Motorcycle Permit

I passed!

With a permit, I can only drive during the day and without passengers.

For those of you who don’t know, we bought a motorcycle (a royal blue Honda Shadow 600vlx) last weekend. There was no way I was going to be the wife who owned a bike but didn’t know how to ride it! Actually, I feel more comfortable with riding (behind Tom or on my own) after reading the safety manual. I think the trickier part will be just being more mindful of being seen by other vehicles.

The next step towards a license is taking a motorcycle class. Hopefully, I can get into the same one my brothers in law are taking! Bikes are provided for the class. They teach you how to completely operate the bike. It’s like a driver’s training class.

In order to get a motorcycle license through the class, one must pass the course and then take a written and driving test.

It’s hard to believe that I’m pursuing a motorcycle license.

Lately, I’ve resolved that I need to be less fearless of things. I also determined that, to overcome the fear, it was OKAY to yield my learning style and take classes. I’m the kind of person that needs to see something a few times in order to grasp a new skill. I am not an auditory learner! Rather than just make excuses as to why I can’t learn something, I decided I need to try to find a way to learn that helps it “stick”.

Heh. This being said, my hands still sweat when I’m getting on a tall, downward escalator. I don’t think any amount of classes will get rid of this fear ;-)

I Prefer a Shot of Grape Juice

Tara Barthel introduced me to this song on her blog.

Musically, the song is a little bland to my ears (Of course, when reading my opinion, you must consider that my favorite genre is classic rock).

However, lyrically the song is culturally relevant and thought provoking.

As I watched and listened, I was reminded of something I often take for granted: how scary it is to live without Christ.

Christ is the Prince of Peace. Without Christ, there is no true peace. Peace is not something that can be something manufactured by following rules of tolerance or political correctness. These things only mask hurt, worry, rage and feelings of loneliness within.

Trying to live without Christ is like moving through life with a migraine headache. Every sound, ever movement is painfully magnified.

This goes for both non-Christians and for Christians who refuse to humble themselves before God and view him as Lord of their life.

To this end, I appreciated how New Law mentioned communion. Churches are oftentimes more concerned about the tolerance of aberration, and set the example of disregarding scripture by leading people in this way, than they are about offending God by changing the way they serve the Eucharist. When we are fully submitting to God, we don’t have to rationalize our actions or look for the loopholes. Wine means wine.

How tiresome it is to try justify ourselves to God. How tiresome it is to take on the attributes of God. How tiresome it is to try to earn our salvation or to “be saved” on our own terms. If this is the attitude that characterizes our lives, how can we really say we’re saved? Saved means saved. If we could do it on our own, we wouldn’t need saving.

The Bible says in Matthew 11:28-30, “Come to Me, all who are weary and heavy-laden, and I will give you rest. Take My yoke upon you and learn from Me, for I am gentle and humble in heart, and YOU WILL FIND REST FOR YOUR SOULS. For My yoke is easy and My burden is light.”

When we trust in God, we no longer have to be “bossed around by our fear.”(< -- link to a practical application of this thought) 1 John 4:17-19 "By this, love is perfected with us, so that we may have confidence in the day of judgment; because as He is, so also are we in this world. There is no fear in love; but perfect love casts out fear, because fear involves punishment, and the one who fears is not perfected in love. We love, because He first loved us." Continue reading “I Prefer a Shot of Grape Juice”

How to Cook a Wolf : Contentment, Family Menu Planning and Cooking Simply With Love

How to Cook a Wolf by M.F.K. Fisher, attacked my curiosity when I saw the title amongst the cookbooks at the local library.

(My faithful readers know that book titles have a strange power over me – sometimes with life changing results.)

First published in 1942, when wartime shortages were at their worst, the premise is learning to make due and, more importantly, be content with very little.

The “wolf” is a metaphor for the feelings of poverty, particularly the growling of an empty stomach.

Do you know anyone who lived through the Great Depression? Perhaps a mother or grandmother?

Reading this book is bringing back memories of my dear late grandmother-in-law, Trudy Seymour. My eyes well with tears even as I write her name. She was the queen of thriftiness. She scrimped, saved and rationed everything she had. Her basement was stocked with enough food to feed a small army, with everything from canned vegetables to Crystal Pepsi (that had been discontinued years before). She was also notably generous.

Maybe you have a Grandma Trudy in your life. This quote will make you love and appreciate them all the more:

There are very few men and women, I suspect, who cooked and marketed their way through the past war without losing forever some of the nonchalant extravagance of the twenties. They will feel, until their final days on earth, a kind of culinary caution: butter, no matter how unlimited, is a precious substance not lightly to be wasted; meats, too, and eggs, and all the far -brought spices of the world, take on a new significance, having once been so rare. And, that is good, for there can be no more shameful carelessness than with the food we eat for life itself. When we exist without thought or thanksgiving we are not men, but beasts.

For all the self-help books out there on the self-imposed woes of managing greed and excess, this book is convicting, refreshing and even freeing.

I’m only into the second chapter, “How to Be Sage Without Hemlock”, which deglamorizes the influence of *”slick magazines” on the housewife. Instead of making simple, hearty meals, wives are faced with the panic of trying to fashion a gourmet experience at every meal. Fisher writes about the expectation that it creates, even in our young children. She noted that children growing up with plenty say things like “what kind of pudding will we have after dinner?” as if they have a right to dessert.

