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Valentines Day

I’m sensing hostility here. No, really. Lots of folks ragging on Valentines Day. “A creation of the greeting card industry! A fabrication to promote the buying of flowers and candy!…

I’m sensing hostility here. No, really. Lots of folks ragging on Valentines Day. “A creation of the greeting card industry! A fabrication to promote the buying of flowers and candy! Why is it okay to be nice one day a year and a jerk the other 364 or 365?”

The answer to the last question is, of course it isn’t okay. If someone’s using V-Day as a way to make up for being a jerk, then s/he needs to catch a clue.

But as to the rest … so what? I’m celebrating V-Day, and I’m not buying an expensive greeting card. I’m not buying boxes of chocolates. Okay, I brought some flowers home for Margie yesterday, but that’s because she was sounding irked about something, and I thought it would be nice.

Just like Christmas isn’t the only day to give gifts and dream of “peace on Earth, good will toward men,” or the Fourth of July isn’t the only day to be patriotic, so, too, V-Day isn’t the only day to be lovey-dovey. But it’s a good reminder and excuse to be.

So stop being love-Scrooges. If you want to give your bunny-boo a kiss today and tomorrow, go for it. But just because Hallmark would love for you to reach out and touch fifty of your closest friends today doesn’t mean the sentiment of the day is sucky. It just means we have to make it clear to our nearest-and-dearest that we’re not acting out of character today, but simply acting more in-character.

So Happy Valentines Day, Margie. I love you. And hopefully that’s just a reminder, not a revelation.

It’s the Saturday, er, Friday Five!

Yet another edition of the Friday Five, this one clearly focused on Valentines Day. 1. What’s the most romantic thing you’ve ever done for someone else? That’s tough, largely because…

Yet another edition of the Friday Five, this one clearly focused on Valentines Day.

1. What’s the most romantic thing you’ve ever done for someone else?

That’s tough, largely because I tend to not be good about remembering such things.

Okay, it would probably be my proposal to Margie. It was Thankgiving, we were at her folks’ house, and, in fact, my folks were there, too. I was still in Southern California, but had gotten a transfer to Denver, leaving that coming Monday. Margie and my relationship was no deep dark secret, obviously, but the clock was ticking on my popping the question. Ordinarily, it would have taken me another six month, I suspect. But with my departure, things were getting urgent, at least in my mind.

I took Margie up to her room at her folks house — oops, Jen was there, trying to calm Ana to sleep. Okay, her brother’s room (how romantic). I knelt down, said something, and handed her a gorgeous engagement ring.

Or not, since I knew that she was going to get one of her heirloom rings, and I didn’t know which one, and I certainly wasn’t going to ask her folks about it ahead of time. So instead I gave her a ring made of aluminum foil.

Didn’t stop her from crying out so loud that Jen was worried there was something wrong.

Yeah, that was all pretty darned romantic.

2. [pardon the cosmo question] What are your erogenous zones?

Margie has taught me to be far more sensuous (senses/touch-loving) than I used to be. I’d guess probably the ear lobes, here and there, and the Usual Suspects.

3. How old were you the first time you had sex? Care to expound?

Pass. (My parents read this blog, fergoshsakes. Margie knows — she’s the only one who needs to.)

4. What’s the most unusual place you’ve ever had sex?

Given that I am, ah, kind of a stick in the mud, I don’t have tales to regale folks of having sex on top of a hot air balloon flying over Venice or anything.

Hmmm. On the dock of a lake at twilight. Fishermen interrupted us …

5. Do you have plans for Valentine’s Day or is it just another Thursday?

No plans at the moment. Margie doesn’t like to go out on VD (“Worst service of the year”). Not sure what we’re going to do. Margie might cook me something really nice, but that doesn’t answer what I’m going to do for her. Chocolates? Cliche. Flowers? Wilt. Something wildly expensive and fabulously beautiful? Margie would hit me.

Hmmmmmm.

Blogger Insider

Woo-hoo! These weren’t due until the end of next week, but since Kara (of Sanity Denied) and I exchanged questions (and answers) so soon, I might as well post these….

Woo-hoo! These weren’t due until the end of next week, but since Kara (of Sanity Denied) and I exchanged questions (and answers) so soon, I might as well post these. Besides, Blogger Insider took a break last fortnight.

Here are Kara’s questions and my answers. Hit her site for the reverse.

1. I went back and read your archives. I was really enthralled by the way you seemed to post and update exactly how you felt at each moment durind the terror of 9/11. I think a lot of people’s blogs from that day stand as an incredible monument to their feelings and the powerful emotions of that day. Do you ever reread that section of your archives, and if you do, what are your feelings?

I’ve been intentionally not going back and rereading things until I get to some major anniversaries. The 24th of this month, for example, is six months since I began blogging, and I’ll probably do something then. And when we get around to 11 March, I’ll probably go back and reread them.

Well, that’s not 100% true. I had cause to go back and take a quick look, and it was interesting watching my emotions bob up and down that day, and the few days following — lots of anger, but also lots of trying to intellectualize the whole thing.

All I know is that I’m glad I have the blog, because, frankly, I don’t remember much of those couple of days.

2. How is your New Year’s resolution coming along?

Heh. Well, my pants have been feeling a little loose. I’ll know tomorrow, because a few days after New Years I was in at the doctors and was Officially Weighted at 248 … and I’m going in tomorrow and we’ll see what they say.

I was just noticing that, in trying to keep Katherine from ruining her appetite for dinner, and so not giving in to her desire for snacks, I’m also perforce not snacking, which is probably a Good Thing. Scratch that — I know it’s a Good Thing.

