Mar 31 2007

Saturday Six - Episode 155

Tag: Saturday SixPatrick @ 7:18 am

It’s time to play the Six once again, as we near the
Last week, Call Me Betty of “Alphabet Soup Memes” was first to play. Congratulations, Betty!

Here are this week’s “Saturday Six” questions. Either answer the questions in a comment here, or put the answers in an entry on your journal…but either way, leave a link to your journal so that everyone else can visit! To be counted as “first to play,” you must be the first player to either answer the questions in a comment or to provide a complete link to the specific entry in your journal in which you answer the questions. A link to your journal in general cannot count. Enjoy!

1. PC or Mac? (You must choose one or the other.)

2. How much do you like one over the other, and what’s the main reason?

3. What would be easier to do without for a week: your cell phone, your television, or your computer?

4. Take the quiz: Are You a Computer Geek?

5. What things do you feel more addicted to than your computer?

6. If your computer has to go in for service and you’re without it for a week, and you have the chance to log on at a different computer, which are you most likely to do first: check news headlines, check email, or update your blog?

If you have a Reader’s Choice question you’d like to see asked (and answered), click the e-mail link in the Blogger profile and send it to me.

MY ANSWERS:
1. Mac.

2. It’s easier to use, quicker to deal with, more user-friendly when there’s a problem, and you don’t have to know the inner workings of a computer to deal with it. (Okay, that’s my impression, anyway.)

3. Television, hands down.

4. You Are Best Described By…

You are a wannabe computer user, but, alas, that is not possible with you.

5. Junk food, television.

6. Email.


Mar 30 2007

Maybe the ‘Real’ Me Would Be There Somewhere

Tag: MemesPatrick @ 5:29 am

Somehow, I don’t think this artist would be my first choice for a portrait:

Who Should Paint You: Pablo Picasso

Your an expressive soul who shows many emotions, with many subtleties
Only a master painter could represent your glorious contradictions

Who did you get?


Mar 29 2007

Stuck!

Tag: Diet, HealthPatrick @ 5:04 am

Has it really been almost a week without my posting anything? Wow…it didn’t seem that long.

Yesterday, I actually joined a gym that’s close to my home. I hadn’t planned on joining one, since my apartment complex had a barebones fitness center that had the basic equipment that I needed. The only trouble is, that fitness center’s hours aren’t really all that convenient for me, so I was missing out on my workout some nights because I couldn’t get there when someone wasn’t already on the machine early enough to avoid being cut off by closing time.

So last night, my first night as a member, I did 25 minutes on the Elliptical Crosstrainer, that wonderful machine that’s just the thing for a good cardio workout, or a massive heart attack, whichever comes first. Then I did most of a full circuit of weightligfting on smaller weights. (I want to lose weight right now, not “bulk up,” because I want the number on the scale to keep dropping.)

I’m sticking to the meal plan, even sticking to drinking the water. The workout went better than I expected, and I was in the gym for about an hour and never once had to wait to get to a machine I wanted to use.

Unfortunately, I seem to be stuck at the 251.0-252.5 range. I can’t seem to hit that magic 250 number. In time for my next weigh-in on Monday, my goal is to be at 249.0. I’ll even be happy with 249.5. Just so long as I’m out of the 250s.

I know, I know…I shouldn’t complain. I’ve lost 38 pounds, which is more than I’ve ever lost at one time. I’m just not ready for the weight loss to slow down just yet!

Weigh-in: 252.0
Total Lost: 38.0
Lost on MUSC Plan: 28.0
Left to Go: 52.0


Mar 25 2007

Sunday Seven - Episode 82

Tag: Sunday SevenPatrick @ 1:08 am

I’ve been on this MUSC weight loss program. At a recent weekly session, one of the behavioral experts suggested that I should come up with some rewards for myself for meeting certain goals or for maintaining healthy behavior for certain lengths of time. As I mentioned over at Patrick’s Place, they weren’t all that amused when I suggested that I’d like to set a meal at Outback as one of my possible rewards. So that got me thinking about this week’s question, particularly considering that I have to have a list of suggested rewards as a “homework” assignment for tomorrow’s session.

But first, kudos goes to Allison of “We’re all mad here,” said the Cheshire Cat to Alice because she was first to play last week!

Time to play!

THIS WEEK’S QUESTION:
Suppose you’re on a weight loss program and you’re urged to come up with “rewards” for yourself for sticking to the program. Name up to seven rewards, that can’t be related to food, that you would set for yourself.

