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The horror! The horror!

No, not really. I think one of the things that helps humans be human is our ability to lose our focus on what’s really important now and again. I mean,…

No, not really.

I think one of the things that helps humans be human is our ability to lose our focus on what’s really important now and again. I mean, with War and Rumors of War, with the events of Red Tuesday still burning in our memories, what could possibly be worth worry and angst and anger than all of that?

Well, how about the incredible inconvenience of our main remote control no longer operating the TV correctly.

We’ve got several of the wretched beasties.

  • The AT&T Cable Box remote: This puppy is our main one. It controls the cable box, but also (until the last week) controlled the TV and VCR, too.
  • The RCA TV remote: This guy controls the TV and the VCR, and can actually channel up/down the cable box (though that’s not very useful). It’s also critical for changing the TV input so that we can play the DVD.
  • The RCA VCR remote: This one controls the TV and VCR, too. It’s also critical for programming the VCR.
  • The Sony DVD remote: This one controls the DVD (duh), but can also control the volume on the TV.
  • The Generic remote: We bought these (we ended up with two of them, for a variety of reasons) a long time ago. They control the TV and VCR, but not anything else. We took the batteries out of one of them and gave it to Katherine in a vain hope that she wouldn’t want to play with, eat, or lose the others. Hah!

So if you’re good with matrix puzzles (“The remote which controls the DVD is not the one which is colored brown”) you can see that, in order to just watch TV, we now need two remotes — one to turn the TV on/off and Volume high/low, and one to control the cable box to Channel up/down and to read the all-important Guide.

This really sucks. I mean, screw the war, to hell with the disaster, fuggedabout terrorists, do you know how hard it is to keep one remote conveniently handy but out of Katherine’s reach? Let alone two remotes?

Life can be really unfair sometimes.

Boomerang Rocks

It’s 1968. The Fantastic Four. Shazzan. The Wacky Races. The Banana Splits Cartoon Network runs year-themed bits from its Boomerang sister network early on Saturday mornings (right about the time…

It’s 1968. The Fantastic Four. Shazzan. The Wacky Races. The Banana Splits

Cartoon Network runs year-themed bits from its Boomerang sister network early on Saturday mornings (right about the time when Katherine wakes up, coincidentally). Fun stuff.

Katherine likes the Banana Splits.

Raining, pouring, snoring

Of course, after I got that fixed, suddenly I couldn’t update the blog any further. It appears that putting the extensions on “locked” the blog html files, so that the…

Of course, after I got that fixed, suddenly I couldn’t update the blog any further. It appears that putting the extensions on “locked” the blog html files, so that the Blogger FTP couldn’t update them. I had to go into a separate FTP program, copy the files down to my hard drive, delete them from the site (this, evidently, was still allowable), then copy them back up. Hey presto, everything works.

Bizarre. But another technical problems solved by The Dave. Nice to know all of those skills haven’t atrophied.

Feeling a little better today. Fever is still there, but diminished, as is the snotty head. I’m trying to do some work from home today, somewhat hampered because our internal network is blocked from the Internet (major Nimda virus problems, complete lockdown until all servers and all workstations are validated as up-to-date and immunized).

Slosh, slosh, slosh …

See previous post on my head and its contents. So this was a perfect day for the host/DNS cutover from DollarHost to Averdata. This blog was down for most of…

See previous post on my head and its contents.

So this was a perfect day for the host/DNS cutover from DollarHost to Averdata. This blog was down for most of the day because I was trying to use Explorer’s FTP, which kind of masks the whole directory shuffle that Averdata does, which meant I was not creating the directories I thought I was.

Mail seems to be connecting (no errors), but I haven’t seen any come in all day, which is worrisome. If nothing comes in tonight, I’ll check with the Averdata people.

None of the other web content is up, which is okay in a way because I haven’t pointed anyone over to www.hill-kleerup.org as of yet. On the other hand, evidently all the uploads I did the other night went into the other directory, which is a tad annoying.