3. What is the most unexpected or suprising experience you have had as a
parent?

As a global thing, just the incredible time sink it’s been. I look back on those feckless days of, “Sigh, here we are in the afternoon on a weekend with just nothing to do. Let’s hop in the car and drive someplace,” and marvel.

As a specific thing, it was probably the first time Katherine climbed out of her crib (during an afternoon nap), toddled downstairs, past where I was sitting at the breakfast table (within eyeshot, if I’d turned my head), went out to the living room, got a knick-knack, and walked back to me and … I finally spotted her. “Gah!” (That was me, not Katherine.)

4. What was your first meeting with Margie like? There has to be a good
story behind all that love!

Actually, Margie and I met in college, introduced by a friend of ours who was running a D&D game and invited us both to it. We were friends then, good friends, and stayed in touch through the various intervening years (and a marriage on my part, where Margie was one of the bridesmaids, as she was also a friend with my now-ex).

So I don’t remember much of that first meeting. Certainly it was not memorable in terms of anything interesting happening, but it was memorable in that we met playing That Evil Demonic Game (which, in fact, is where I’ve met probably 90% of my friends).

Now, asking her out for our first date … there’s an interesting story. But that’s not what you asked. 🙂

5.Tell me more about NaNoWriMo, and how you conquered it.

National Novel Writing Month, a/k/a “Take November, Wad It Up Into A Little Ball, And Throw Any Non-Writing Activities You Had Planned Then Into The Trash.” I conquered it by (a) being someone who writes a lot as part of his job, (b) deciding I would do something fun, not profound, (c) deciding I would not go back and revise lest I never get past the first chapter, and (d) having a wonderful wife who let me sequester myself upstairs for a couple of all-day catch-up fests. Having a friend who was also doing it helped, too, since that made it a bit of a competition.

6. Name your top five places to visit on the web (not weblogs).

In terms of frequency of visits? Amazon, Google … er, SpamCop … um, RefDesk, … damn, I really don’t go that many other places these days, besides blogs. The Rocky Mountain News, the Christian Science Monitor, Yahoo News, and the Wall Street Journal as news fodder for my blog.

7. Do people “in real life” know about your weblog, for instance, people
from work or extended family members? Have they ever reacted negatively to
anything you’ve blogged about? If so, how did you deal with it?

My folks know about it, and read it — my mom does, at least. I’ve mentioned it to my in-laws, but they’re not much into Web stuff. Most of my local friends know about it. I don’t know that anyone at work knows — but I assume that they can find it, so I’m always very discreet about work-related stuff (especially anything involving managing or HR or stuff like that).

So far I’ve not had any negative reactions from anyone from those arenas — but I endeavor at all time to be inoffensive, so …

8. Do you consider yourself an “artist” or a “scientist”?

Tough one. I’d probably say artist, if pressed — but I try to apply logic and reason to the things I do, esp. at work, as well as creativity.

9. Favorite book?

Urg. I hate this question, if only because I read voraciously, and I only tend to read what I enjoy (reading is entertainment for me, not education). So I’m drawing a blank here. I can tell you what I’m presently reading, which is Which Lie Did I Tell? by William Goldman, one of his books detailing his career as a screenwriter. Vastly entertaining and an interesting introduction to the screenwriting trade.

10. The answer is… 16. What is the question?

“When did you learn to drive?” “What’s four squared?” “What base is hexidecimal?” “How many comic books are in the bag you just picked up from the comic book store?” And we’ll leave it at that.

Harrumph

I think my wife would take issue with that. Uh, you would, wouldn’t you, honey? Honey? (Via Trance Gemini)…



I think my wife would take issue with that.

Uh, you would, wouldn’t you, honey?

Honey?

(Via Trance Gemini)

Blogger Insider

I almost missed my deadline here, but I managed to squeak it out. Yes, it’s another installment of Blogger Insider, where random bloggers send 10-15 probing, penetrating, and otherwise inappropriately…

I almost missed my deadline here, but I managed to squeak it out. Yes, it’s another installment of Blogger Insider, where random bloggers send 10-15 probing, penetrating, and otherwise inappropriately touching questions to each other.

My partner this week is Eleanor Holmes. Of the three BI folks I’ve been linked with, she’s doubtless the most “compatible,” since she enjoys both RPGs and “Undercover Blues.” Her being from Australia lends a mysterious, exotic, foreign air to her great question — along with that cute Australian accent.

Since I just sent my questions to her (almost missing it, here in Faerie), she probably hasn’t answered them yet, but here are hers to me.

1. Ah-ha… Someone I could have lengthy LotR discussions with, I see! So, what would you define as the central theme of the books, and how does that relate to the movie? (I feel like I’m setting exam questions here!) I think that Peter Jackson has nailed it right on the head. The theme of the books is the influential role of the individual in the affairs of history. Sure, you’ve got this grand, sweeping, epic drama, with prophecies and the like scattered like buckshot. But, bottom line, the story is about how a couple of very small, very ordinary country folks manage, through great personal struggle and sacrifice, to overthrow the greatest evil in the land. Frodo is the least likely individual to do away with the Ring. Aragorn, Gandalf, Galadriel, even Boromir — all the Mighty and Powerful would seem far better choices. But against all odds, his personal dedication — and the dedication and love of his friend, Sam, make it happen, where any of the others would ultimately have failed. Great stuff, and very unexpected for most people.