Either answer the question in a comment or answer it in your journal and include the link in a comment. (To be considered “first to play,” a link must be to the specific entry in which you answered the question.)


Mar 24 2007

Oliver Has His Day

Tag: Pets, Advertising, YouTube, DogsPatrick @ 8:40 pm

When a commercial can touch people through emotion, you often — not always but often — have a successful advertisement. The Pedigree dog food brand tapped actor David Duchovny to voice spots for an image campaign to promote the company’s donations to animal shelters.

Here is one of the original commercials you’ve probably seen:

One of the dogs featured in some of the spots, and particularly some shorter :15 versions, was what appeared to be a Jack Russell Terrior mix named “Oliver.” A brand new spot strikes another emotional chord with animal lovers:

Whether you have pets or not, and whether you buy Pedigree or not, I hope you’ll consider making a donation to an animal shelter near you. There are far more animals than homes available, and these hard working people are doing everything they can to take care of unwanted animals that may never be as lucky as Oliver.


Mar 24 2007

Who’s Out to Get Who?

Tag: NBC, War in Iraq, News & Media, TelevisionPatrick @ 9:00 am

“I’m not paranoid! Why are youse all out to get me?”

–Archie Bunker,
All in the Family

Recently, in response to the piece I wrote about criticizing the news, I got a comment from Dave that I thought was worth mentioning. He began with this:

I think you have a hard time evaluating what the news does without making it personal. You’re involved with it and you’re a good guy. I’m sure most the people you work with a great people. Unfortunately, as Marx pointed out, you are what you do.If you work for any major media news outlet than your primary job is to confuse and scare the American people. The same news media that “doesn’t have the time” to cover the growing impeachment movement has all the time in the world to cover the Anna Nicole Smith nonsense.

I guess that’s another reason to find disagreement with Marx!

So I’m simultaneously a “good guy” and someone who sets out to confuse and scare people on a regular basis? I guess I’m tall and short and skinny and fat at the same time as well.

There are people who only see the world — or only want to see the world — in absolutes. You’re either all good or all bad. And if you don’t happen to side with someone else’s viewpoint, you’re either the “enemy” or “uneducated” when it comes to the truth.

I’ve never said that the media doesn’t have its failures. It does. But I also maintain that a lot of the people who go around looking for such failures sometimes invent them where they don’t exist out of their own zeal to make a point.

Think that doesn’t happen? Here’s an example:

I recently had a conversation with a friend of mine the other day who turned out to be a lot more conservative than I had realized. I said something about a health story I had seen on the Today show.

“I don’t watch NBC News,” he replied. “They’re biased.”

“Biased how?” I thought perhaps he felt that they had some kind of bias against certain medical procedures. I quickly found out that he was referring to Iraq and not to anything related to the story I was talking about.

“NBC was the first one to say ‘civil war.’”

I sat there for a moment, waiting for an explanation. When he didn’t give one, I asked what he meant.

It turns out that because NBC News had called the situation in Iraq a “civil war,” this person took that to be a specific attack on the Bush administration and conservatives everywhere.

But let’s think about this for a second. When I look up civil war in a dictionary, I find this as its primary definition:

n. A war between factions or regions of the same country.

It is a fact, not opinion, not commentary, not propoganda, that the Shi’ites and Sunnis, two factions within Iraq, are at each other’s throats. By definition, their conflict is a civil war. In labeling their ongoing battles with that term, there’s nothing inherently biased there. Saying that Iraq is suffering the effects of a civil war doesn’t, in and of itself, point blame at anyone — unless it’s the Shi’ites and Sunnis themselves.

The Bush administration didn’t cause their conflict; the Prophet Muhammad did. To put it more correctly, his death, back in the year 632, is where their hostilities began. They couldn’t agree on a successor, and they haven’t been able to settle their growing disputes that sparked from that one after all these years.

I need hardly mention that even the first Bush administration wasn’t even a wild fantasy 1400 years ago.

But this person’s perception was that using the words civil war and Iraq in the same sentence had to have been intended as an attack on his political beliefs. In his mind, therefore, NBC News is biased. Therefore, as far as he is concerned, he isn’t interested in anything they have to say about any story.

There’s something wrong, very wrong, with that kind of thinking.

The thing is, we all bring our own preconceived notions to the table. I work in the media, so I carry my own experiences when it comes to what that means. Dave suggests that I should visit other sites (that happen to side, coincedentally, with his opinion) to “learn what I really do for a living.”

That strikes me as a quite presumptuous statement for someone who doesn’t work in the media to make to someone who does.

