Thursday, May 29, 2008

House & Garden Adventures

These last few months, we've been doing projects around the house & gardens. Here's a few glimpses of some of the most recent.

We mulched last week. Found out you can get free mulch from our township--sweet!
I think it was the biggest mulch pile I've seen in my life.
Matt's parents wanted to help with some house projects while they were here:
So we scraped a lot of popcorn ceiling, patched & sanded plaster, ripped up carpet...
...and worked on scraping the linoleum off that was glued to the wood floors under the carpet. BLAH. We're wanting to refinish the wood on all the landings and steps. Note the white stuff everywhere: let's just say clean up after all this took probably 2 hrs.

So there's a little glimpse for you all!

Wednesday, May 21, 2008

family is coming to visit!

tomorrow, matt's tribe starts to arrive and will be spending the weekend with us. we have grand visions of walking to central market, laughing a lot, touring the local winery, relaxing, and generally having a great time.

i (heart) city life. cant' wait to show off our new place & the city we are growing to love.

Tuesday, May 20, 2008

Collaboration


I’ve been thinking lately about collaboration.

I just finished a book, finally! I read like 7 books at a time, so I’m AWESOME at starting ones, but not nearly as great about finishing them—at least not quickly. But I finished Tough Choices by Carly Fiorina, a great memoir from a talented businessperson—lots of helpful thoughts on leadership.

As I read the afterword, this particular paragraph really stuck out to me:

“A company’s [or any group of people] ability to look at new ideas and new solutions is linked directly with the heterogeneity of its management team. If a management team is homogeneous or becoming less diverse, it means people are favoring consensus and conformity in their meetings and decision-making processes, rather than encouraging the creative tension that comes from differences in perspective, experience, and yes, race and gender as well. This is why real diversity is in everyone’s interests: better decisions come from understanding and hashing out the differences in people’s points of view. If everyone thinks in the same ways and agrees quickly, decision-making may be faster, easier, and more pleasant, but it’s not as effective. Something important is going to be missed, some problem ignored, some risk underestimated. The only antidote to the dangers of ‘group think’ is a diverse team sitting around the table and a decision-making process that explicitly examines and debates every point of view.” (321-322)

And later she says a lot about how she views her role as a leader when she says “I have always been passionate about unlocking people’s potential, the power of collaboration, and the technology that enables both” (323).

I always talk about believing in humanity’s “Imago Dei”, our being created in the very image of God. How because of this, everyone has value, potential, and divine characteristics—as flawed and twisted by sin this all can be at times. But Carly’s view that everyone has something to bring to the table, no matter how different they are, really challenged me.

This takes Imago Dei to a whole new level for me because it doesn’t just mean I value my neighbor, or my husband, or the homeless man on the street. It means I have to believe that the person I don’t get along with, or the person I don’t feel on the same page with, has something I desperately need. That together, we can create something better than we can alone.

As young adults, I think we often feel at odds with the world around us. We have a sense of cynicism and discontent with the way things are. We rile up with passion, often coupled with bitterness, about how we want to change things, people, institutions, culture. And sometimes we think this is a righteous sort of indignation. Maybe it is. Maybe God wants to use each new generation to push in directions where we need to go. But somewhere in the process we lose sight of the fact that previous generations have something to bring to the table as well. That there can be good, even alongside the bad, in the way things are.

Now I keep thinking about this in those moments I feel at odds with others around me.

Sunday, May 18, 2008

another day

today i...

- drug myself out of bed still unrecovered from a week of crazy sleep schedules
- had chai from starbucks (no water--it's way better!)
- got up to harrisburg to check out my church's multi-site: sweet! so cool to see something god is doing and opportunity to be a part of it.
- met with the czech mission team matt & i are leading for the summer
- got to spend time just w/ katka over a frap @ barnes & nobles, planning for english camp
- drooled over 3 books i wanted to buy
- caught up on some piddly things around the house
- sat with my dog, read a magazine, and enjoyed the rain
- chatted with the neighbors on the porch
- hung out with our small group for a while and talked about what freedom means
- watched some tv

...and now i head to bed soon. good night all!

p

Friday, May 16, 2008

Everyone should be able to stay home on rainy days


Life should just shut down, and we should all be able to stay home in our sweatpants. Then, you can relax and do whatever you feel compelled to do on rainy days:
  • Sleep as late, or get up as early as you feel like
  • Run in the rain, smelling that lovely wet pavement smell and feeling the water dripping off your hair and running down your face
  • Stay in comfy sweats all day
  • Tip a chair back on the porch and read
  • Make a cup of hot tea in your favorite pottery mug
  • Open the window and listen to the drops fall
  • Snuggle with someone you love
  • Sit on the couch and have a TV or movie marathon
Well, that's what I would like to do anyway. I love rainy days. Today has been incessantly gray and wet, so I really wasn't very motivated to be at work all day. I was going to share Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's poem "The Rainy Day" with you all because I imagined it was a lovely picture of how I felt about rainy days, but it's actually a rather depressed poem. I decided not to.

What would you do if rainy days were holidays?

Tuesday, May 13, 2008

Eckhart Tolle's A New Earth


I'm not much for when the Christian community gets in an uproar over pop culture they feel like they should oppose:

Harry Potter
The Golden Compass
The DaVinci Code

I think it rubs me wrong for a few reasons:

1) It seems like they tend to pull things out of context

2) I hate the fact that Christians are sometimes known more for what they're against rather than the good things we are for

3) I think it portrays us as unwilling to interact with the culture we are a part of because we are so afraid it is going to taint us instead of being able to recognize the pieces of good that are often mixed right in with the bad. We throw the baby out with the bathwater so to speak.

The latest round of warning emails have been about is Eckert Tolle's "A New Earth". Recently launched to the forefront of the nation's attendance as Oprah not only endorses it, but is actively promoting the teaching.

So I've decided to read it for myself to see if it's all they're saying it is.