2. Blogging: the lovely SJ stole my initial question (what made you start?) so I’ll ask: if you could have your blog be as beloved and famous as any other idolized blog, which would you pick? Eep! That’s a tough one, as there are many other blogs out there which I admire (as the Link List o’ Admired Blogs off to the left indicates). I’d probably have to say InstaPundit. I have a lot of admiration for the author (even when I don’t agree with him), and I think that in addition to something informative and entertaining, he’s actually providing a public service. Good stuff.

3. What’s your favorite smell in the world? Sauteeing onions and garlic. The basis for many, many, many good meals that Margie has cooked me.

4. I’m impressed to see that you did NaNoWriMo; I tried, but found that I just didn’t have time, and stopped. Tell us a bit about where you got your inspiration, and words of wisdom you’d pass to those trying it next year? Well, I have to confess that I will probably not do it next year, largely because it shot the bloody hell out of both my November and December schedules. That having been said, I was inspired by my wife (who supported me), my pal Doyce (who suggested the damned thing in the first place, the Infernal Gateway Drug that he is), any number of comic book writers, Kevin Smith, Stephen Brust, Neil Gaiman, and my own personal muse, who is still lolling, sated, somewhere in the back of my head. Words of wisdom I have to pass on from Roger Zelazny:

I try to write every day. I used to try to write four times a day, minimum of three sentences each time. It doesn’t sound like much but it’s kinda like the hare and the tortoise. If you try that several times a day you’re going to do more than three sentences, one of them is going to catch on. You’re going to say “Oh boy!” and then you just write. You fill up the page and the next page But you have a certain minimum so that at the end of the day, you can say “Hey I wrote four times today, three sentences, a dozen sentences. Each sentence is maybe twenty word long. That’s 240 words which is a page of copy, so at least I didn’t goof off completely today. I got a page for my efforts and tomorrow it might be easier because I’ve moved as far as I have”.

5. When you write, what do you need in your immediate environment to make you productive and efficient? Not much. A keyboard (because I can type about 40% as fast as I can think, which is far better than with any other medium). Some scrap paper. If I want to really pound things out, music and earphones help. Margie saved my butt during NaNoWriMo by taking care of Katherine while I sequestered myself in the guest room.

6. You’re a gamer! Hooray! So, go on. Tell us about your fave character.
Please? 🙂
Based on the verbiage I’ve dedicated to him, it would have to be Grinthorn, a half-elvish bard. I played him in a roll-your-own campaign during college, wrote a novel about him (which is not yet finally finished), extended his adventures into an abortive PBeM Mage: The Ascension campaign, and then turned him into a PBeM Amber character. In all incarnations, he’s a sassy bastard (literally), whose taken his childhood experiences of rejection and turned them into an iconoclastic turn-about rejection of authority. Which is nothing like me, but he’s the closest to my “voice” of all the characters I’ve ever run.

7. One of my favorite questions: If you could live in the ‘reality’ of any
one RPG or game system, what would you pick? What kind of person would you be?
Frankly, the “reality” of most game systems frightens the bejeebers out of me, since they are all front-loaded with lots of threats. Not that RL isn’t threatening, but it’s threats I know and can (mostly) manage. I’d probably either choose Phage’s Amber system, as one of the kids of that realm, or some sort of a metahuman hero in one of any number of supers RPGs. The latter is usually relatively straightforward and familiar, but with the bennies of some sort of keen power. The former would be far riskier, but with the possibilities of more significant powers. Plus I’d like to meet Fiona. And Flora.

[Question 8 never arrived. No, really.]

9. SJ swiped the Desert Island book question, so I’ll chime in with Desert
Island Discs: pick a dozen albums you’d take with you to aforementioned
desert island. (Alright alright, you can have something to play the albums
on if you like.)
Not fair! I’m hundreds of miles away from my collection! Yeesh! Hmmmm. A few I can think of:

  • Sting, Nine Summoner’s Tales
  • John Barry, Moviola
  • Enya, Shepherd Moons
  • Handel, Messiah (pref. the Christopher Hogwood recording)
  • Frente, Labour of Love
  • Loreena McKennitt, The Visit
  • Bach, The Brandenburg Concertos

    That’s all I can come up with off-hand … after this I’d have to cheat and start coming up with the 12-Disc Greatest Hits of the 80s, or the Collected Beethoven Symphonies or something.

    10. Many people have talked about the problems of integrating gaming into a normal family social life. Have you found it’s caused problems for you? Being married to a roleplayer must make it easier, but with Katherine it must still be a juggle. How’ve you found it to be? It’s certainly a lot easier being married to a role-player. Katherine has “kept me” from GMing since she was born, but that all changes in a few weeks, so we’ll see. But it does take time, and social commitment, and right now Margie and I are trading off Fridays playing in different campaigns while the other stays home with Katherine (and, truth be told, sort of enjoys a quiet night of being alone, once she’s asleep). Doyce and Jackie, friends of ours, both game, and they’ve managed to integrate Justin, their 11-year-old into the proceedings pretty well — he goes to cons with them, games in some things that Doyce runs, or just hangs out, tolerantly, since they spend a lot of non-game time with him, too. And the latter is probably the secret to making it work.

    11. If you had one hour to spend online every day, what would you do with
    it? How much time reading email, what sites would you visit, what forums
    would you hang out on, where would you surf?
    Egad. I’d probably spend about 20 minutes on e-mail (and cut way back on my mailing lists), 30 minutes blogging, and the remaining 10 minutes doing online “business” — shopping at Amazon, paying bills at PayMyBills, etc. But I wouldn’t like it.