Am I in denial? I don’t deny that there are problems in the media. I agree that there are warped priorities in terms of stories that get too much attention. But I also believe — and have stated before — that there is a cause-effect relationship that’s behind this. If the news media even thought that it could get ratings as high as they get covering celebrity “non-news” by covering things like Dave’s “growing impeachment movement,” don’t you think that’s what they’d be covering?

I can visit websites criticizing the media every day for a year. I’ll agree with the criticisms that seem reasonable, and I’ll disagree with those which depend on sweeping generalizations and paranoia, the same kinds of unreasonable debate that Dave despises when it is used against his beliefs.

I know what I do for a living, thank you very much. I don’t need you to tell me what that is, just as you don’t need me to tell you what it is that you “really” do for a living. I don’t have your knowledge or life experience. I don’t know your bosses and their goals. I don’t know what’s on your agenda.

I know the people that I work with. And even if it’s true that in only my newsroom, there isn’t a “conspiracy” to confuse and mislead, then, logically, is is therefore untrue to claim that all media people have this as their goal. That statement is invalid.

But I’ll play devil’s advocate for a second as well: if I can’t be trusted to be reasonable when it comes to the media because I’m part of it, I wonder why it doesn’t occur to Dave that he should butt out of all discussions about the labor movement since he is a union supporter. I wonder why Dave doesn’t realize that his opinions and “research” with respect to Iraq and the Bush administration could be suspect simply because he’s part of that “growing impeachment movement.”

Good luck selling him on that! And good luck with suggesting sites where he can “educate” himself about what is “really” going on, particularly when, for all of us, what is “really” going on completely depends on how paranoid you are.

Sometimes, people who fail in their job not because of conspiracy, but because of other, equally realistic reasons. Sometimes, they have personal problems that distract them from doing their best work. Sometimes, they’re just lazy and let other people do their thinking for them. And sometimes, it’s as simple as a genuine lack of talent. You can’t build conspiracy theories on that.


Mar 24 2007

Saturday Six - Episode 154

Tag: Saturday SixPatrick @ 8:33 am

A few weeks from now, there will be a special edition of the Saturday Six to commemorate the start of its fourth year in the blogosphere. Who would have thought? I hope you all had a great workweek, and I hope you’ll have an even better (and more restful) weekend!

Last week, Travis of “Tilting at Pinwheels” was first to play. If I’m not mistaken, this is Travis’s first time to play at all, so it was quite an accomplishment to be the first of the week to play. Congratulations, Travis!

Here are this week’s “Saturday Six” questions. Either answer the questions in a comment here, or put the answers in an entry on your journal…but either way, leave a link to your journal so that everyone else can visit! To be counted as “first to play,” you must be the first player to either answer the questions in a comment or to provide a complete link to the specific entry in your journal in which you answer the questions. A link to your journal in general cannot count. Enjoy!

1. What is your favorite kind of museum?

2. How long has it been since you walked through a museum?

3. When you enter an art museum, what type of art do you generally visit first?

4. Take the quiz: What Famous Work of Art Are You?

5. Judging your own personality, how well do you think the quiz’s result matches you?

6. If you could own any famous piece of artwork for your own, which one would you choose?

If you have a Reader’s Choice question you’d like to see asked (and answered), click the e-mail link in the Blogger profile and send it to me.

MY ANSWERS:
1. I like art museums and science museums best.

2. Middleton Place, which is a colonial home open to visitors to demonstrate life in the early 1800s.

3. Usually photography.

4. You Are Best Described By…

The Scream
By Edvard Munch

5. Quite well. Anyone with any kind of anxiety disorder “gets” that image.

6. I’d love to have The Scream or Dali’s The Persistence of Memory or Van Gogh’s Starry Night over the Rhone


Mar 22 2007

Painful Pictures?

Tag: Hot-Button Issues, Crime & PunishmentPatrick @ 8:01 pm

The South Carolina House has given approval to a bill that would require women seeking an abortion to look at ultrasound images of the fetus before the procedure would be performed.

WIS-TV in Columbia reports that if enacted, this bill would be the first of its kind in the nation. The bill next moves to the GOP-controlled Senate. If approved there, it goes to Republican Governor Mark Sanford who has stated that he approves the bill.

Rep. Greg Delleney, the chief sponsor of the bill, says it would save lives and a lifetime of regret for some women. It might cause a lifetime of regret for women who have already decided that abortion is the right decision in their own case.