That and I managed to “ruin” B5 Season 4 by leaving a tape cued up between two episodes, rather than to be the beginning of the tape. Not a huge problem, except that it was the Big, Climactic Battle tape, so Doyce went straight to the happy post-war party tape, and kept waiting for the flashback …

Slosh, slosh, slosh …

Back in the saddle again

And so life begins to return to a more normal-like state. Back in the office this morning. Doug’s back in this week, too, which means I can take off one…

And so life begins to return to a more normal-like state. Back in the office this morning. Doug’s back in this week, too, which means I can take off one of my several hats. Day-to-day concerns, like calling in on the furnace, setting up eye appointments, etc., become the norm, rather than 24-hour news coverage.

Which is how it should be.

Still, folks continue to natter on about what happened, what we are doing, and where we are going. Which is good, too, since once we stop talking about it, we let the agenda be controlled by others.

I’m neither in the camp of the “The Guvviment is going to use this to take away all our rights, slaughter innocent abroad, and tattoo barcodes on our foreheads” folks, nor am I in the camp of the “Nuke ’em all until the glow and let God sort ’em out” people. I’m in the camp that’s ready to act, not sure what that action should be, but willing to entertain reasonable ideas. Which is where I suspect most folks are.

Jackie and Doyce were over last night, as we try desperately to catch up with this past season of Buffy and Angel. I would laugh at Doyce’s efforts to make this happen, if we weren’t also participating in those efforts.

Got an e-mail from Wil thanking me for mentioning his site on my blog. Which is kind of weird in a bunch of ways it shouldn’t be, and kind of neat in a bunch of ways that are too geeky to go into right now.

Well, daylight’s burning (not really, it’s cloudy out), and time’s a-wastin’ (quite true). Let’s move ’em out.

Editorial Pages

By the way, Margie usually doesn’t like me reading the editorial pages on Sunday. She says it raises my blood pressure unnecessarily. She’s probably right. She’s good that way….

By the way, Margie usually doesn’t like me reading the editorial pages on Sunday. She says it raises my blood pressure unnecessarily. She’s probably right. She’s good that way.

Good, bad and ugly

One of the few things I regret in my move, several years ago, from LA to Denver, is losing the Los Angeles Times as a paper. Or, rather, being stuck…

One of the few things I regret in my move, several years ago, from LA to Denver, is losing the Los Angeles Times as a paper. Or, rather, being stuck with the local papers (the Denver Post and the Rocky Mountain News, now quasi-joined in their mediocrity) instead of the Times.

An aspect of the papers that very much stands out in contrast is the reader letters. Granted, there are plenty of yahoos, dimbulbs, and people who see the world in sound bites in LA, too. Probably more of them. But the larger population there allows the editors of the Times to be a pit more picky-and-choosey as to what letters they print. Thus, on the whole, they are a more articulate, and, usually, more thoughtful bunch. It’s not a fair sample, to be sure, but it’s better reading.

From this morning’s letters:

“If we are to be secure … we must make them fear us more than death and more than dishonor. Our response to their attack on us must be so brutal, so violent and deadly that they will cut their own throats before daring to attack us again. And since they are obviously willing to sacrifice their own lives to kill us, we must be willing also to sacrifice the lives of their famiy, friends and neighbors.”

“Most of the world’s problems stem from religion. If you go from the Crusades to the persecution of the Jews in World War II to what’s going on in Ireland between Protestants and Catholics now and then this. The institution of the church is the root of all problems in this world.”

“It is time for an end to politically correct speech about radical Islam. The truth is that it is a cancer that feeds on violence and murder. It is totally alien to Judeo-Christian morality. The children and grandchildren of the free world are not safe until it is eradicated.”

And this gem from the other end of the political spectrum, as given by an anti-globalist activist from San Francisco to the Wall Street Journal: “We’re supercritical of [Tuesday’s] terrorists’ scorn for human life. Why couldn’t they have done what they did on a Sunday? There are always ways to make allowances for people’s lives.”

It’s the Silly Season, folks. Only problem is, too many of the Sillies have access to guns, or to Congressmen.

On the bright side, as asinine, if not infuriating, as much of the above was to me, most of the commentary, and the letters, were within the bounds of sanity. Messages of tolerance, of compassion, of determination, and of justice. Those are the voices we need to be listening to.