She writes about meal planning rituals, “You read magazine articles filled with complicated charts and casual references to thiamin, riboflavin, non-organic nutritional nutritional essentials and International Units. You try to be serious about them all, and with a dictionary and a pencil you fill in at least the first week on a monthly chart, putting little circles, triangles and arrows for minerals and vitamins and such, until you see practically the same chart in a rival magazine and realize that it has switched symbols on you.”

While her words may seem harsh and even cynical, I do think they are a wake up call. How true are her words! I confess that I have been brought to tears while hiding behind my stacks of magazines and cookbooks, wishing that I had more free time. I do believe that women should strive for excellence as they serve their family – but as I read this, I am convicted that it may not have to involve a trip to both Wegmans and Trader Joe’s to find expensive, rare ingredients for each everyday meal on the menu.

Her answer is to create simple, healthy meals (for which she provides recipes throughout the book) and to have so much simple food on the table that people can concentrate on the fellowship and not on being amateur food critiques.

Better is a dish of vegetables where love is
Than a fattened ox served with hatred.
– Proverbs 15:17

* This is unbelievably funny to me – at the same time I was writing this, my husband was upstairs making this comment on my Martha Stewart magazine collection. And no, dear, if you’re reading this, it does not necessarily follow from the above epiphany that I will be canceling my subscription any time soon ;-)

How often when they find a sage,
As sweet as Socrates or Plato;
They hand him hemlock for his wage,
Or bake him like a sweet potato!

-from Taking the Longer View by American humorist Don Marquis

Snow and No Heat!

I woke up this morning around 5am and noticed something was wrong – NO HEAT!

Overnight, we had quite a snow storm (it’s still snowing, actually). These things never happen on mild-weathered days.

Not wanting to cause mass-panic, I put an extra blanket on each kid and let them sleep.

It was cold but bearable, so I waited till 8am to call the repairman.

Despite the snowy roads, the repairman was here within an hour. He flushed out the clogged hoses that circulate the water in our radiators through the boiler and then waited for the water to heat and the radiators began to warm.

This isn’t the first time that it was clogged.

A year a ago last week, we had the same thing happen.

Tom was in Japan. It was below freezing outside and very windy.

The children and I had been visiting at my in-laws and we came home around 10pm. After getting the kids in bed, I sat down to go over the bills and realized it was quite cold!

I tried to figure it out for about an hour. I replaced the batteries in the thermostat for good measure, checked to make sure all the switches were “on” and bled the air in the radiators.

I couldn’t think of anything else I could do on my own to fix the problem and finally called the the repairman at 11:30pm.

He came over and it took about three hours to fix. The clog was in a little hidden hose and was very hard to find.

When he found it, he emptied the debris, which was quite substantial compared to this year’s, into my utility sink.

The next afternoon, I was rinsing out the sink and the water wasn’t draining. The debris wouldn’t “tap out” of the strainer into the trash. I had to clean it out by hand.

I pinched the slimy blackness between my fingers. It crunched.

Instantly, I realized what it was: two dead mouse skeletons in a compacted furry dirty mush. Ooo… I shudder just thinking about it. I picked the little bones out of the holes in the strainer and then bleached my hands. I avoided eating finger food for a while after that!

Well, I’m praising God the house is warming up. Now it’s time to go play in the snow!

If anyone in eastern Pennsylvania is looking for a heating and air conditioning company (they both install systems and repair them), I recommend Absolute Heating & Cooling in Parkesburg. Both times we called them, they were prompt when called and tenacious until the job was complete. The employees are professional and kind. Today, the guy didn’t seem to mind that the children sat on the steps and watched him while he worked. He answered all their questions about the heater, and even laughed at the 20 “Why did the chicken cross the road?” joke variations they told him.

Concealed Weapons on Campus

As sad as I was to hear about the Northern Illinois University shooting, it didn’t come as a surprise.

If you think anti-gun legislation is working, take a look at this wikipedia entry listing school shootings in recent history. Remember the Nickel Mines Amish School shooting? There have been eight school shootings since then! Needless to say, this heinous crime is no stranger to the evening news.

Clearly, there must be something to deter these shootings from happening.

As you think about solutions, ask yourself this: If a would-be shooter knew that fellow classmates were armed, how likely would they be to go on a shooting rampage?

Not very likely.

Part of the sick thrill seems to be killing those who are helplessly unarmed. As if the idea of, “I’m hurting. I want to die. My life is so disgusting and I can’t think of a positive legacy so why not take the lives of innocent people and go out with a bang? At least I’ll be in the history books for something” is all the license they need. Such reasoning forces me to make contributions to the cuss jar. Let’s give these murders (and no, Ms. Baty, Steven Kazmierczak was not a “victim, too”) something to fear more than dying an unknown.

Keep in mind that the shooters need not necessarily be killed. They could be disarmed by a non-fatal shot or could be intimidated by the drawn weapons of gun-carrying students into dropping their weapon and standing down.

Here’s a current story with a sidebar on the current legislation regarding concealed weapons on campus.

Continue reading “Concealed Weapons on Campus”