Rep. Gilda Cobb Hunter says she has a problem with the mandate because it suggests that women don’t know what they’re doing, “that they’ve arrived at this decision quite lightly and nothing could be further from the truth.”

There are some days when it’s hard to be proud of this state.

I have no problem with ultrasound images being made available to women who have decided to have an abortion. Some states already do that.

The problem I have with this is the whole required part. Abortions, at this moment, are legal. This means that women who have considered their options and feel — for whatever reason — that an abortion is what is best for them should be able to have the procedure, with proper counseling and information from the medical professional, and without blatant coercion designed to pressure her decision based on guilt.

And the House defeated amendments that would have exempted victims of rape or incest. Haven’t they been through enough already?

If this is a country that truly values freedom so much, women should not only have the right to choose whether to have an abortion, but also the right to choose whether to look at an ultrasound image of the fetus.

I’m amazed that so many of our lawmakers have lost sight of that. (And before any liberals go off on a tangent about those crazy Republican conservative “wingnuts,” you might be interested to know that more than half of the state’s Democratic Representatives also sided against a woman’s right to choose.)

It makes about as much sense as those people who show up on busy street corners to protest abortion to “protect children” by waving giant signs showing graphic images of aborted fetuses that children who pass by can see and be haunted by.

When it comes to abortion, I don’t think it should be the sole method of birth control. Sadly, it sometimes is. But there’s a big part of me that thinks that anyone who can have an abortion and consider it a “quick and easy” way to take care of “a little problem” and think nothing of it probably isn’t really all that ready to be a parent to start with.

There’s also the fact that there are couples who carefully analyze their position at a given moment, decide that they can’t handle children or provide for them properly, take appropriate precautions, and find that despite the fact that some birth control methods are up to 98% effective, they happen to land in that mysterious 2%. Many of them are happily married. Why shouldn’t they be able to make that choice without a legislation-mandated guilt trip?

That’s my two cents. Now it’s your turn. The new Patrick’s Place Poll gives you the chance to vote. If you were running things, how would you rule? The survey is on the sidebar…so go vote!


Mar 22 2007

Killing Time

Tag: Technology, HumorPatrick @ 2:24 pm

As seen on fosfor gadgets:

As an insomniac who hates getting up in the morning, I think I could definitely use one of these!

Roger Ibars, the designer of the Gun Operated Alarm Clock, realizes that people hate their alarm clocks and believe that they should be severely punished for their treachery. There is a lot of satisfaction to be had by throwing your alarm clock against the wall or, in this case, shooting it until it turns off.

Unfortunately, it’s just a prototype for now. But if they ever start selling them, I’ll be in line to buy one.


Mar 19 2007

The Best Seat

Tag: Photography, CharlestonPatrick @ 9:58 pm

I love the beach…with conditions. First, there should be no one else around but me. There’s nothing like a nice, quiet beach with nothing but the sound of crashing waves to listen to.

When I find a scene like that, along with an empty chair facing out towards the blue horizon, it occurs to me that I might have stumbled upon the best seat in the house.


Mar 19 2007

Above Average

Tag: DietPatrick @ 8:22 pm

I just got in from a 30-minute walking/jogging session. (The chances of my jogging continuously for thirty minutes are slightly less than the chance of you becoming an instant millionaire by winning three different state lotteries at the same moment.)

This time, I took Zoey along, which I’ve done a few times now. Zoey will be seven later this summer, but she doesn’t seem to be slowing down. As lazy as she is when she is inside, she certainly manages to pull in energy from somewhere when there’s the chance to go for a walk! Of course, once she’s back inside, laziness resumes.

Anyway, I met with the behavioral specialist earlier this evening as part of my regular check-ins with the MUSC Weight Management Center. The average amount of weight loss per week, he said, was about two pounds or so. At the moment, I’m averaging about four pounds per week. I’ll take that.

We talked about setting rewards for continued successes, and I mentioned that I had caught a little flak for not being able to come up with anything besides a nice meal somewhere as a “prize.” So one of my “assignments” this week is to come up with some potential rewards that I might enjoy, but that I wouldn’t normally buy under other circumstances. Money’s a little tight, so none of them will be extravagent.

Weigh-in: 255.5
Total Lost: 34.5
Lost on MUSC Plan: 24.5
Left to Go: 55.5


Mar 19 2007

Over the Weekend

Tag: Religion, PhotographyPatrick @ 6:53 pm

This weekend, I spent a little time at the beach on Sullivans Island. I posted a couple of pictures…and more will come soon…over at Patrick’s Portfolio.

