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We get comments

Or maybe we will if the “Mail me” code below works. It’s not real comments (and won’t be, until I move my ISP), but it will at least allow folks…

Or maybe we will if the “Mail me” code below works. It’s not real comments (and won’t be, until I move my ISP), but it will at least allow folks who think I’m really keen (or full of crap) to let me know that.

A note from the installation instructions …

… for the ceiling fan: NOTE: The important safety precuations and instructions appearing in the manual are not meant to cover all possible cnditions and situations that may occur. It…

… for the ceiling fan:

NOTE: The important safety precuations and instructions appearing in the manual are not meant to cover all possible cnditions and situations that may occur. It must be understood that common sense and caution are necessary factors in the installation and operation of this fan. [Emphasis mine.]

Praise the Lord, and Thank the Great Maker that someone realizes that “common sense and caution” should be part of any installation (and operation) instructions for pretty much anything. And shame on the American public for requiring such instructions.

From the sacred to the profane

We got the ceiling fan up. And operating. Cue “Dave does the Happy Ceiling Fan Dance.” Use your imagination….

We got the ceiling fan up. And operating.

Cue “Dave does the Happy Ceiling Fan Dance.” Use your imagination.

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.

I am sooooooo sore

I am sooooooo sore Very. Very. Sore. Those who pooh-pooh the physical aspects of golf should play 18 on foot. Ouch. But I got a 49 on the back nine….

I am sooooooo sore

Very. Very. Sore.

Those who pooh-pooh the physical aspects of golf should play 18 on foot.

Ouch.

But I got a 49 on the back nine.

49

49 49. Forty-nine. Seven squared. 49. Forty-frickin-nine. Less than half of 100. 49. Back Nine. 49. Hoody-frickin-hoo….

49

49. Forty-nine.

Seven squared.

49.

Forty-frickin-nine.

Less than half of 100.

49. Back Nine. 49.

Hoody-frickin-hoo.

On feeling better when contemplating one’s failings

When chipping, I have a tendency to go from feast to famine. Either I give it a little, bitty scoop, sending it dribbling a few yards — or I whack…

When chipping, I have a tendency to go from feast to famine. Either I give it a little, bitty scoop, sending it dribbling a few yards — or I whack it with the edge of the face, sending it flying several hundred yards over and beyond the green.

Well, watching golf last week, I watched someone on the pro tour doing the former. Twice. In a row. Insert picture of Dave doing the little Guilty Pleasure Over Someone’s Misfortune Dance.

When Doyce and I went out a few weeks ago, he decided that his ball getting caught in a tree was a sign that the Golf Gods did not want him to finish out the hole.

Well, Tiger did the same thing yesterday. Triple-bogied the hole. Seven off the lead at the Canadian Open. Feel better, guy.

On knowing when to hold ’em, as well as when to fold ’em

On knowing when to hold ’em, as well as when to fold ’em Dice were not my friends last night. Two good rolls (including a spectacular … initiative roll), accompanied…

On knowing when to hold ’em, as well as when to fold ’em

Dice were not my friends last night. Two good rolls (including a spectacular … initiative roll), accompanied a bevy of rolls in the single digits.

In the low single digits.

In the thumbs-on-both-hands-if-I’m-lucky digits.

It’s fortunate we were out of the asteroid field when I took the helm.

Okay, enough geeky goodness.

It’s been raining since shortly after I came home until now. My Dad, a noted Weather Channel addict, says it’s just about blown through. A good thing, that, since our tee time is three hours (hack).

Golf and Star Wars RPG. Two great oddball passtimes, rolled into one blog. Who could ask for more?

So a man walks into a ceiling fan …

Ouch. It seems we always do Big Home Improvement Projects when the in-laws come to visit. So when my folks came this time, I thought, hey, why not a home…

Ouch.

It seems we always do Big Home Improvement Projects when the in-laws come to visit. So when my folks came this time, I thought, hey, why not a home improvement project (of at least moderate size) for them.

Aha. The ceiling fan.

We’ve been wanting to put a fan up in the breakfast room for some time. We don’t have a/c in the house — most folks in Denver don’t, and there aren’t more than a few dozen days per year when you really wish you had some. Well, maybe more if you’re working from home.

So, now that summer is waning and we’re finally getting a few brisk (to coin a phrase) evenings, it’s time to put up a ceiling fan.

We’ve had the fan, and a between-the-joists bracket — for three or four months. Time to put it up.

And to learn, once again, why I don’t tackle these projects on my own.

Turn off the power, first.

Go up and pull off the existing, chintzy ceiling fixture.

Hmmm. Odd. I expected this to be a simple electrical box nailed to an adjoining joist. Well, there’s a joist, next to it, but no connector. Just some screws at the top.

Wait. Not screws. Rivets. Odd.

Call Jim, my Father-In-Law Master of Things Home Improvementish. He thinks its already mounted on some sort of bracket between the joists. Cool.

Assemble the fan. Big fan. Assembles easily, though.

Getting ready to mount it. Hmmmm, what’s this next step?

Remote control. Yes, this ceiling fan has a remote control. And that’s good, since we only have a single power line coming up here (otherwise we could have separate switches for light and fan). And the way that works … is with a modules the size of a garage door opener, with wires for the incoming power, then wires for the fan and light, and a little antennae for the remote control.

Y’see, this is really sort of a hybrid unit. It’s a ceiling fan with the wiring a ceiling fan would be. And it’s a remote control kit for a ceiling fan.

One problem. No way that little module is going to fit in the electrical box on the ceiling.

