January 2005 Archives

Daddy Moment

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My youngest son, Ethan, is sick. I got him into his nighttime diaper and pajamas and cradled him while we sang hymns[1] tonight. He cooed along the way he usually does, but slowly his eyes started closing. He is not the type to fall asleep in one's arms, but he did tonight. It was sooo sweet. I hated to put him in his crib, but I couldn't hold him all night. Well, I suppose I could have, but I didn't. At any rate, it was a sweet daddy moment.

[1] "How Great Thou Art" is our hymn to learn this month.

Big family, big sense of humor

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Anecdote from a friend of Jamie's:

My dh has an office mate who is a young lady of 20, and just got married this past year. She is quite impressed with the size of our family.

Today she asked him, "So, do you guys use any kind of birth control at all?"

Dh smiled and said, "Well, YES, of COURSE!"

"What kind do you use?" she inquired.

"Fatigue," he replied.

Snow Angels

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We finally got a taste of winter around here -- 3 or 4 inches of snow that looks like it might actually stick around for more than a day or two. We'll see how that pans out. Anyway, my daughter and I made a snowman today while the boys were still asleep (she has always taken shorter naps than they do).

I was looking out at the snow this evening as I was getting ready for bed. I haven't put my nightshirt on yet, and being half-naked made me think back to a Terre Haute winter night about 5 years ago when two young men decided to make some rather unorthodox snow angels, just for the experience. Ah, the college life. ;)

Long Day Standing Up

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I didn't have a chance to post this yesterday, but the Career Fair was another rousing success. In 5 hours we talked to over 80 people. It was a fun day, although I didn't get to see many familiar faces. I did run into Christine Winters, a fellow 2000 ChE grad whom I found out is now married to Michael Bach, one of my SA's freshman year on BSB 2 (so I guess that would make her Christine Bach).

I also talked to Andrew Strack (Strack-on!), who was trolling for a summer internship while he works on his masters at (ugh) Purdue (the traitor!). All in all, a good day. As usual, plenty of good candidates.

Okay, so here's one last post tonight and then I'm done. I just happened to come across this quote in a NYTimes.com article that I should not have been reading (because I should be in bed):

"The law was enacted here at a time when women could not vote, when society viewed them as delicate flowers to be kept in the kitchen, tending to wood-burning stoves for their genteel gentlemen, vulnerable maidens in need of legal protection from verbal assaults on their purity. It was upheld by the State Supreme Court in 1914, which researchers say was apparently the last time it was before the courts."

For those of you who still refuse to register with the Times, the article is about the repeal of a Washington law designed to protect women from slander.

I think I can safely say that the Times' representation of the law's context (as described in the quote above) is about as mistaken as one can possibly get. Only an ultra radical super ueber man-hating feminist could be offended by a law like that. Ultra radical super ueber man-hating feminists really get my goat. Grrr.

Winter Career Fair 2005

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In case you didn't make it all the way through that last post, I'll be at the ADM booth at the Rose-Hulman Career Fair tomorrow. Hope to see some familiar faces there!

The Language of Choice (part 2)

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Okay, now that I've listened to both of the commentaries (for good measure, I listened to the pro-abort commentary a second time), I am free to rant. First, I appreciate that NPR presented a balanced look at the issue. Second, to those of you who are reading this who are more "progressive" than I: please listen to the anti-abort commentary for me and give me your thoughts. Was loaded language used? It seemed to me to be much less filled with rhetorical hyperbole than the pro-abort commentary, but obviously my skepticism of the anti-abort commentator's position is somewhat less than it was with the other. You can listen to the anti-abort commentary here (at least for a little while). The pro-abort commentary can be found here.

Third, the pro-abort commentator happens to hail from my hometown. How quaint! I bet you didn't know that I grew up a Democrat, or that Goshen is a hotbed of leftist activism. But it is. I personally know a lot of Nader supporters, and I'm not joking. I'm kind of a black sheep in my family, politically speaking.

My biggest problem with the pro-abort position is that it has insinuated itself into the language of liberality (in the classical sense of the word liberal -- in case you're not a regular reader, please note that whenever I use the word liberal, I mean it in its classical sense. The Libertarian Party is probably the political entity that most embodies the values that a classic liberal held in the early 20th century. If I am referring to the political left, I use the word leftist. But I digress.) Ahem. Anyways, a line from the commentary (I think I've got it quoted correctly) that really sticks in my craw goes like this:

"We can't claim to be a free society if half of us aren't free to make our own choices."