    12. Of what achievement are you most proud? I try not to toot my own horn. Really. I’m always afraid I’ll say, “Yes, I’m horribly, horribly proud of this painting here,” only to have someone say, “Eewwww.” I’d have to say, at this point in my life, it’s been building a wonderful, wonderful marriage (particularly given some problems I had last time around). I had help, of course. But I’m proud of what we have, and what we’ve done, and of the little girl we’re bringing up.

    Isn’t that just too sappy for words? 🙂

  • I mean, have you heard the way he talks about his wife?

    The title of this was a title text for a link to my blog on Bazima’s page. Hmmm. How do I talk about my wife? She’s in my heart, she’s…

    The title of this was a title text for a link to my blog on Bazima‘s page.

    Hmmm. How do I talk about my wife?

    She’s in my heart, she’s in my soul, she’ll be my breath when I grow old, she is my lover, she’s my best friend …

    Yeah, and then some.

    I’ve been friends with Margie for many, many years, far longer than we’ve been involved romantically. And I’m really glad of that, because it’s made our romance all the richer.

    She takes the places where I’m stronger and makes me even more so. She takes the places where I’m weak and makes me strong. She’s clever, she’s funny, she laughs at my jokes, she’s tolerant of my foibles and habits and esoteric interests (and brings enough of her own to the mix to keep things interesting), she’s a wonderful cook, and, frankly, she’s great in the sack.

    She enjoys enough of the things I do to be someone I can spend lots of time with, but not so much that we end up in big trouble buying a life-sized Vorlon Encounter Suit or something like that for a zillion dollars on eBay.

    She’s an excellent hostess and a wonderful mother to our daughter. She’s good at talking to vendors. She’s good at reminding me of things I need to do without being a nag. She’s good at pitching in when there’s hard work to do. She’s an enjoyable traveling companion. She’s an interesting conversationalist.

    She’s my confidante. She’s the person I can be honest with, who will baby me when I need babying and give me a swift kick in the ass when I need one.

    She stretches my horizons. She persuades me to eat food that I wouldn’t otherwise, and enjoy it, too.

    She’s a saint. When she’s good, she’s very, very good. And when she’s bad, she’s better.

    She’s wise, and sensuous, and cheerful and patient. She’s an inspiration, and a support, and a goal to aspire to, and someone I can care for and cherish.

    She’s my right arm. And I hope that I can be hers, too.

    As I enter a new year, and approach our seventh wedding anniversary (this April), and the twenty-first (I believe) year I have known her, I lift my glass on high to her, and I give you all Marjorie Lucia Kleerup.

    Damn, am I lucky.

    Blogger Insider

    This week’s Blogger Insider questions are from the Geekman. For my questions and his answers, check his site. 1. You write a lot about comic books, what do you think…

    This week’s Blogger Insider questions are from the Geekman. For my questions and his answers, check his site.

    1. You write a lot about comic books, what do you think are the top 5 comic books ever made? Why?

    Oh, geez, it’s lots easier to critique others choices in this category than to actually come up with a list myself. The criterion of “top” is difficult, too. Best sales? Most influential? Most re-readable? Beyond which is the question of single stand-alone issues vs. story arcs, and other annoyances like that.
    I’m gonna compromise here by IDing my favorite Trade Paperback Collections up
    on my downstairs shelf. And I’m gonna compromise still further by choosing
    six, and not giving any particular order:
    The Books of Magic – Before Harry Potter, Neil Gaiman introduced Tim Hunter, an ordinary bespectacled boy in London who might grow up to be greatest wizard of all — if he chooses the path of Magic, as offered to him by four trenchcoated magical denizens of the DC world. Gaiman teamed up with art notables John Bolton, Charles Vess, Scott Hampton and Paul Johnson, to describe the many worlds of magic, and a young boy faced with a terrible decision. Great art, great writing.
    The Watchmen – This twelve-part series let Alan Moore deconstruct the superhero genre into a tale of humans with strange abilities and funny costumes and dark passions. Dave Gibbons art complements this perfectly.
    Preacher (Vol 6 – War in the Sun) – Garth Ennis’ tale of a Texas preacher with a past, out to find God and make Him answer for the pain in the world, is good through and through. But this particular volume, drawn as always by Steve Dillon (with a backup tale by Peter Snejbjerg), features the origins of Herr Starr and the Grail, some particularly passionate scenes between Jesse and Tulip, and the confrontation between the Saint of Killers and the US Army (not to mention Air Force). Great, over-the-top action.
    The Sandman (Dream Country) – Reprinting issues 17-20 (and over a decade old now), this collection includes the marvelous one-shots “Calliope,” “A Dream of a Thousand Cats,” “A Midsummer Night’s Dream,” and “Facade,” individual tales of dreams, horror, and hope, each with a differerent artist, but each with Gaiman’s particular writing touch. While the Sandman story arcs were fine, I liked the single issue stories even better.
    Strangers in Paradise (Complete, Vol. 2) – I love this extended love triangle soap opera written and drawn by Terry Moore. This relatively early collection completes the first “crime story” arc.
    Astro City (Life in the Big City) – The original collection, and still, to my ind, the best. Kurt Busiek — aided by the art of Brent Anderson — imbues his still-recognizeably Silver Age heroes with humanity. The stories are less about how Captain X Defeats the Evil Dr. Y, but about how Captain X spends his spare time, or what the folks watching all of this going on actually think and feel. Really good stuff, duh. Even if Busiek’s health has interfered with more recent production, his work stands for all time.

    2. What�s the worst nickname you ever had?

    In 7th Grade Orchestra class, two of the girls in class insisted on breaking into “The Ballad of Davy Crockett” whenever I arrived.