On another note, we went to visit Rick & Amanda’s new house yesterday afternoon, up near Longmont. As we traveled along I-25 north of the city, the continued suburban sprawl was apparent. Indeed, Rick & Amanda live in brand-new block of houses, with vacant agricultural lots (with zoning change signs festooned upon them) in all directions.

It’s a problem that has needled Colorado for decades — how to accomodate those who wish to come here, adding to our economy and diversity, while also preserving the rural and mountain character that makes this such a neat place to live.

In some ways, the dangers, threats, fear and devastation of the past week render such considerations trivial. And yet … these problems, and so many others in our society, the ones that in any relatively sane week would have been our headlines, remain. The horror of terrorism, and the difficult, complex decisions we need to make regarding it and our future, do not replace these issues on our list of Things to Do. They simply add to that list. The same way a serious illness in the family doesn’t mean the bills don’t have to be paid, the furnace doesn’t have to be replaced, or the baby doesn’t have to be fed.

Life goes on. We have to along with it, handling what it throws at us. The alternative is not really an option.

Future interests

Future interests 1. Doyce continues to GM away at a host of campaigns (so to speak). 2. We’re off to Rick and Amanda’s for their housewarming this afternoon. 3. Got…

Future interests

1. Doyce continues to GM away at a host of campaigns (so to speak).
2. We’re off to Rick and Amanda’s for their housewarming this afternoon.
3. Got a nice blog response from Mary (hi, Mary!).

Conclusion: I really need to get back focused on my hanging-in-limbo supers campaign.

You have been warned.

Kids! Don’t try this at home!

I discovered something interesting last night. If you … Go get a big jug of grapefruit juice from the garage. Shake it up. Take off the cap and set the…

I discovered something interesting last night. If you …

  • Go get a big jug of grapefruit juice from the garage.
  • Shake it up.
  • Take off the cap and set the jug on the kitchen counter.
  • Pick up a magazine to read.
  • Go get a glass.
  • Fill the glass with ice.
  • Go back to counter.
  • Set the magazine down, but continue reading it.
  • Pick up the jug of grapefruit juice and give it a good shake …

… then you can spread grapefruit juice over an incredible area, including counter, floor, and self.

Remember, kids. Klutzmasters are trained professionals. Don’t do this at home unless Mommy tells you to.

Time to be anti-social

Or moreso than usual. Margie’s off to her D&D game tonight (wasn’t the last time when I started this thing, eons ago?), Squiggy will be down to sleep in an…

Or moreso than usual. Margie’s off to her D&D game tonight (wasn’t the last time when I started this thing, eons ago?), Squiggy will be down to sleep in an hour or two, and then it’s a quiet night of blowing things up … in video games.

It’s cathartarific!

Or maybe I’m just not getting enough sleep

Princess has been teething for the past week or two something fierce. So that — plus the diaper rash that comes with teething — has meant she’s been fussy and…

Princess has been teething for the past week or two something fierce. So that — plus the diaper rash that comes with teething — has meant she’s been fussy and up and down multiple times each night. And since Margie’s had this low-grade illness, that means both of us have been up and down multiple times each night, responding to cries of distress.

I went to bed at 9:30 last night. If not for the hour-plus I was up around midnight to one, getting up at 5 wouldn’t seem so bad, right?

Thousand Yard Stare

I am, I think, obsessing over this. And it’s really grinding me down. I know a lot of people who are picking right up, heading back to their daily lives,…

I am, I think, obsessing over this. And it’s really grinding me down.

I know a lot of people who are picking right up, heading back to their daily lives, and moving onward.

I’m feeling progressively tired. Shell-shocked, perhaps. I listen to the news, with avid passivity. I find myself worrying about what move folks will make next. I can concentrate on this, kind of, but not on the work I need I know to do. Bills to pay. Employee reviewed to review. Documents to write, edit, send in for approval. Deadlines to meet.

Not this week.

Oddly enough, I seem less scared than many. I know of several people in my company who have mentioned how much they do not want to fly any time soon. That really doesn’t bother me. I actually have a morbid interesting in checking out the security measures, seeing how the airport experience is different.

And flying. I like flying. Given the tens of thousands of flights daily, that on one day four of them went horribly, horribly wrong is not, to my mind, a reason to give up flying.

