March 20, 2011

  • Meditations on Marcus

    I borrowed this image from a fellow Xangan.  It wasn’t directly related to his entry but it got me to thinking about man’s duty and our expectations of God. Somehow we’ve begun to require from God a position and perspective we would never begin to entertain for ourselves.  

     

     

    On the surface, the above quote from Marcus Aurelius may sound like a pretty good perspective to have, maybe even a magnanimous one coming from such a great and powerful leader as the last Good Emperor. But I was immediately struck by the impracticality of this bit of wisdom.  I don’t think Marcus Aurelius showed the same degree of goodwill towards subjects who refused to recognize his own earthly authority though he was certainly one of the more reasonable Emperors. I doubt he tolerated desertion from his military officers or subversion from his subjects. In fact I’m quite certain he required a degree of devotion from his people. He even paid mercenaries to help defend against the barbarians who threatened the glory of the Roman Empire he so gladly ruled.

     

    It isn’t a position I fault him for. All leaders have at their disposal the power of the military for the purpose of defending a legitimate state and it’s citizenry.  Duty and even devotion can be noble qualities. They’re attributes most people expect from those they’ve been given charge over.    

     

     

    Whether it be bosses, Presidents or parents, people expect recognition and acknowledgment of their position of authority. An individual’s virtue means nothing to a boss when his employees refuse to listen to directives that will ultimately benefit the company. Judges expect their rulings to have weight and consequence. It’s a Parent’s desire that their children respect and honor them etc etc…. Emperors and Presidents don’t care for subversion even if it is shrouded in virtue. If duty and respect aren’t given, the working relationship is severed. It’s how we function in our society. Even on Xanga, where we’re all equals, we expect a certain degree of respect when exchanging our ideas and opinions. It’s a good expectation to have in many ways.

     

     

     

    So my question is:

     

    How is it that we think that a Creator God would be content with so much less than what we demand daily?

     

     

     

March 17, 2011

  • Happy Maewyn Succat’s Day!!

    *A Repost*  :)

     

     

     

    The following is a brief story about a famous Welshman named Maewyn Sucat, also known as Saint Patrick. 


This excerpt was taken directly from the book The Great Escape (40 faith-building lessons from history) by Christine Farenhorst. My kids love the stories in this book. ~And in particular the following story about the famous Welshman whose faith impacted history. 

If you have a moment this St. Patrick’s day, this short story is worth taking the time to share with your kids/grandkids. It gives a different perspective on the true meaning of this day. 



     

     

    Maewyn’s Vision

”Maewyn Sucat was born in Wales around the year 389. The Romans ruled Great Britain at this time, and Maewyn was proud of his nationality. His people built fine churches and sturdy houses. Calpurnius Sucat, Maewyn’s father, was a magistrate, a Roman official. He was also a deacon in the Christian church. Calpurnius and his wife taught Maewyn about God. But although Maewyn listened with his ears, his heart was stopped up. He had no need of the gospel. He led a sheltered existence. There were servants to obey him, plenty of food, a strong roof over his head, and fine clothes to wear.




     

    
Across the sea from England lay the country of Ireland. Ireland was ruled by a number of powerful men. Each man called himself a king and the most powerful of them all was king Niall. But even more powerful than the kings were the druid priests. With power to declare war and make peace, practicing divination and sorcery, these Druid priests often resorted to human sacrifice. When Maewyn was sixteen years old, King Niall, with the Druids encouragement, attacked England and took thousands of prisoners. Maewyn was one of these prisoners. Taken away from friends and family, he was sold into slavery to one of the rulers of Ireland. Suddenly there were no more servants to bring him his dinner; no fresh clothes were laid out for him in the morning, and the roof over his head was exchanged for the great outdoors. From heir to a rich house, Maewyn was demoted to the position of swineherd. 

Sometimes when luxuries are taken away from us, we begin to appreciate things more and more. So it was with Maewyn. Alone in a strange country, with plenty of time on his hands to think about why he had been pirated away from his home and friends, he found that the only comfort he had was in prayer. In his loneliness, Maewyn was thrown into the arms of God. He prayed much and such is the power of prayer that it made a child a man, and the man, a child of God.