Clearly, this person has a warped view of freedom. A free society cannot function if there aren't clear rules about every person's rights. Unfortunately, the Roe v. Wade decision in effect ended the debate about the rights of the unborn before it really began. But I am getting off topic again. My choices are limited in many respects because I live in a society that is governed by law. Restriction of choice is not indicative of an oppressive society; it is, in many issues, a necessary ingredient for a free society.

While legally the debate over personhood is (for the moment) over, ethically and scientifically it has yet to be decided. Recent court decisions have added some doubt to the Roe v. Wade decision by granting personhood to unborn victims of crimes (if their parents want the children to be born). But rational individuals can only hope such a subjective legal view of unborn children's personhood will not long withstand the scrutiny of a rational society. Sooner or later, our country will have to decide once and for all whether or not infanticide is a protected ritual, or an illegal practice. In the meantime, let's try not to exaggerate the magnitude of the freedom that would be restricted were infanticide in all forms to be outlawed. For the vast majority of women who choose to have an abortion, the pregnancy was the result of consensual intercourse. And of those, an even larger percentage (about 97%) of abortions are entirely elective, as in not performed to protect the life of the mother.

I'm going to be in the Haute tomorrow, so I need to catch some shuteye. Have a nice night.

Coach Carter

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Due to the blessing of a wonderful lady from our church Jamie and I had a date night tonight. We went out to dinner and then to see the movie "Coach Carter." I recommend it to you, if you like inspirational story type movies, or if you like basketball.

By the by, we saw a preview for the film adaptation of Clive Cussler's Sahara. As far as I know, this is the first film based on Cussler's Dirk Pitt novels. I don't think I've read all of the Pitt novels, but I have read many of them thanks to a college roommate who shall remain nameless. I'm looking forward to "Sahara." Also saw a preview for "State of the Union" and it looked like a good action flick as well.

Follow-up to last post

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Yup, according to this site there are over 3700 infants killed each day in the U.S. alone because their mothers (or fathers, or grandparents) don't want them.

The Language of Choice (part 1)

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I heard a commentary this morning on ME about the future of abortion laws in the U.S. Unfortunately, I missed the commentary yesterday, so until I have a chance to hear that one I'll refrain from launching into a polemic against the language used by the pro-abort commentator (who was featured this morning) until I have a chance to see what kind of loaded language was used by yesterday's (anti-abort) commentator.

On a side note, our safety director announced this morning that, according to the CDC, cancer is now the leading cause of death in the U.S., at 1500 deaths per day. I think, however, that the number of infanticides per day is somewhat higher than that. I'll see what I can find for numbers on that.

Yummy Beer Week

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ADM was buying meals last week.

Monday night: St. Pauli Girl
Tuesday night: Warsteiner
Wednesday night: Black & Tan
Thursday night: Sam Adams

Nothing tastes quite so good as a beer after you've spent 11 or 12 hours on your feet. Mmmmm, beer.

Commercial TV

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Last weekend and today (after church, of course) the Eagles play(ed) in the NFL playoffs. I have been exponentially increasing the number of hours of TV watched each year to take in these games. One thing I have noticed is that since I last watched TV regularly, there's been a change in commercials. Namely, the commercials with the most violence and innuendo are no longer for products, but for other TV shows. If TV was a vast wasteland and a cesspool in days past, it's a hellhole now. Someday soon I might even stop watching sports altogether. Don't get your hopes up, Jamie! For now, I just turn the TV off for about 2 minutes at every commercial break.

Well, I don't have the blues, but I think I might have pneumonia. I can't think of any other explanation for the deathlike rattle coming out of my chest with almost every breath. I suppose I'll have to make a trip to the doctor tomorrow. Ugh.

Leftists are historically ignorant

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So, an op-ed columnist in the NYTimes recently had this to say about the prospect of democracy in Iraq:
"[Bush] claims that freedom must be chosen and defended by citizens, yet his administration is in the process of imposing democracy at the point of a gun in Iraq."

I am not a student of history, but I know that this country, at least, did not take a peaceful road to democracy. There was this little thing called the Revolutionary War, in which we were assisted by several other nations (most notably France, if you can believe that!) in overthrowing the tyrannical British rule.

I know that the comparison isn't perfect, but the least courtesy that the leftists could show would be to acknowledge that the freedom they have to criticize the Iraq enterprise is theirs only because of a similar undertaking some 230 years ago.