A lot of people seem to disagree. That does not bode well for the industry.

Why is this affecting me so much?

Well, for one thing, I’m a control freak. I know this comes as a shock to those of you who know me. I like things orderly, planned, predictable. Not that I don’t mind some excitement, but the fundamentals damned well better be what I expect them to be, or else trauma ensues. I’ve tried to overcome this, and I think, socially, I’m better at not letting this make me instinctively turn down any spontaneous change in plans. Really.

But I do like order. And this is chaos. I like to know how things are going to progress, or at least make assumptions of same. That was probably one of the hardest parts of my divorce — that all those expectations of how things would be 5, 10, 20 years in the future were — well, as defunct as sf movies of the New York skyline now are.

Disturbing.

Another big reason is that a cornerstone of my life is that reasoned discourse will triumph. I am convinced that, if you can just get people talking with each other, you can get them to understand each other. And if they understand each other, they can find an outcome that satisfies both.

Yeah, right. I know it’s not true. At least not always true. But it always upsets the hell out of me when I see it break down. Another reason why my divorce was traumatic, I suppose — and a reason why such an ultimate act of violence just freaks the hell out of me. Because that’s how I try to live my life, and here’s someone saying, “Screw you, I’m gonna do the exact opposite.”

Deeply disturbing.

Another reason I came up with after I had driven a bit further (this was all scribbled on a torn-off bit of fast food bag whilst driving home tonight) was that I’m angry. I’m really, really angry. I’m furious at those — wastes of organic compounds. I’m bloody furious at what they did, at why they did it, at all the lives snuffed out so unjustly, at how it has scarred us all … and at the violation of the safety and security and constancy and hope I so much want to have.

I am so furious, I can hardly bear to voice it.

And that’s the problem. Because I don’t voice my anger very often. Oh, over safe things, perhaps. In controlled circumstances. When it won’t offend, or drive off, or embarrass.

No, really. I can be angry at others, not in the room, and voice it. Almost never at those in the room.

But this anger … this anger is so profound, so burning, churning, yearning for vengeance, for lashing out, for demonization, for dehumanizing, for hurting anyone I even think might be a part of what happened, that I don’t feel like I dare let it out. That to let loose that spirit would alter me in so profound a way that I would never be the same. And I’ve already gone through that once this week.

Still, it leaks out. Anger usually does.

I’m covering for the local IT manager while he is out this week. At the same time as this national tragedy, he’s facing a personal tragedy, the death of his mother-in-law on Monday.

So today I get autoforwarded from his mailbox a message in which …

Well, let’s just say that a local manager was bitching in the most uncomplimentary tones (and untrue allegations) over the support he and his people have received.

I have always run our group as a service organization. So has Doug (the present IT manager). I knew this was screwy, because I’d heard all the tales of the long hours spent in supporting these people, the frequent changes in deployment schedules, the places where our peoples’ hands were tied, the “above & beyond” that our best people had gone in this effort.

And this had all been escalated up the management chain. And the guy who handles site support for half the global organization was pinging Doug to find out WTF, and to get the details before responding to this litany of complaints.

I was calm. No, really. I called in the folks who had been directly involved. I went over the list of complaints. I got the details. I saw, from one guy who is a gem among techies, who frequently, almost embarrassingly, gets kudos from the staff about how he’s been helpful, been supportive, provided exemplary service — I saw the dismay, the disbelieving defensiveness, the way he took this as a personal attack.

And I lost it.

Or I lost it as much as I ever do at work.

I wrote back an e-mail to the inquiring IT manager, copying the person who had forwarded this on to him, refuting every single charge. In the most definite tones I could.

And I actually included the phrase, “This is bullshit,” as I reached the bottom.

Which, for those who know me, must indicate some deep-seated derangement, because I am usually polite to a fault, diplmatic to the extreme. The more perturbed I am, the more formal and careful in tone I am. I am infamous for this in the company, at least from anyone who gets e-mails from me.

This all sounds really silly, as I think of it. But it was indicative of how much anger I’ve got bubbling around in my gut.

Feh.

No pithy conclusion. Gotta work it out somehow.

Maybe I’ll write some more blogs ….