     

     

    After he had lived in Ireland for six years, Maewyn had a vision in which he heard a voice saying to him, “Behold, a ship is ready for thee.” He got up, left the swine, and walked many miles to the sea. No one stopped him. Finding the ship, he secured a passage and was taken to an island off the southern coast of France. Here he entered a monastery and seriously began to study his bible.

When Maewyn, after an absence of nearly ten years, returned to the village where he had been born, his family was overjoyed to see him. For a while he was happy to be back, but one night he was given another dream. In it a man spoke to him and said, “Why dost thou loiter here in peace and happiness when there are men waiting in darkness for a message from God that thou shouldst carry to them? Arise and return to the land of thy captivity, for the people there need thee.”


     

     

    Maewyn was certain God was calling him to go back to Ireland. In the year 432 he was ordained as a missionary and renamed Patricius, or Patrick. He then sailed back to Ireland. He had eight fellow workers with him to face the enmity of the Druid Priests and to help him preach. He prayed much and earnestly.

Patrick thought that if the kings of Ireland would be converted to Christ, surely the tribe members would follow. At this time the high king of Ireland was a man named Laager. Legend has it that as Patrick spoke to Laager in the name of The Lord, the chief Druid continually mocked Patrick and his God. But as he mocked, a lightning bolt struck him down and stunned him while an earthquake rocked the countryside. Believing in Patrick’s God, many were converted, and Laager is reported to have said, “Thy God is great and wonderful. He has worked miracles for thee. Thou mayest indeed carry thy message to the people of my kingdom, and I will help thee as I may.”


     

    Although there were people who hated Patrick and tried to kill him, God protected him. His success was amazing. He traveled, preached, converted, and baptized. The King of Leinster, the King of Munster, and many others came to Christ until it was said that Ireland had more Christians per square mile than any other country. With God’s help, Patrick established monasteries and schools. The Irish tribes did not yet have a written language, but the gift of the Christian religion gave them the Latin alphabet. Gospel books Patrick carried with him became Irish treasures. Students spent their lives copying them, and Irish monasteries became the cradles of many who would later spread the Gospel throughout Europe.



     

     

    Happy St. Paddy’s Day!!

     

     

    But then also, don’t forget the Welsh….    :)

     

     

     

     

March 11, 2011

  • Elton John & The Wings :D

    Watched “27 Dresses” w/ the big kids last night. This ⬇ was a really funny scene. It reminded me of when I was about 7 and my sisters overheard me singing “To Live and Let Die”.

     

     

     

    Only I thought Mr. McCartney’s was saying, “The Liverman Died”.  

    Made sense to me. You know the Liverman, right?

    He’s like the milkman. Except he delivers the liver door to door in your neighborhood. 

     

    I will never live it down. My sisters still bring it up…. (usually when they’re introducing me to complete strangers).    :P

     

     

     

     

     

March 1, 2011

  • My First Grade “monster”

    It was one of those days I looked forward to with both excitement and dread. It was the day we were to get our “class” pictures back. In that day and age, I don’t remember going through a picture selection process before we received the typical portrait package of 8×10′s; 5×7′s and wallet photos, so naturally, I was curious to see how they turned out. I had no clue. In fact, all through my school years my youthful vanity would set me up for the inevitable disappointment on this day and I would muse, ”I thought I’d look better than that”     silly

     

     

            

    3 years old (?)                                                   4 years old (?)

     

    5 years old (I was the tallest in my class until 9th grade)

     

     

    But on this day 40 years ago, I was standing at the back of the classroom as the teacher called the children up one by one to receive their portraits. The envelope containing the pictures had a transparent cut out on the front so you could see the happy student smiling back through the plastic film. It seems to me that I was the 3rd or 4th student called. The first several kids were summoned unceremoniously to the front but as she came to my photo, my teacher paused to examine it. It was then her students seemed to freeze in unison. She was an unpredictable sort, though at this point in the school year there was one thing we had all come to count on, and that was careful consideration of anything by this woman never resulted in anything positive. 