    3. Assuming god exists and offered to truthfully answer any one question you asked, what would you ask?

    Unfortunately, I suspect any of the questions I’d want answered would be beyond my understanding of the answer. But I’d probably still take a stab at, “Why is there suffering?”

    4. What five things do you never want to hear your children say that you already know they will one day say?

    – Go away.
    – I never want to talk with you again.
    – I don’t love you.
    – And this is where I got the *other* piercing.
    – Time for your meds, Dad.”

    5. Assuming no time for preparation (they meet accidentally and without warning), who would win in a fight, Spiderman or Batman? Justify your answer.

    Batman, no question. Brains over brawn. Not that Spidey is stupid — Bats is just too darned sneaky, and is used to dealing with guys who are stronger and faster than he is. Hell, the guy’s been hanging around with the JLA forever, standing up to folks who can take out Superman, Green Lantern, et al. Brains, m’man. Brains.

    6. What’s the best insult/comeback you never got the chance to say?

    Unfortunately, while I often think of better arguments or rhetorical rejoinders after the fact, I rarely think of insults in that way. I’m just
    too nice of a guy.

    7. What profession, other than your own, would you most like to try?

    Professional philanthropist, giving away reasonable chunks of my vast fortune to good causes.
    Or maybe an accountant. I think I’d make a good accountant.

    8. What one thing would you want your children to remember you for?

    Teaching them, by example, how to be a good person.

    9. What’s the stupidest/silliest/most trivial lie you ever got caught in? Why did you tell it? How did you get caught?

    I was probably 6. My mom was giving violin lessons in the front room. I decided to get my 3-year-old brother in trouble (which needs no further explanation), and went and sprinkled salt and pepper all over the kitchen counters, then ran out to tell my mom. She proceeded to banish my brother to his room.
    Not leaving well enough alone, I repeated the trick, adding sugar to the mix. Unbeknownst to me, my mom could see what I was doing in the reflection from the breakfront’s glass doors. So when I went to narc on my brother for not only such a high crime, but for his breaking out of his banishment … well, in retrospect, hilarity ensued.

    10. What’s the funniest thing you ever did when no one was around to see?

    Damn. I’m not good at remembering things like that. Cop-out, I know, but there you go.

    11. What song most encapsulates your idea of true love?

    John Barry’s “Moviola”. It has no lyrics, it’s just orchestral, but it’s broad, sweeping, nostalgic, inspirational, complex, and utterly romantic. We used it at the end of our wedding video.

    12. Every material item in your home will be disintegrated at the touch of a button. You are allowed to save one thing from this horrendous fate. What item would you chose and why?

    Gah! Probably a piece of art. Much of our photography is duped elsewhere — on-line, or with other people — and so could be replaced. My notebook is backed up. So probably art. Maybe the Mauro over the fireplace.
    Or maybe the “lock box” of stuff that should really be in a safe deposit box but is not yet. How annoyingly pragmatic.

    13. Name three things your S.O. does on purpose just to get on your nerves.

    I can’t even name one. Really. She doesn’t play those sorts of games. There are occasional things she does that get on my nerves, especially when I’m already feeling peevish. But intentionally — no, not really.

    14. Do you believe that it’s possible a child can do something so bad that a spanking is necessary? Why or why not?

    Yes.
    Spanking is not, IMO, an awful, evil thing. I think it’s an appropriate response, usually a last resort for older kids, to providing some immediate painful consequence to an action that’s dangerous (but which you don’t want to actually make good on its danger).
    I’ve been known to flick Katherine’s hand with my forefinger when she keeps reaching up for something that she should not get into, and won’t listen to “No!”
    The point being, of course, that spanking is not meant to inflict injury, nor to make Mom or Dad feel better, but to be part of the balance in teaching kids between “carrots,” simply withdrawing them from the unwanted situation, and “the stick.” It’s certainly something that can be done to excess, to harm — but the same can be said for any tactics you use to help bring up a child.

    15. What makes something worthy of being blogged on your site?

    It’s got to move me (humorously, irritatingly, absurdly) enough that I want to share it with others. That’s I think the underlying bit here — this is all stuff I want to communicate to others. So I do.

    Lists of Four Things

    4 things you would eat on the last day of your life: 1) A bag of Mother’s “Taffy” cookies. 2) A pepperoni pizza. 3) Haagen-Dazs Rum Raisin ice cream. 4)…

    4 things you would eat on the last day of your life:
    1) A bag of Mother’s “Taffy” cookies.
    2) A pepperoni pizza.
    3) Haagen-Dazs Rum Raisin ice cream.
    4) Margie’s pepper steak.

    4 CDs from your collection that you will never get tired of:
    1) John Barry/Moviola
    2) Pet Shop Boys/Actually
    3) Eurythmics/Greatest Hits
    4) Bangles/Greatest Hits

    4 movies that you watch over and over:
    1) Princess Bride
    2) Undercover Blues
    3) Judgement at Nuremberg
    4) The Shadow

    4 vacations you have taken:
    1) Britain, with Margie.
    2) The Grand Canyon, with my folks
    3) My honeymoon, with Margie
    4) Santa Fe, with Margie

    4 things you’d like to learn:
    1) To hit a golf ball straight, consistently.
    2) Japanese
    3) Philosophy (formally)
    4) How to draw faces

    4 beverages you drink frequently:
    1) Coffee
    2) Barq’s root beer
    3) Grapefruit juice
    4) Coke

    4 TV shows that you liked when you were a kid:
    1) I Love Lucy
    2) Mission Impossible
    3) Doctor Who
    4) Star Trek

    4 places to go in your city:
    1) The Zoo
    2) The Botanic Gardens
    3) Lo-Do
    4) Cherry Creek North

