Wednesday, October 29, 2014

Do It Youself...

DIY...Do It Yourself.  That's big these days.  Check out TV and print ads from Big Box Hardware Stores and you'll see what I mean.

Got some free time this Saturday before the big game comes on ESPN? Get the materials for a new deck...and DIY.  You can take the flat-screen out on the completed deck and watch the game in the cool of the evening.

The shelving that the wife wants installed in the family room.  Take the specs to the friendly people at your local DIY store and before you know it, the whole project will be completed...by you.  Probably before lunch.

Got a whole crowd coming over for dinner?  Pull the DIY cookbook down from that new shelving the husband put up, and in no-time-flat you will be serving up a meal good enough to make it to the final round of "Chopped."


Do It Yourself. 

Here is a list of "Six Personality Traits to Admire and Acquire;" they come from an article by Brett Blumenthal, back in January of 2010.  They are all...every one of them...DIY projects:
#6...Humility
#5...Integrity
#4...Sensitivity
#3...Genuinness
#2...Tolerance
#1...Selflessness

Have at it.  Do It Yourself, and you will be an even better person than you already are.

Do It Yourself.

Here is how friend, Stan Abell (back in his BlueVine Collective days) said it:

Humans are on a life-long journey toward perfection, but not the A+ kind of perfection. Rather, the wholeness and fulfillment kind of perfection. Not the kind of perfection purchased by claiming and clinging to dusty creeds…but instead, participating in life-giving wholeness that comes from claiming, following, and perpetuating a message of hope, compassion, and unconditional love.

Have at it.  Do It Yourself, and you will be an even better person than you already are.  You've got plenty of time...it is, after all, a life-long DIY journey.

Do It Yourself.

Leonardo da Vinci (yeah, That Guy) wrote this:

Life is pretty simple: You do some stuff. Most fails. Some works. You do more of what works...Then you do something else. The trick is the doing something else.  

Have at it.  Do It Yourself!


Tuesday, October 21, 2014

Really Bad Ideas

I have had some really bad ideas in my time.  We will not recount them here.  Many of them no doubt began with something like, "Hey, wanna see somethin'?"

You have had some really bad ideas in your time, too.  Don't be all smug and feeling superior to the rest of us...we've all...all...all had some really bad ideas.

Radium and phosphorus toothpaste was a really bad idea.  No kidding, it was a real thing.

Infusing toilet paper with lotion was a really bad idea.

New Coke was a really bad idea.

You want more proof of really bad ideas?  Ok...but remember, you asked for it:
-Billy The Big Mouth Bass
-Mood Rings
-The Flowbee
So, you see what I'm saying here, right?

That going-over-the-falls-in-a-kayak thing is a really bad idea.

And, sadly, some folks have posited some really bad ideas about God.

"There but for the grace of God, go I," is a really bad idea about God.

"God said it, that settles it," is a really bad idea about God.

"God loves me more than God loves you," is a really bad idea about God.

"Christianity is the only way to God," is a really bad idea about God.

Believing that God had anything to do with the murder and genocide accounts in the Old Testament, is a really bad idea about God.

"God never gives you more than you can handle," is a really bad idea about God.

Accepting the notion that God will eternally damn any part of creation as a result of temporal sins, is a really bad idea about God.


And so, wanting to avoid really bad ideas about God, let me suggest this (paraphrasing a New Testament writer):

If its noble,
If its pure,
If its lovely,
If its just,
If its admirable,
If its excellent,
If its praiseworthy,
Well then, if its any-or-all of those things, then its a really good idea about God.

And really good ideas beat the heck outta really bad ideas every time!

Oh, BTW, Motorola's Razr cell phone was a really bad idea.  Not joking, it was known as the MotoRazr.




Tuesday, October 14, 2014

Time...Revisited.

I have blogged about time before.  At least three times, that I can recall.  Evidently I did not say all that I need to say about the subject in those previous postings...because here I go again.

Time.


It flies.  It crawls.
We mark it, waste it, bide it, and race against it.
We all have the same amount of it each day, each week, each month, each year; but none of us ever think we have enough of it.
We all use it differently…and what we do with it helps define and direct our lives.



In Thorton Wilder’s play “Our Town,” Emily dies and is given the opportunity to relive one day of her life.
Against the advice of those already buried in the cemetery, she chooses to go back to her 12th birthday.  She sees the hustle and bustle, the baking of the birthday cake, the wrapping of presents, and family members living in the same house but hardly noticing one another.  Finally, she cries out, “Oh Mama, just look at me one minute as though you really saw me…Just for a moment now we’re all together.  Mama, just for a moment we’re happy.  Let’s look at one another.”*

Saddened by this experience, Emily returns to the cemetery with a new understanding of time.  She says goodbye to clocks and all the things we do that are governed by clocks.  She says, “Oh earth, you’re just too wonderful for anyone to realize you!”  And she asks the play’s narrator, the Stage Manager, “Do any human beings ever realize life while they live it...every, every minute?”  And the Stage Manager says, “No…Saints and poets maybe…they do some.”

My advice about time in this blog-post?  Try to be a saint or a poet...and realize this time in your life while you are living it.
 
Don't wait...

Don’t wait until you finish school, Until you go back to school…
Until you lose ten pounds, Until you gain ten pounds…
Until you have kids, Until the kids leave the house…
Until you start work, Until you retire…
Until you get married, Until you get divorced…
Until Friday night, Until Sunday morning…
Until you get a new car or home, Until your car or home is paid off…
Until spring, until summer, until fall, until winter…
Until you are off welfare…
Until the first-of-the-month, or the fifteenth-of-the-month…
Until your song comes on the radio, or your iPod…
Until you’ve had a drink, Until you sober up…
Until you die, Until you are born again…

Try to be a saint or a poet...and realize this time in your life while you are living it.

 
 

Here are some words about time from Mitch Albom’s book, The Time Keeper:
-The hands of a clock will find their way home.
-This was true the moment (Father Time) marked his first sun shadow…
-(And) every generation after…was determined to sharpen (the) concept, counting ever more precisely the measure of their lives.
Sundials were placed in doorways.  Giant water clocks were constructed in city squares.  The move to mechanical designs – weight-driven – led to tower clocks and grandfather clocks and eventually clocks that fit on a shelf.
-Then a French mathematician tied a string to a timepiece, put it around his wrist, and (we) began to wear time on (our bodies).
-Accuracy improved at a startling rate.  Although it took until the sixteenth century for the minute-hand to be invented, by the seventeenth century, the pendulum clock was accurate to within a minute a day.  Less than one hundred years later, it was within a second.
-Time became an industry.  (We) divided the world into zones so that transportation could be accurately scheduled.  Trains pulled away at precise moments; ships pushed their engines to ensure on-time arrivals.
People awoke to clanging alarms.  Businesses adhered to “hours of operation.”  Every factory had a whistle.  Every classroom had a clock.
“What time is it?” became one of the world’s most common questions…

What time is it?  Its NOW, that's what time it is.
Try to be a saint or a poet...and realize this time in your life while you are living it.
  

The Jesuit tradition of "Examen" offers some wonderful contemplative questions that can help us examine how we are using our time:

        In a place of solitude and silence consider these questions:
1)   For what moment today am I most grateful?
2)   For what moment today am I least grateful?
3)   In what moments did I sense God’s presence around me and in me?
4)   In what moments did I fail to love?

Try to be a saint or a poet.  Maybe its time.