     

     

     

    We waited for the insanity bomb to drop and she didn’t disappoint. After chuckling to herself, she held my picture up to the classroom for inspection and laughed derisively, “Have you ever seen a more ugly thing in your life??!!” I remember glancing over to my right and seeing one of my classmates standing with her mouth open; eyes wide and standing stalk still. As I looked around the room I noticed the entire room held the same posture. Nobody laughed. Nobody spoke. No one even flinched. Once again, they were stunned. I could almost hear them wondering to themselves, “Sure, we kids can be cruel, but what kind of adult ridicules children?”    Not normal ones.   After finishing a long critique of my photo, she called me to the front of the class. At this point, the evaluation of my picture had been made and as I walked back to my seat I looked down at the image staring back at me and I saw exactly what my teacher saw.  Ugliness.  

     

     

     

    Fortunately for the rest of my classmates she had vented her illness on me that morning and they were able to acquire their pictures in peace. Years later, the parents of children from her other classes found out that she had locked kids in the closet for “misbehaving”. I seriously doubt any of her students really misbehaved. She was just crazy. At any rate, this never happened to me. I was often berated for being ugly and stupid but she never did anything physical to me and I don’t recall her treating others in my class this way. No doubt, she had a model classroom. The woman knew how provoke the very best behavior from her students. I suspect she could have single handedly driven the mischief out of Huckleberry Finn and Tom Sawyer.  

     

             

    *My teacher was “Larsonesque” in appearance*

     

     

     

    My first grade year had a tremendous impact on my life. It was the kind of impact that wasn’t readily apparent but would manifest itself in the decisions I made later on in life.  Decisions I’m thankful about. For instance, it was my first Grade teacher that was the very breath of inspiration behind our decision to home school our children. In that way, she was a role model. Even now, she is a constant reminder of what NOT to be; how NOT to act; what NOT to do when teaching/raising children. It wasn’t until recently that I told my kids about this crazy tenured public school teacher who provoked my adolescent struggle with self image. Even after I had determined this lady was just plain nuts, there was still a certain shame in recalling these stories aloud. Perhaps part of me thought she might be right. Maybe I WAS ugly and stupid? ….. What if speaking these memories out loud should spark some suspicion in the minds of those who heard them. They might believe these things to be true too.

     

     

    Nonsense!

     

     

    Guess which one of these poor kids is me?   :P

     

    To this day though, I can still see her in my mind’s eye surveying the classroom with her high beehive hair and black cat eye glasses. The ill fitting, long suffering polyester pantsuit she wore was a favorite of hers. She forever wears it in my mind. The turquoise material did an adequate job of restraining her generous girth but the elastic waistband always seemed to strain at the task of containing her. 

     

    I even felt sorry for her pantsuit.   

     

    At any rate, it serves as an appropriate metaphor for the thin veil of sanity she wore to disguise her super-sized mental pathology. Once my mother and I were out shopping and happened to run into her. To my horror I realized she was the mother of a beautiful little baby. Even as a child I understood that a “mean” person could modulate their temper to suit their favorite people. But this woman wasn’t mean. She was mentally ill and untreated at that. I really feared for that child. To this day, I still wonder how she faired.

     

    But I didn’t tell my mom about her behavior and treatment of me. I was far too embarrassed to tell my Mom that I was ugly. Because in my childish mind, telling her that my 1st grade teacher said I was stupid and ugly meant revealing to her that I was stupid and ugly. Up to this point she appeared blissfully ignorant of these facts and I wanted her to remain that way.  winky  Nevertheless, my mother did find out she was nuts and I realized very young that it’s damn near impossible to conceal 100% pure fire crazy. Not that it did any good for the 1st graders that would continue to attend that school through the years. 

     

    It all happened the day of the parent teacher conference. All the students had off and the parents filed into the school with their kids throughout the day. My Mom and I showed up and I sat in the hall outside that horrible classroom. Never in my wildest dream did I think my teacher would have a psychotic break and unload on my mother who was a mental health professional herself.

     

    Well, she did.