    4 things to do when you’re bored:
    1) Read
    2) Watch TV
    3) Blog
    4) Read some more

    4 things that never fail to cheer you up:
    1) Margie’s smile
    2) Katherine’s smile
    3) Praise
    4) Knights of the Dinner Table

    (Via sillycow)

    Theological chit-chat

    I was raised Catholic. My family stopped being avid church-goers around the time my brother was born, but we remained at least Christmas/Easter Catholics, and there was always an understanding…

    I was raised Catholic. My family stopped being avid church-goers around the time my brother was born, but we remained at least Christmas/Easter Catholics, and there was always an understanding that this is what we were and how we believed and so forth. I went to Catechism, took First Communion (5/9/69, as I have memorized from the back of the little St. Christopher medallion I had for years), was Confirmed (by Bishop Juan Arzube), and so forth.

    In college, as my folks were beginning to attend church more regularly again, I was able to explore my own beliefs more. And I found I enjoyed participating in the Mass at McAlister Religious Center and leading the music and being involved in — well, I guess, as part of the show of the Mass. Not that I treated it solely as such — it was still a solemn sacramental gathering, but there were also logistics and staging and hitting your lines and all of that show biz sort of terminology. Because much of the Mass is ritual, which is the community both establishing, through formula, what they believe, and that they believe it all together.

    (Put that way, it sounds sort of creepy, but it also makes a lot of sense, which is why ritual is important in so many social and religious groups. Indeed, I think, as communication shorthand, it’s part of all social interaction. But I digress.)

    Cheryl and I were married at the parish where the priest, Fr. Frank, who served the college campus actually was a part of. We had to stretch a bit to make that happen, since you’re really supposed to be married in the bride’s parish — but Cheryl had no parish, having converted to Catholicism during our courtship, so it worked out okay.

    After that, the whole religious thing sort of faded from my life a bit, in terms of regular practice. Main problems was that the parish where Cheryl and I lived was kind of — I don’t know, after the intimate, lively college experience, it was sort of dull and staid. And, to be honest, no longer being a big fish in a small pond, I might not have been as quick to rush off to Mass on a Sunday morning. And, of course, since Catholics are really supposed to be tied to their geographical parish (church shopping being pretty much out of the question), that was that.

    And when things started going seriously south in our lives, and so on and so forth (and that is, perhaps, another blog), the whole religious thing sort of went by the wayside. I mean, I never stopped believing that there was a Deity, or a purpose, or anything like that. But I was angry, not to mention distracted. I explored other avenues of my faith, but not with a fervor that would actually lead me to convert anywhere.

    Fast forward several years or so (mercifully). Cheryl and I are through, except for the settlement. Margie and I are going together. And we’re looking toward getting married.

    Margie had gotten involved in the Episcopal Church when she was off in North Carolina, I believe, participating in choir and so forth. As we were looking for a religious aspect to our wedding and marriage, not just a civil one, the Episcopal Church seemed a reasonable way to go. And, frankly, the EC always struck me as the Catholic Church with the Latin serial numbers filed off and a cute English accent. The ritual stuff was all there and familiar to me. Besides which, they allowed women to be priests, which I found philosophically and theologically pretty nifty (or, rather, found the lack of which in the Catholic Church to be goofy and indefensible).

    So, Episcopal we went.

    And here in Colorado, as we started contemplating expanding from 2 to 3+, we decided we wanted our hypothetical children raised in a religious, church-going context. That’s a bit difficult to explain. I think it was less about the specific theology or ritual or beliefs (though those are important) than it was that our kids would grow up with the idea of church and God and rules as part of their lives. I fully expect that Katherine, et al., will eventually make her own decisions about her faith, her beliefs, what she wants to do and why. And I have to respect that, even as I expect my own decisions to be respected. But I think that, without growing up in a church-going context (to whatever degree), it’s more likely that those decisions are less likely to be made, because the need for them is not perceived.

    Or, put another way, being actively religious (whatever that means, in whatever faith) means one is (or should be) engaged in the objects of religion — the spirit, the Deity, faith, the Meaning of Life, what it means to live a good life, to act rightly, etc. I think that’s a good thing. I think it’s particularly good for a kid, because it gives them a foundation to make those sorts of decisions on their own someday.

    At least that’s what we figure. Your Mileage May Vary, and that’s what makes a horserace.

    So we searched around the area, and eventually found a home at Good Shepherd Episcopal. We’re active in the community there, I administer their web page, Margie cooks for some of their classes, we serve as Lectors and as Chalice Ministers, we’re off on our annual Parish Retreat in three weekends, and so forth. Katherine was baptized there, hangs out in the Nursery during the service, gets fetched out for Communion at the right time, etc.

    All of which is prelude to what I actually wanted to talk about in this blog post.

    Y’see, though I think my folks are disappointed that we’re not Catholic, and though they’ve become much more active in their religious practice (going to Mass daily, going on retreats, and, heck, my Dad served as parish administrator for several years after he retired, and they never had a better one), we still have a kick talking about the subtle differences between the Catholic liturgy and the Episcopal one. They go to Mass Sunday a.m., then join us at Good Shepherd afterwards, and then my Dad and I have theological chit-chat (hence the post name) about it.

    For example, they use a fairly similar lectionary to ours. This week, their Old Testament reading was from Ecclesiasticus (Wisdom), which the Protestant churches consider part of the Apocrypha, so we had Deuteronomy, but the Epistle and the Gospel readings were the same. The various prayers and even the order of the Mass are much the same.

    So my Dad and I have great fun chit-chatting about the differences.

