pay taxes and we can start working toward this MASSIVE debt we’ve accumulated over the last ten years.

Our country has reached a point we are going to have to start making some hard decisions. We HAVE to start cutting spending and we’re going to have get firm about what we cut. No one will like these cuts because we’ve all gotten so used to having these benefits. But our politicians have bankrupted us – WE DON’T HAVE A CHOICE.

I’ve already resigned myself to the fact that I will likely not receive social security benefits when I reach that age. There simply isn’t any money left to pay for it. So, Kevin and I are working hard NOW to plan for THEN.

If we want our country back on track, we’re ALL going to have to make some sacrifices. And that sounds like we have a choice. I’m afraid we don’t even have that luxury anymore.

If our politicians are serious about healing this country, they will make those hard choices. If they don’t, then I think it’s the American people’s responsibility to find someone who WILL.

Sorry to rant, but this stuff has been weighing heavily on my mind. And I must say, I feel better after having vented. It’s too bad no one ever listens to me. πŸ™‚

Book Corner

Book Review: The Hunger Games

The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins
Publisher: Scholastic Press; Reprint edition (July 3, 2010)
ISBN # 0439023521
384 pages
Author Website

My Grade: A-

Plot / Premise:

I’ve decided to copy and paste the plot summary from the below source. I always feel like I don’t do plot summaries justice and I’m only regurgitating what other people have said and … okay, fine. I’m lazy. I’d rather concentrate on character development and writing style.

From Barnes and Noble:

In the ruins of a place once known as North America lies the nation of Panem, a shining Capitol surrounded by twelve outlying districts. The Capitol is harsh and cruel and keeps the districts in line by forcing them all to send one boy and one girl between the ages of twelve and eighteen to participate in the annual Hunger Games, a fight to the death on live TV. Sixteen-year-old Katniss Everdeen, who lives alone with her mother and younger sister, regards it as a death sentence when she is forced to represent her district in the Games. But Katniss has been close to dead before-and survived.

Overall Thoughts

This book is awesome, gruesome and thought provoking, it’s also not for kids under 10, at least, in my opinion.

Seriously.

I will be the first to admit, this book is disturbing. It’s graphic without being off putting, but it sucks so much of your imagination that it’s very hard to put down.

In fact, Dude (my oldest son), and I read it at the same time. We had two bookmarks in the book for a while. He would read it at night before he went to sleep and I snuck in some reading time during the day while he was at school.

This was a first in our history – both reading the same book and both loving it. So in that respect alone, giving me something in common with my very quiet and withdrawn 18-year old son was worth the grade right there. So thank you, Ms. Collins, well done.

Moving on …

The Story

One of the reasons the story attracted my son’s attention was because of the premise: a post-apocalyptic world setting. He plays a lot of video games with that premise – characters that must do whatever it takes to survive in a world that has been destroyed by either man-made elements or natural disasters.

There have been many movies made with this premise and it continues to be a popular premise because it’s fascinating to watch normally mild-mannered, wouldn’t-hurt-a-fly sort of people suddenly turn into savages that kill without (seemingly) a second thought. It’s a true test of character and I think we’re all just a bit fascinated about how the survival instinct develops.

So when I told Dude about this book, I could immediately tell he was interested. And I must admit, so was I.

I don’t DO horror, but I DO enjoy a good thriller and that’s how I would sum this book up. The story is compelling and Collins does a really good job making the reader care about this tough-as-nails girl who was forced to grow up and take over her household by learning to hunt and feed them but also sprinkles in moments where Katniss reveals that she’s a typical 16-year old girl with insecurities and vanity issues.

In essence, I thought Katniss was a well-rounded character and I finished the book feeling like I knew her pretty well.

The story is about Katniss’ struggles to survive “the hunger games.” She’s forced to kill her peers in order to be allowed to go home. But the story opens with Katniss at home, with her mother and sister, and her adventures with her best friend, Gale, while they sneak out of their district into the woods to illegally hunt and bring home food so their families will not starve. I thought it was wise of Collins to begin the story here, as opposed to just beginning with her adventures in the games, as this gave the reader a sense of what this character was made up of. It set the foundation so the reader was prepared for that foundation to be shaken later.

Though the humane part of me was disturbed by the fact that she was forced to kill other people in order to survive, I was utterly fascinated that she was mentally capable of actually doing it. Katniss didn’t kill because she enjoyed it, she killed because that was the only way she would get back to her mom and sister, who she adored more than any other human being. She simply didn’t have a choice and Collins does a really nice job showing the reader that.

The underlining theme of this story was big government and what can happen when we allow our government to become all powerful. The people in this book were completely and totally dependent on their government to feed them and take care of them, and of course, they don’t do a very good job. People are starving, jobs are scarce or non-existent and it’s a very bleak and depressing world indeed. (I could totally go off topic and preach about the parallels in our world today, but I’ll spare you the agony).

The Hunger Games, which interestingly enough are treated as an annual festival complete with people dressing up in their finest clothes, though everyone dreads them and prays that their children are not the “lucky” ones to be drawn, is a program that keep people in check. They are designed to scare people into submission – an exercise in power – to discourage the people from taking a stand and overthrowing the government.

Collins’ writing was seamless, at least for me. It never felt jerky and it certainly didn’t jerk me out of the story. She did an excellent job of balancing description, action and conflict and was quite adept at the chapter cliffhangers (hence the reason I stayed up late one night to finish it). It’s precisely the kind of writing I admire and aspire to imitate in my own writing.

This story makes you think about the bigger picture … something I think is sorely lacking in our society today. Everyone is so focused on the short term fixes, but what about the long term repercussions? Our society could very well end up like the society in this story.

Think about it.

*Side Note: It never ceases to amaze me, the number of people who claim that an author plagiarized off another author. Sure, it happens occasionally, but I think most people don’t understand what plagiarism is. I found two comments on “The Hunger Games” reviews that I thought were worth printing here. To those people who like to cry plagiarism because ideas are similar, read on …

Plagiarism? Plagiarism is copying. It does NOT cover ideas, it covers the expression of the ideas. I haven’t read Battle Royale, but I read the Long Walk a few years ago, and the similarity to The Hunger Games is trivial, like claiming Melville “stole” Moby-Dick from the Bible, or Hemingway “stole” The Old Man and the Sea from Moby-Dick, or Collins “stole” the idea of bows and arrows from Robin Hood.


You can’t copyright an idea. If you could, Jane Yolen could have made a fortune suing J.K. Rowling for “ripping off” Wizard’s Hall to write Harry Potter. And L.J. Smith could have sued Stephenie Meyer for writing about teenage vampires who lust after human girls during class. And Shakespeare (if he were still around) could have sued Disney for stealing much of the plot of Hamlet for The Lion King…

P.S. I wish Dude would hurry up and finish “Catching Fire,” the second book in the trilogy; I want to read it!