I had the opportunity to read, for the first time since I started getting my subscription about 10 or 11 months ago, an issue of The Economist from cover to cover. It was the issue with the special report on Taiwan. Anyway, on the last couple of pages it gives economic statistics from various countries. I was struck by the unemployment figures. Here's my question: Why, if socialism is so great for a country's economy, are the unemployment rates in the most socialist states so high?

The most obvious answer is that if you place so many safety nets in place that it is possible to live quite comfortably off of other people's money, many people will opt not to work at all. Small wonder that such countries have far lower productivity and GDP growth rates than nations in which the (relatively) free market system is used.

I also got quite a bit further into The Road to Serfdom so look for a post on that sometime this week.

Where I've Been

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Last Thursday I had the flu. When I called in to let my plant manager know that I wasn't going to be in that day, he asked me if I would go to help out with a plant startup the following week. I said I'd think about it.

Jamie is currently 37 weeks pregnant -- for those who don't know, that means the arrival is imminent. So we talked about it and decided that it would be a bad idea to say no. So, Monday morning (which was a holiday at my plant, but not at the one I was going to), I was driving to Quincy, IL to ADM's new margarine plant.

Let me tell you, there are few things cooler than a machine that will produce 90 1-lb blocks of margarine every minute. It was a long week (startups always are, I'm told) and I'm glad I went, but I really missed my family. Anyway, I'm back now (actually, I have been back since Friday evening). We will now return to our regularly-scheduled programming here at Ye Olde Blogge.

Evolution is a dogma, oh yes it is

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"This textbook contains material on evolution. Evolution is a theory, not a fact, regarding the origin of living things. This material should be approached with an open mind, studied carefully and critically considered." (as quoted by CNN.com)

In and of itself, this statement is completely free of any religious innuendo. Substitute, say, "string theory," for "evolution," and "nature of physics" for "origin of living things," and many scientists would agree.

I agree that IF it could be shown (and perhaps it was) that every science teacher using that book was using the sticker as a way to introduce the subject of religion into biology classrooms, then and only then is the court's order to remove the stickers from every textbook reasonable. If that was not demonstrated, then the court order is an unconscionable defense of one of the secular left's most inviolate dogmas.

More Leftist Hypocrisy

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Isn't it interesting that the same leftists who champion women's "right" to OTC distribution of a drug that has known dangerous side effects (RU486), including several documented deaths, are rabidly attacking big drug makers who allegedly may have known that their prescription drugs might increase the risk of heart problems (Vioxx, Celebrex, etc.)?

See, leftists love doublespeak. Sometimes I wonder if Bush isn't a closet leftist, or maybe if he just decided to beat the leftists by imitating them (but that's a different post entirely). At any rate, it's really stupid. In another example that Jer brought to my attention, a federal court in Atlanta ruled that, essentially, labelling evolution as a yet-unproven theory -- which, in fact, is exactly what it is -- amounts to "an unconstitutional endorsement of religion." Doublespeak, to be sure.

One of these days, I'm going to have to move to Montana.

I prefer geek, but if I must. . .

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Link from Mikey.


I am nerdier than 82% of all people. Are you nerdier? Click here to find out!

Just for the record

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I did NOT want a thunderstorm on January 11th, 2005. In case anybody was wondering, I think it should be WINTER right now. If I wanted rain in the middle of January, I would live in Florida, where at least the temperature would be in the 50's or 60's when it rained, instead of the mid-30's.
Bah!

Me Like Big Bed!

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We got a king-sized bed with some of our Christmas money and a generous donation from my mother-in-law. It is SOOO comfortable. And it is really hard to get out of in the morning, especially when you have a wife as beautiful as mine.

The major reason we are getting it is that we are going to undertake a major experiment in parenting (at least, for us it is major). With our first three we have used sleep training and schedule feeding, and all three of them were sleeping through the night within 8 weeks after they were born. That in itself is nice, but we are recognizing that, at least for our last two, it has been a mixed bag. Our oldest, being a typical oldest child, dealt reasonably well with the sleep training. The younger two, though, have been much less amenable to it. Mainly because they haven't learned self-comfort as easily.

With this next one, we are going to try co-sleeping and a form of demand feeding. Pretty much a 180-degree flip from where we were before. Our selfish motive is that demand feeding delays the return of fertility. But the bigger reason (as mentioned above) is that we have been less than satisfied with the results of schedule feeding/sleep training. A lot will depend on the personality of numero quattro, of course.

We'll see how it goes. Regardless of the outcome, at least we got a king-sized bed out of the deal!

Samwise the Juicer

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We watched 50 First Dates last night, and I have to say that the most amusing part was watching Sean Astin play the part of Lucy's 'roids popping brother. A far cry from the part of Samwise the Brave.