A return to normalcy

My folks finally hit the road today, headed back to California in a rental car, since DIA is still not yet really open. A nice, fun visit, but a long…

My folks finally hit the road today, headed back to California in a rental car, since DIA is still not yet really open. A nice, fun visit, but a long one, too.

I look forward to a nice, quiet evening with Margie and Katherine.

Up-to-the-minute confusion

Well, at least two of our offices (besides Oak Ridge) have decided to close, along with a number of DoD-related jobsites. My folks are in the main terminal building at…

Well, at least two of our offices (besides Oak Ridge) have decided to close, along with a number of DoD-related jobsites.

My folks are in the main terminal building at DIA. The concourses have been evacuated.

Margie is hearing on the TV news that cars going to the airport are being turned away at the old toll plaza. Doyce called to say he’d heard that folks at the airport were being bussed out to the old toll plaza.

Called my folks on my Mom’s cell, and, amazingly, got through. They’re being told that people are being allowed in to pick up people, but that the airport is being closed.

Meanwhile, Doyce mentions that he’s hearing that the FAA doesn’t know where five planes are still. Though whether that’s Sinister or simply A Sign The ATC System Needs To Be Replaced is not clear to me.

This day is increasingly becoming more and more Looking Glass in style. Margie mentioned that “they” have closed the road across the top of Cherry Creek Dam. Now, granted, if the dam were to somehow be blown open, there would be quite a bit of death and destruction. But the chances seem awfully slim. Margie noted, “Better safe than sorry,” but, by the same token, if we do too much squawking about like chickens with heads cut off, we simply aid and abet “the enemy.”

Still, I suppose the folks in the Denver PD (or whomever “they” are) are looking around desperately for something to do other than sit there and listen to the ongoing depressing news.

Catching up is hard to do

Well, back to work today. The ‘Rents are off to the airport this morning, and I’m already at the office, trying to play catch-up. Mercifully for y’all, this means no…

Well, back to work today. The ‘Rents are off to the airport this morning, and I’m already at the office, trying to play catch-up. Mercifully for y’all, this means no long, drawn-out blogs about my religious life or similar matters. At least, not until this evening.

Doyce reassures me, by the by, that the template stuff is Blogger’s fault, not mine. Keen. So either my template will get changed sometime today, or not.

Who Is Your Weblogger Twin?

Who Is Your Weblogger Twin? This site supposedly lets you find your “weblogger twin,” which, presumably, means that, based on a dozen questions, you can find some other blogs you…

Who Is Your Weblogger Twin?

This site supposedly lets you find your “weblogger twin,” which, presumably, means that, based on a dozen questions, you can find some other blogs you will enjoy. The author, Firda, has managed to get everyone in the bloggerverse buzzing over this — though she herself calls it a “silly quiz.”

My top five “twins” are:

# 1 Firda of Weblog Wannabe
# 2 Caroline of Prolific.org
# 3 Caterina of Caterina.net
# 4 Meg of Not So Soft
# 5 Nikolai of Fairvue Central

Of these, only one looks like one I would be liable to visit again. I’ll not go into further detail (professional courtesy), but not much twinny stuff going on here.

Margie rocks

Margie is, even as I write, on the phone once again with the dimbulbs from Qwest, expressing her dismay with their dismal activities during our recent attempts to get DSL…

Margie is, even as I write, on the phone once again with the dimbulbs from Qwest, expressing her dismay with their dismal activities during our recent attempts to get DSL installed. One of these days soon I’ll chronicle it here.

She rocks.

And this while she does not feel well.

I don’t tell her often enough how much I appreciate her.

Update: Margie got them to give us free service on both our phone lines for two months. And got a chance to vent. Bleah.

We have an order in for later this month with Sprint Broadband. Stay tuned.

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.

The ‘Rents are here

My parents are in town for the next few days. Which probably means a reduction in blogging, though it did mean that they took the Squig downstairs when she woke…

My parents are in town for the next few days. Which probably means a reduction in blogging, though it did mean that they took the Squig downstairs when she woke up, allowing Margie and me to sleep in a bit.

The Blackberry is forwarding mail just fine. I’ve already responded to three critical work-related e-mails I would have missed otherwise. I am not convinced that this is a Good Thing.

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.