     

    I don’t think the two were in there more than 15 minutes when my Mom whipped open the door and stormed passed me with a look of pure determination on her face. The Polyester Pantsuit followed closely behind her. My Mom was TICKED!!  You’d have to know my Mom to appreciate how unusual this was. My Mom is about the most even keeled, professional person you could ever possibly meet. Seeing this was quite disturbing to me because she very rarely was upset or angry. One thing I did know, she wasn’t mad at me. Something pretty outrageous must have been said to provoke that kind of reaction from my Mom. After they blew by, I peaked around the corner and saw the two of them head into the principals office.

     

    My Mom was taking my teacher to the principal’s office!    how cool was that? clueless

     

    As we drove home that afternoon, I questioned her about what had happened. She lied, “Nothing really, Beth Ann.”  I continued to press but information was NOT forthcoming. It wasn’t until I was an adult that she told me (minimally) what happened. 

     

    For whatever reason, my teacher felt it necessary to tell her that she thought I was stupid and that my mother was stupid as well. Hearing the details of the conversation years later was a relief in many ways. My mom is anything but an idiot. The woman graduated Summa Cum Laude from the University of Pa. for crying out loud. Having this bit of information helped to dispel much of my doubts about myself. I know that my Mom could not and should not have shared those details with me then. How could she? But I’m thankful she told me later.

     

    Unfortunately talking to the Principal that day proved unfruitful. He informed my mom that she wasn’t the first to complain. This lady was an on going problem and firing her would be next to impossible. In fact, it just wasn’t going to happen. I have no idea what happened to her after that. We moved from the area 2 years later. 

     

    As awful as that experience was, I really am grateful for the things it taught me. It has shaped me in positive ways and it certainly was not an accurate picture of my experience with public school teachers (thankfully). Most of them truly cared for their students. One of the biggest ways God has used this in my life is to help me reflect on where I derive my sense of worth and the worth of others. 

     

    But that’s a philosophical discussion for another time…..  

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

February 23, 2011

  • BD2 ~ My Premier Vlog

     Hey folks!

     

     

     

    This is short and sweet(?)   happy

     

    I’m going to see how well I like this medium. I have some ideas about where I might like to go with this. I’m not terribly comfortable with this right now (meaning I did a bunch of these). We’ll see if this changes. 

     

    Anyway, my dear Xanga friends, this is my introduction to the vlogosphere!!

     

     

    The video doesn’t seem to want to show up… Here’s the link

    http://bakersdozen2.xanga.com/videos/7dca41186136/

     

     


     

     

February 21, 2011

February 14, 2011

  • Photo Challenge Red

    I heart faces has a photo challenge featuring the color red. It’s to raise awareness of Cardiovascular disease.

    Here’s a link for those who are interested:

     

    http://www.iheartfaces.com/2007/11/i-heart-faces-photo-challenge-themes/

    Siobhan playing with Tom the Talking Cat.   silly

     

     

  • Only one thought this day.

    I’d like to wish him a “Happy Birthday” in person, but I can’t.

     

     

    He’s several hundred miles away and up to his neck in school work. His Father and I are very proud of the man he’s become. 

    Expressing it beyond my next statement would only trivialize the depth of emotion I have for my first born child.

     

    And so I’ll just say this directly to you, Jay.

    There is only one other man that I respect as much as I respect you.

    And that man is your Dad. 

     

    You are the best Valentines Day gift!

     

     

    I love you!! 

     

     

February 9, 2011

  • Let me tell you about someone special

     

    This little girl right here is one of my best friends. She’s fearless and she’s loyal and her brilliant smile mirrors both her personality and her mind.  She’s one of the 7 beautiful gems that are in embedded in her father’s crown. And anyone who knows my husband, knows this is not hyperbole. 

     

    Her Daddy is the one who decided on her name after seeing a chubby baby girl during morning clinic. He came home for lunch and excitedly announced as he walked through the door. “If this baby is a girl, I want to name her Erin Kathleen.”  I was taken aback by his enthusiasm, and replied cautiously, “that sounds REALLY Irish, don’t you think?”  He nodded vigorously.

     

    Her personality matches her fathers enthusiasm from that day over 22 years ago and she certainly looks Irish enough to own the name. 