This was the first Adam Sandler movie I've seen, and I have to say that I'm underwhelmed. Potty humor to the max! Aside from the puerile vulgarity, it was a cute flick. Very funny, too -- there was some real humor to go along with the grade school level stuff.

Yeah, I can do that

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If you've seen Ocean's Twelve -- do you know that scene where the French guy (can't remember his name) is dancing through the laser security system? Yeah, that was me this week. I was weaving my way through a pipe rack in our attic, and it felt a lot like that, at any rate. I'm just glad nobody was watching. :)

Chemistry flashbacks

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NPR had a series on great college classes this week, and one of them was a creative writing class at Colorado School of Mines, an engineering school (that, by the by, isn't number one in its class). One of the students, in describing why he appreciated the creative writing class, said something like this: "For other classes, you go to the lectures, you take notes, you read the textbook, you study, you take the tests, rinse and repeat. . ." (emphasis mine).

They may not be number one, but this guy at least is a true geek. I haven't heard that phrase since my last chemistry lab, and hearing it on NPR made me laugh out loud. Hopefully I wasn't the only one listening who understood the reference. . .

Name Game

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Due to a series of unfortunate events -- well, just one, really -- Slacka has turned off his comments, so I am responding to one of his recent posts here.

Jamie and I also view choosing a baby's name as a big responsibility. We think a child's name should reflect on our family's values, and we believe that a name's meaning should have some spiritual significance.

Elijah (Yahweh is God) James (a variant of both Jacob and Jamie) is our oldest son.

Molly (a variant of Mary, meaning Lady) Rose (the flower, duh) is our only daughter (at least for now).

Ethan (strong) Luke (light) is our youngest son (at least for now).

All of these names reflect our commitment to training up our children in righteousness. Their names symbolize our hopes for them to be Christ-followers.

Our current front-runners for number 4 (due in just 5 weeks!) are Seth Thomas and Annabelle (Annie) Grace. Anna is a variant of Hannah ("belle" is a feminine diminuitive) which is Hebrew for gracious, so it's a little redundant, but you can never have too much grace (no, I am not a Lutheran). Seth means "appointed one" and Thomas is to honor my mother's mother (it is her maiden name). We liked the name Seth Aaron, but in some monograms the first initial is put in between the middle and that just wouldn't do.

We have also toyed with LoTR names, even before the movies came out. I personally know both an Aragorn (another engineer who works for ADM) and a Strider (a fellow Yank exchange student I took classes with in Stuttgart). Molly had a good chance of being named Arwen Grace. I think Arwen means Evenstar, connoting everlasting beauty. We have also strongly considered the name Eowyn.

We did want to stay away from popular names, and have for the most part, although I think that Ethan is fairly common these days. But it just fits him and his personality. In fact, all of our kids' personalities fit their names. Which begs the question: Does the name you give your child shape his or her personality? It's an interesting proposition.

On questions not to ask a precocious toddler:

Toddler: "We're going to play a game!" (After being told that we didn't have time before bed)
Me: "We? Do you have a frog in your pocket?"
Toddler (without a moment's hesitatation): "No, on my shoulder!"

Life is so much more fun with kids than without. That's all I have to write about that.

Auld Lang Syne

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A very happy new year to all.

An anecdote to close out the year (a little late):
Last night we were watching "Raising Helen"[1] and I noted that one of the main characters (Ravi) had also been in the movie TM:Revolutions. Jamie asked me where and as I was trying to jog her memory, I said something like this: "He was the one with the eastern philosophy, you know, "Love is a word" and all that junk. He was the one who was talking to Nemo --" at which point I stopped talking, looked at my wife, and busted a gut. I actually fell off the couch I laughed so hard. We'll file that one under "You know you're a dad when. . ."

May 2005 find you blessed as I am, and may you grow in the grace and knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ.

[1] We rented 3 movies to watch over the New Year's weekend: "Raising Helen," "The Stepford Wives," and "Shrek 2," none of which we'd seen before. So far, so good, though we haven't yet watched "Shrek 2." We wanted something a little more action-packed to help us make it to midnight. So tonight I went back out to Blockbuster, only to find that they close at 22:00. I got there at 22:01. Bah. Undeterred, I went to Wal-Mart and bought "The Bourne Supremacy." I made it to midnight, but Jamie didn't. Oh well. I woke her up, kissed her, and sent her to bed. I'm headed that way myself post haste. . .

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This page is an archive of entries from January 2007 listed from newest to oldest.

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