    And the really cool thing is, it doesn’t make that much difference. Where we have specific differences, it is, at worst, an “agree to disagree,” and, usually, a “huh, that’s weird, oh well.” Like, in the Catholic Church, kids don’t go to Communion until they’ve been through certain classes so that they understand its significance, hence the whole “First Communion” thing. Usually happens around age 8 (gauging from my own). In the Episcopal Church, the rule is as soon as they can put it in their mouth and keep it there, they can take Communion, since it’s an invitation by Christ to his table. Two different approaches, both of which I can see the reasoning behind, and so can my Dad, and we go from there.

    My folks are really cool about this. Which maybe is a way I’m like them, since I tend to look at the religious differences between me and others and say, “Huh, that’s kind of cool.” When it’s cool. And, really, it usually is, since I think the religious/spiritual influence is a natural, intended part of human nature, and stems from a desire to reach the same, ultimate goal. But that’s a subject for another post.

    And we all share the same ability to observe the human frailties of our respective denominations. And both chuckle/regret them, and not let them unduly influence our faiths in what those denominations stand for. We can even stand some ribbing of each other. Again, that’s neat. And that’s probably why I started writing this very, very long post, which has wended and wound its way through some very lengthy side passages through the mare’s nest which is my brain.

    Actually, what’s kind of fun about discussing this stuff with my folks, is that I went through a lot of these “Wow, they do it that way? That’s odd/neat” thought processes and discoveries when I first started attending the EC, comparing them to my experience as a Catholic. Like I said, the similarities, theologically and liturigically, between the Episcopalians and Catholics are, in some ways, much more trivial than substantive. (I know there are a number of folks in both denominations who would hasten to disagree, but maybe that’s my own open mind — or lack of understanding — showing). It’s sort of like American English vs British English. It’s a sibling denomination, as opposed to cousins. With the exception of the whole Apocryphal books thing (and the Dissolution of the Monastaries), the split by the Church of England from the Roman Church had very little to do with basic beliefs and more with politics. (Again, I know there are some who would disagree vehemently.) So it’s not surprising that there are so many similarities.

    Though we still have a cute English accent on our side.

    One ring to rule them all

    I get an annoying little rash on my finger. No, this isn’t yet another self-indulgent blog post about some minor ailment. In hot weather, my left ring finger is susceptible…

    I get an annoying little rash on my finger.

    No, this isn’t yet another self-indulgent blog post about some minor ailment.

    In hot weather, my left ring finger is susceptible to some sort of rash or minor fungal hoohah. This has the incredibly annoying (to me) result of my being unable to wear my wedding ring for more than a day or two at a time, let I get the major itchies. That’s a real shame, for a number of reasons.

    First of all, my wedding ring is my symbol to the world that I was lucky enough to net a Gem Amongst Womankind, to wit, Margie.

    She’s mine, all mine, you hear me! Bwah-ha-hah!

    It’s also, to be fair, a nice piece of jewelry, from John Atencio, which is a jewelry store and design company here in Denver. (John Atencio was also, coincidentally, the brother of the wife, Elouise, of my first boss at the company, JimLo. None of which I knew at the time. I jokingly asked Jim, when he told me, if I should have dropped his name to get a discount. He indicated they probably would have increased the price.) It’s actually unique, since the “default” for the ring is yellow gold, and we got it done in white gold (which took them two tries to cast correctly).

    Very spiffy, kind an abstract wavyness to it. I enjoy wearing it. When I can, dagnabbit. Since its a solid, wide band, it tends to create a wide area of compressed skin, heat, and moisture. Which then leads to a recurrence of that rash again.

    Okay, enough with the rash.

    So, anyway, during those times when I can’t wear my wedding ring because of you-know-what, I’ve taken to carrying it in my wallet. Which is kind of nice, too.

    Margie, of course, ended up with a family heirloom ring that I couldn’t afford even today. Yeesh. What a deal.

    I have another ring I wear, too. Margie got it for me as an “engagement” ring, of a sorts — a lighter, silver, Celtic knot sort of design. Made on the Isle of Skye, if I recall my Wireless catalog correctly. I wear that one a lot more often, on the right hand, sort of as a compromise.

    Rings are about the only jewelry I wear. Well, I also have a medallion, with a Celtic knot on the obverse, and a Northwest Indian design (eagle and raven, I believe) on the reverse (symbolizing the joining of two houses) which I got at a Rennfaire some time ago. Margie has a similar one, with the same reverse design. I wear it all the time.

    The only other jewelry I can see wearing would be an earring, since that seems to have become marginally acceptible for men. On the other hand, I work for a rather conservative engineering company, so that might draw a few odd glances. And I hate needles, which means the whole piercing thing is pretty sketchy for me. And, finally, I would worry that it would be (or would appear to be) one of those Desperate Attempts By Guys In Their Forties To Try And Look Cool Again, which would be mortifying.

    (That’s one reason why I never grew the ponytail back after the wedding. Especially with the thinning, to put it politely, of my hair, it would have looked too much like one of those Desperate Attempts By Balding Guys To Try And Make Up For It By Growing A Ponytail.)

    I’m so vain. I probably think this post is about me.

    The Name’s the Thing

    So we are referred to (in some quarters) as the Consortium. Or, more properly, our (Margie and my) place is so referred to. Interesting. The reason, I am told, has…

    So we are referred to (in some quarters) as the Consortium. Or, more properly, our (Margie and my) place is so referred to.

    Interesting.