     

    She has that “Irish” sense of fun with a tremendous sense of familial loyalty. Her intense personality is the Yin to my “laid back” Yang and we blend very well together (Some Xangans may have a hard time believing that I’m really laid back. The Xangans who have met me IRL know the truth silly) But she’s very much like her Dad in that she rushes into life with unbridled enthusiasm. But she “thinks” like her Mom, and we’ll often say the same thing at the same time.

     

    She has her own personality though (thankfully!)

     

    I’m most proud of the fact that she stands up for her beliefs and yet has the discernment to know WHEN to do it. She isn’t afraid, even when I think she should be. Before her sisters and brother joined her at UVA, she would go walking at night by herself. Many times I would stay on the phone talking with her as she walked. The fact that I thought this would “protect” her was just as irrational as her thinking that walking at night was a good idea. At the time, they were looking for the Va Tech girl who went missing after a concert on campus. They’ve since found the girl’s body, but not the man who killed her.

     

    I couldn’t stop her from walking at night so we talked during that time. It made me feel better, anyway. Now the kids walk together and I rest more easily in the evenings. 

     

    But truthfully, if I could infuse a little fear into her I would. I still admire her grit though. She’s always been that way. When she was 3, we lived in town and shared a driveway with two other houses. Two of the kids from those families were bullies. These kids were 10 and 13 and they would pick on my oldest son, Jay, who was 6 at the time.  One day, Jay was riding his Big Wheel in our portion of the drive and they were riding their bikes down the hill and stopping just short of wrecking into him. Erin came outside and ran right in front of Jay. She pivoted on her foot & assumed the “Superman” pose right in between her brother and the hefty bully hurtling towards them. He nearly wrecked into them both but she DID NOT flinch and he DID stop but barely. She raised an indignant little finger in this kids direction and began yelling,  ”YOU LEAVE MY BIG BROTHER ALONE!!!!!”

     

    I walked outside just in time to see the tail end of this scene. This child of mine was not the least bit afraid. In fact, she was TICKED!!

    The amazing thing is that chubby big kid looked ashamed of himself. He turned on his bike and left the area. 

     

    That story best illustrates Erin’s loyalty and fearless spirit. She also doesn’t hesitate to let others know where she stands on her beliefs; but she shows wisdom too. She’s challenged professors and T.A.s when appropriate. Last year she revealed in her Organic Chemistry lab that she didn’t believe in Evolution. The subject came up casually but she didn’t back down. She said her T.A. looked like she’d lost her best friend. They got along well. But this girl knew Erin had the best grades in the class and was confused. “How do you know the answers so well?” she asked.

     

    Erin said, “We’ll, I understand the material. It isn’t difficult to understand. I’ve studied both ID as well as Evolution. I know both sides of the debate.”  

     

    The T.A. objected, “But that other stuff is just propaganda.” Erin asked, “Have you investigated the other side? I’ve been schooled in both.”   One of her friends who was in the class with her got very defensive of her and reacted to the intensity of emotion suddenly directed at her. An Evolutionist himself, he began to defend her as best he could. Erin said that he was watching her smile; laugh and argue back. All the while he was not happy at the level of hostility in the room. He told her later that she was CRAZY… just CRAZZZY for revealing her beliefs. But she said the subject came up and she had no problem discussing her position on the matter.

     

    The way she described it later, I could picture it perfectly. Her smiling, laughing and firing right back. Her friend looking confused and feeling defensive about his little friend being “attacked”. But Erin didn’t really feel like she needed help. She was comfortable with her knowledge and with her argument.

     

    Btw, she’s a T.A. this year for her Ecology and Evolution professor.   winky

     

    That’s Erin: confident; respectful and….. very happy!

    HAPPY BIRTHDAY, Erin Red Baron!!  

     

    I SURE do LOVE YOU!!!

     

    Mom  smooch

     

     

     

     

February 6, 2011

  • 100

    He was the first President I voted for.

     

     

    One of the few ballots I’ve cast with no remorse.  

    He was a decent man and a fine Conservative. There is just no one like him anymore.

     

     

    When he died, I cried like a baby. This I don’t do very often.

    I pray that God will continue to raise up leaders like this man.