I also found a new church that I like. And I realized how powerful the internet can be when it comes to finding a comfortable house of worship. I wrote about that in The Cross Examination, which I hope to update more regularly.


Mar 19 2007

Check Your Pet Food!

Tag: Consumer, Pets, DogsPatrick @ 10:08 am

The Menu Foods pet food recall that originally seemed to include only Iams brands actually includes more than forty brands!

Here is the complete list of brands, lifted from CBSNews.com:

Cat Food

  • Americas Choice, Preferred Pets
  • Authority
  • Best Choice
  • Companion
  • Compliments
  • Demoulas Market Basket
  • Eukanuba
  • Fine Feline Cat
  • Food Lion
  • Foodtown
  • Giant Companion
  • Hannaford
  • Hill Country Fare
  • Hy-Vee
  • Iams
  • Laura Lynn
  • Li’l Red
  • Loving Meals
  • Meijer’s Main Choice
  • Nutriplan
  • Nutro Max Gourmet Classics
  • Nutro Natural Choice
  • Paws
  • Pet Pride
  • Presidents Choice
  • Price Chopper
  • Priority
  • Save-A-Lot
  • Schnucks
  • Science Diet Feline Savory Cuts Cans
  • Sophistacat
  • Special Kitty Canada
  • Special Kitty US
  • Springfield Prize
  • Sprout
  • Total Pet
  • Wegmans
  • Western Family
  • White Rose
  • Winn Dixie

Dog Food

  • Americas Choice, Preferred Pets
  • Authority
  • Award
  • Best Choice
  • Big Bet
  • Big Red
  • Bloom
  • Bruiser
  • Cadillac
  • Companion
  • Demoulas Market Basket
  • Eukanuba
  • Food Lion
  • Giant Companion
  • Great Choice
  • Hannaford
  • Hill Country Fare
  • Hy-Vee
  • Iams
  • Laura Lynn
  • Loving Meals
  • Meijers Main Choice
  • Mighty Dog Pouch
  • Mixables
  • Nutriplan
  • Nutro Max
  • Nutro Natural Choice
  • Nutro Ultra
  • Nutro
  • Ol’Roy Canada
  • Ol’Roy US
  • Paws
  • Pet Essentials
  • Pet Pride - Good n Meaty
  • Presidents Choice
  • Price Chopper
  • Priority
  • Publix
  • Roche Bros
  • Save-A-Lot
  • Schnucks
  • Shep Dog
  • Springsfield Prize
  • Sprout
  • Stater Bros
  • Total Pet
  • Western Family
  • White Rose
  • Winn Dixie
  • Your Pet

If a brand you use is there, you can find a link to the manufacturer’s site on the CBS News link. From there, you can click on the brand and see the specific flavors, sizes and expiration dates you need to confirm whether your pet’s food might be covered by the recall.


Mar 18 2007

Finding a Church

Tag: Best Of, Religion, Internet, PoliticsPatrick @ 6:51 pm

I’ve been shopping around for a church recently. Thanks to the internet, one can learn a lot about a church without setting foot inside. A church’s website is a powerful marketing tool for would-be parishoners. Of course, depending on your church’s stance on certain issues, it can also keep people away.

I was born and raised Southern Baptist. The older I’ve gotten, the less tolerate I have become of some Southern Baptist intolerance.

All churches have problems. All churches have some members that want to control things and who feel, because they may donate more money than others, that they should be able to call the shots. Sometimes the shots they call don’t really answer that famous question, “What would Jesus do?”

There are also some points of the Baptist faith that I strongly disagree with. One of them, for example, is the position of some Baptist churches that women do not belong in ministry. While browsing a few local Baptist church websites, I found statements that surprised me.

For example, on music:

We believe that worldly, pop, rock and some other forms of popular music are inappropriate to communicate the truth and character of God. We, therefore, reject Contemporary Christian Music and Christian Rock and use only those songs and melodies that are unmistakably godly.

The primary church I attended from my teenage years into my thirties did mostly traditional hymns, but there were also a mixture of more contemporary pieces with contemporary arrangements. Occasionally, there were prerecorded music tracks that were played during the performance. Other times, that church’s expanding musical ministry brought in additional instruments that gave a more contemporary feel to the music.

I don’t see anything wrong with that.

That’s not to say I want to hear rap music or hard rock in the sanctuary. But I don’t think that it offends God to have “modern” music played in celebration of His love any more than it would please Him to have pipe organs play music dating back to the 1800s.