Okay, not a big problem. I can pry open some ceiling drywall next to the electrical box, make a slot for the remote unit to fit in, and still run the wires back through (I hope) to the box. Problem solved.

Cut, cut, cut. Be careful not to make anything that will be visible around the ceiling fan’s decorative bell around the electrical box.

Hmmmmm. That’s interesting. I can see up now past the electical box …

… and it’s simply has a hanger riveted to the top of it, that hanger in turn nailed to the joist. Seriously NFG to support a ceiling fan.

Damn.

Okay, drop back and punt. We’ll pull out the old electrical box, by brute force, then use the bracket-between-joists doodad up there, hang the enclosed electical box, all’s right with the world.

(What the hell is this old box made of? Some sort of bakelite, or quasi-ceramic material Weird.)

Okay. Slide the bracket-between-joists doodad up through the hole. This thing’s cool. It has a spiked bracket at each end to dig into the joist, and you turn the shaft in-between to extend it out. It starts out just short of 16″ — the usual distance for joists — and extends out to 24.

Unfortunately …

… the distance to the next joist is 11″.

Off to Home Depot to return that guy, see if there’s a different, shorter one. Alternative is to tear out more drywall, bracket/hang a 2×4 between the joists, and go from there. Or so suggests Jim, after another phoned consult.

A very, very helpful fellow at HD speculates that the bracket things — they have them there — could be cut down with a hacksaw. Duh. Buy a hacksaw for $5, come home, cut it off, lookin’ good …

…. And it’s time to go off and start off our new Star Wars campaign. Tale to be continued ….

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.

Just what I need, more reading material

Rey has a blog….

Rey has a blog.

Dave Kopel on Yates/Soltys

Dave Kopel on Yates/Soltys I am not a big fan of the National Review, being of a generally leftist bent when it comes to social issues. But this article has…

Dave Kopel on Yates/Soltys

I am not a big fan of the National Review, being of a generally leftist bent when it comes to social issues. But this article has a lot to say, and says it well.

The Blackberry Report

— The calendar application does not have a “snooze” on its alarms. – The docking cradle seems to be very sensitive — it’s easy to have it seem to be…

— The calendar application does not have a “snooze” on its alarms.

– The docking cradle seems to be very sensitive — it’s easy to have it seem to be in place just fine, and then notice that it’s still on “battery.”

+++ Mail is working. The mail filter software (defining rules as to which items should be forwarded) is sophisticated — indeed, it may be slicker than what Outlook itself uses.

— Reading formatted stuff is sucky. There’s no such thing as large text, bold text, underlined, text, etc. This may be a serious drawback.

++ The scroll-dial/click-to-enter control is neat (so is the escape button).

— Having to scroll horizontally and vertically to get the pointer to where I want is annoying compared to just pointing with a stylus.

More to come …

Comedy

At least one way of measuring the freedom of any society is the amount of comedy that is permitted, and clearly a healthy society permits more satirical comment than a…

At least one way of measuring the freedom of any society is the amount of comedy that is permitted, and clearly a healthy society permits more satirical comment than a repressive, so that if comedy is to function in some way as a safety release then it must obviously deal with these taboo areas. This is part of the responsibility we accord our licensed jesters, that nothing be excused the searching light of comedy. If anything can survive the probe of humour it is clearly of value, and conversely all groups who claim immunity from laughter are claiming special privileges which should not be granted.

— Eric Idle (b. 1943)

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.

Tech notes

Blackberry seems to be up and running, and I’m getting mail to it from the office. The next few days should be interesting, as I “tune” what level of mail…

Blackberry seems to be up and running, and I’m getting mail to it from the office. The next few days should be interesting, as I “tune” what level of mail forwarding I want with the thing, and as I (hopefully) get involved in how well it handles doing memos, etc. My first impression is that the interface is a bit cruder than the Palm’s, and the relative lack of alternative software to the basic aps is probably going to be annoying. On the other hand, it gets really good signal at both the house and the office (certainly better than my cell phone).

We shall see.

Fill it to the RIM

I got my Blackberry this afternoon. Now I just have to figure out how the damned thing ties in with my mail. Unfortunately, the other fellow in the office who…

I got my Blackberry this afternoon. Now I just have to figure out how the damned thing ties in with my mail.

Unfortunately, the other fellow in the office who has one is trying to get our network problems resolved. Which means my consultation with him will be, of necessity, limited.

We’ll see. I’d love to have it working for the weekend.

Make Mine Molly

I love Molly Ivins. In a “I like to read what she writes” sort of way, not in any way that Margie needs to worry about. She’s witty, she’s clever,…

I love Molly Ivins. In a “I like to read what she writes” sort of way, not in any way that Margie needs to worry about. She’s witty, she’s clever, she’s incisive, and she’s not afraid to poke fun at anyone in the political spectrum — though most of her barbs tend to be aimed toward the right, which is just fine by me.

Yahoo! and Intellivu both carry her columns, but the home is at Creators Syndicate. You can find her current column at that site. A recent one (the most recent, at this writing) is “The Fatal Weakness of Libertarian Thinking”, a fine example of her wit and insight.

She wrote an entertaining biography of Dubya prior to the election, Shrub. I enjoyed it. Margie enjoyed it. My folks (staunch conservatives) enjoyed it. And we all probably had nightmares about it.

Big, huge, honking ones

With occasional bonuses of additional ones, too….

With occasional bonuses of additional ones, too.

They should be paying me bigger ones

I really hate dealing with personnel problems….

I really hate dealing with personnel problems.