    The reason, I am told, has to do with our nomenclature. I’m a Hill, Margie’s a Kleerup. Margie kept her maiden name for two reasons that I’m aware of. First, should she publish, there are a lot fewer Kleerups than Hills out there, making journal lookups and the like a lot easier. Second, because there are a lot fewer Kleerups than Hills out there (I can count the number in the US on the fingers of both hands, I think), so it’s a Proud Name That Should Be Retained. (Which is why we decided that if Katherine was a boy, she’d be a Kleerup.)

    I’ll add another one to both of those very good (and supported by me) reasons: because I’m not hung up on Margie becoming a Hill. Because we are we, and her having her own name is just fine by me (as would be her taking my name — or, if she had felt that strongly about it, my taking her name). And I’d known her fifteen years as Margie Kleerup (let alone how long she’d known herself to be that), and it would have been weird any other way.

    Margie will go by “Margie Hill” or “Mrs. Hill” socially, if that’s how things get typed up on the seating chart or name tags. And I have been known to answer to Mr. Kleerup (usually by those who know Margie and assume she’s taken my name).

    Indeed, I had a “David Kleerup” Costco card for a while. Margie’s folks have had a business membership with Costco for quite some time (since it was Price Club) as Kleerup Enterprises. When I married into the business, so to speak, I got a Costco card … that said, for reasons taht escape me, David Kleerup. It had my picture, of course, and I had no problem with it. It was even kind of funny.

    Then I got the Checkout Clerk from Hell. No, that’s too harsh. But think of the stereotypical teenage male checkout clerk, completely with breaking voice, from The Simpsons. That was this guy. All was well until I tried to pay my Costco bill with my Discover card (back when they took Discover). He looked at the credit card. He looked at the Costco card. His eyes got wide.

    I’m sure he was onto breaking open some incredible credit card fraud ring. Because it was clear that there was Something Funny Going On Here.

    “Uh, these names don’t match.”

    “Hmmm?” Dave remembers the Costco card name. “Oh. That’s my wife’s last name.”

    “It’s not your name?”

    “No, but it’s my wife’s. They issued it to me with her name by mistake.”

    “She doesn’t have the same last name?” This seemed to be a novel, probably heretical, concept.

    “No, she goes by Kleerup.”

    “But this credit card says ‘Hill.'”

    “Yes.” Dave starts speaking more slowly so that the clerk can understand him. “My name is Dave Hill. My wife’s name is Margie Kleerup. I got this Costco card through her family’s business, Kleerup Enterprises, and they put the wrong last name on.”

    “That’s not the same last name as on the credit card.”

    “Noooooo, it’s not. But that’s me. See, there’s my picture on the Costco card. And –” Rummaging. “Here’s my driver’s license. See — my real last name, plus my picture.”

    “But they don’t match.”

    Dave looks around for Margie, who had gone to the drink stand to get me a soda. “Margie?”

    Margie comes over. Margie shows her ID — her driver’s license (“See, same home address”), her Costco card, even some Kleerup Enterprises business cards.

    “I’m going to have to call the manager.”

    Meanwhile, of course the line is backed up, impatient customers are wondering who to lynch first, and, dammit, we always go to Costco as the last stop on our errands (since we usually end up with perishables), so I was tired and hungry, and not just a bit embarrassed.

    The manager, fortunately, was able to hold two or more concepts in his head at once, and so understood the problem. I was asked to get a new Costco card, with my real name, and all was right with the world.

    I’m sure that checker, though, was disappointed.

    At any rate, I was willing to be Dave Kleerup as need be (and still am).

    And, frankly, given the hassle I went through with that, I can’t imagine pressuring Margie to change her name.

    For those folks who have decided otherwise — more power to you. Names have magic, and how we conjure with them is up to us, thank you. Don’t fence me in, and I’ll not ring you with chain link either. ‘Nuff said.

    The only other complexity our dissimilar names cause is … well, the source of this Consortium thing. Because it’s not the “Hills’ house,” and it’s not the “Kleerups’ house.” And we don’t really hyphenate our names (except in our domain). I’ve tended to use “Hill/Kleerup” at times, but that’s not always possible. It makes doing up invitations to functions interesting, too, when it’s for people (like at the office) who know one of us or the other, but need more than just first names.

    So. The Consortium. There we go. “An association or combination for the purpose of engaging in a joint venture [i.e., marriage].” I like it.

    To Margie

    Let’s get married, We’re ready for tying the knot, Let’s get married, Set the seal on the feelings we’ve got, Let’s get married, We can make each other happy…

    Let’s get married,
    We’re ready for tying the knot,
    Let’s get married,
    Set the seal on the feelings we’ve got,
    Let’s get married,
    We can make each other happy or we can make each other blue,
    Yeah, it’s just a piece of paper but it says “I Love You.”
    For the good times,
    For the days when we can do no wrong,
    For the moments when we think we can’t go on,
    For the family,
    For the lives of the children that we’ve planned,
    Let’s get married,
    C’mon darlin’, please take my hand.

    The Proclaimers, “Let’s Get Married”

    Love you, Margie. Even if it is cuter with a thick Scottish accent.

    Night owl

    I am really a night owl. It always comes back to haunt me when I’m on business, because I stay up way too late, reading, video gaming, watching movies, without…

    I am really a night owl. It always comes back to haunt me when I’m on business, because I stay up way too late, reading, video gaming, watching movies, without the restraining arm of Margie (bless her) making sure I don’t, well, stay up way too late. Given my druthers, though, I’d live 10a-2a, rather than 5a-10p.

    Anyway, it will be nice to be back home tonight. Back to Katherine, and, of course, Margie. [Cue romantic sigh with little hearts floating around Dave’s head.]