Then there was a church whose site mentioned the philosophy that when it came to ministry, women should be neither seen nor heard, but rather sitting in the pews learning whatever the men had to say. I find this outdated view of the role of women in churches particularly offensive.

A few years ago, I attended a Baptist wedding. For years, couples have fought over whether the marriage vows should contain the word obey. The vows at this particular wedding took that several steps farther: the bride promised in her wedding vows that she would “lift up her husband as the spiritual leader of their family.”

Excuse me?!?

Granted, if they agreed to that, then it’s not my business. But at the same time, I’m amazed that such an idea would even come up: why must the husband be the “spiritual leader” of the family? Who’s to say that the wife couldn’t read a passage of the bible and have a clearer understanding of that passage’s application to their lives than her husband? Who’s to say that a woman preacher couldn’t do just as admirable a job as her male counterpart?

While I was in Richmond, I attended an Independent Baptist church that had a female preacher. I thought she was terrific. She gave meaningful sermons that resonated with me. Her effectiveness as a preacher wasn’t because she was a woman, of course, but had she been prevented from preaching because she wasn’t a man, her congregation would have missed out on what she had to say.

This belief that women should not be allowed to teach dates all the way back to the Garden of Eden:

1 TIMOTHY 2:
11 Let the woman learn in silence with all subjection.
12 But I suffer not a woman to teach, nor to usurp authority over the man, but to be in silence.
13 For Adam was first formed, then Eve.
14 And Adam was not deceived, but the woman being deceived was in the transgression.

I find such outmoded belief shocking. This is the 21st century. I think women have more than proven themselves since Eve’s transgression. But one of the churches I was planning to visit said on its webpage that its congregation believed that women had no place in ministry!

Even the Southern Baptist Convention lists this in its statement of faith:

He has the God-given responsibility to provide for, to protect, and to lead his family. A wife is to submit herself graciously to the servant leadership of her husband even as the church willingly submits to the headship of Christ.

Wives as servants? Sounds mighty 17th century to me. The bible has a lot of laws we don’t follow today because they seem so obviously outdated. I wonder why this is one we can’t seem to shake.

Then, there’s the ultimate pet peeve of mine found on a church site that actually uploads audio of sermons onto its website. With apologies to anyone who happens to attend this church, (which I will not name) here’s a brief look at what one local preacher had to say about one of the likely Democratic presidential candidates:

“There’s a certain lady that’s running for nomination of the Democratic party.”

Had I been in the church, I would have already started getting angry. He stated that he was neither Democrat or Republican — or even Independent. He said that whomever God wants in a leadership position should be the person God puts there. Then he said:

“But you can’t convince me on her being in there. Listen, guys: I’m not against women, not at all. I love my wife more than myself. … This woman is changing history. … If she gets nominated for the Democratic Party, there’s a very good chance that she could win. Now what’s going to happen when God sees all those changes, I’m not sure.”

I was in shock. Is this guy trying to suggest that God will come after us if Hillary is elected? On what grounds? Is God a Republican? I don’t think so.

I don’t mind religious people running for office. I don’t mind religious people working together to get people to go vote. I do mind, strongly, when politics are preached inside a church. Any time the government has anything to say about religion, church members can’t scream “Separation of Church and State” loudly enough. I expect churches to stay out of politics in terms of any “official position.” I think God gives us all the ability to make our own decision. The last thing I want, and the last thing I would tolerate, is some preacher telling me who I should vote for…especially when that endorsement comes during a church service.

If I were visiting when he went into that, I’d have slipped out the back way: that’s not why I would be there.

I was able to eliminate a lot of churches from my list just by visiting their websites. It saved me quite a bit of time, actually. Who would have thought that technology would lead people to God…or away from certain churches?


Mar 18 2007

Sunday Seven - Episode 81

Tag: Sunday SevenPatrick @ 6:27 pm

One of the stops I had to make today was at the grocery store. And that got me thinking…

But first, Frida of I Really Hate Blog Names was first to play last week! Congratulations, Frida!

On to this week’s question!

THIS WEEK’S QUESTION:
Name the last seven specific items that you purchased at the grocery store.

Either answer the question in a comment or answer it in your journal and include the link in a comment. (To be considered “first to play,” a link must be to the specific entry in which you answered the question.)

My answers:
1. 20 oz. Diet Coke
2. Post-Courier Sunday Paper
3. Canned Collard Greens (Damn diet)
4. Canned Seasoned Cabbage (Damn diet)
5. Pureed Blueberries for Diet Shakes
6. Applesauce for Diet Shakes
7. Canned Green Beans


Next Page »