Tuesday, July 26, 2011

A Few Ingredients for Infinite Dinner Options

Maybe infinite is an exaggeration, but this summer I've discovered that with a relatively small group of ingredients you can create a relatively huge amount of entrees. In later posts I will share the backbone recipes which can be altered in dozens of ways to make all sorts of options. By keeping to a small but flexible group of ingredients you cut down on size and frequency of shopping trips and cost of groceries. You also get to avoid planning a meal schedule before shopping.

Meat:
  -eggs
  -chicken (I use boneless chicken breasts)
  -bacon

Dairy:
  -sour cream
  -shredded cheddar
  -shredded mozzarella
  -grated parmesan
  -butter (not margarine)

Starches:
  -potato
  -bread
  -pasta
  -rice

Vegetables (I don't know yet what the best options would be in the winter time):
  -onion
  -green bell pepper
  -tomato
  -(frozen) broccoli

Sauces and Their Ilk:
  -marinara sauce
  -Italian dressing
  -soy sauce
  -vegetable oil
  -salsa

Spices and Seasonings:
  -rosemary
  -oregano
  -thyme
  -basil
  -cinnamon
  -black pepper
  -salt
  -garlic powder

By adding a few more less-often used cooking ingredients, you can expand your options even more (mostly to include breakfast for dinner, which I happen to love).

Extras:
  -lemon juice
  -brown sugar
  -white sugar
  -flour
  -milk
  -maple syrup
  -baking powder
  -baking soda

It is important to note that this list of foods is not a comprehensive list of what foods/ingredients you want to have in your kitchen. Note the absence of coffee, for instance. This is merely a list that will set you up for cooking dinner. You'll need to choose your own economical and tasty snacks, breakfasts, lunches, and beverages.

Sunday, July 10, 2011

Book Review: Dune

Finally, I've had the chance to read Dune. I actually have time to read now, and it's amazing. I'll have even more now that hours are being cut since July is slow for hardware store/garden centers.

In reverse of my usual habit, I saw the movie before I read the book. And I'd say that the movie is true enough to the book that I wouldn't have been angered if I had first read the book and then watched the movie. Sure there are scenes that the movie doesn't include, but there's so much going on in this book that there's no way they could have managed to successfully cram it all into a movie. There's also a few things the movie outright changed, but not in the plot-changing way that some movies are in the habit of doing.

And now to speak of the book itself. In short, it was quite excellent. The characters were extremely well-developed through many means. We get to hear their thoughts and view event through their eyes, learn how others interpret their actions from their point of view, and also get the usual third person narrator descriptions. Perhaps one of the book's greatest strengths is its shifting point of view. Herbert seamlessly shifts from the vantage point of one character to another for maximum understanding of the situation and, as was already mentioned, stellar character development.

I must also applaud the success with which he builds a new universe and drops us into it. The societies, politics, and technologies are skillfully and realistically crafted. I could spend a good deal of time admiring it. My paragon example of society creation is Richard Adams' Watership Down, and I consider Dune worthy to sit alongside it. The readers are dropped into this world, given just enough facts to figure the rest out on our own. He doesn't waste time tediously describing his world to us foreign onlookers. Rather, it's as if his book is written to an audience that lives there. The reader is neither patronized nor overwhelmed.

The plot, too, is worthy of praise. But I feel that this is obvious enough without explanation.

One thing I disliked about Herbert's style was the repeated use of a few descriptions and phrases. I don't need to know a million times that Stilgar's eyes are a deep blue sunk into dark pits, or whatever exact phrase he uses over and over. He also has a habit of saying that a glance or gesture "contained an entire conversation." While this is true several times throughout the book, he could come up with different ways of expressing the same idea every once in a while. But I really have no other complaints to make.

In summary, Frank Herbert's Dune is quite an excellent book in all respects. Go read it. It's long, but you'll zoom through it because it's so fantastic.

Friday, July 8, 2011

Summer Playlist

Oh shnap! I almost forgot to post a summer playlist. As usual, I have far more songs on my itunes summer playlist than I can reasonably post, so I've narrowed it down to 40. Also as usual, some bands had so many ideal summer songs that I had to just pick a few. Some of the best summer bands are Led Zeppelin, Eliza Doolittle, The Aquabats, Guster, Queen, The White Stripes, The Beatles, and The Decemberists. Interestingly, my summer playlist has the highest concentration of songs I'm somewhat embarrassed to say I enjoy listening to from time to time. And several of them even made it to this list out of the nearly 400 songs on my itunes playlist. Mostly they're just upbeat songs that make me want to dance if only I knew how, and they all have some sort of nostalgic significance connecting to dearly beloved people. So don't hate.
  1. Rocky Road to Dublin (aBuck63)
  2. Ceann Dubh Dilis (Anuna)
  3. Pool Party (The Aquabats)
  4. Theme Song (Arthur and Friends)
  5. Sk8r Boi (Avril Lavigne)
  6. I Wanna Hold Your Hand (The Beatles)
  7. I've Got a Feelin' (The Black-Eyed Peas)
  8. Stick Shifts and Safety Belts (Cake)
  9. If You Want to Sing Out, Sing Out (Cat Stevens)
  10. Put Your Records On (Corinne Bailey Rae)
  11. The Sporting Life (The Decemberists)
  12. Pack Up (Eliza Doolittle)
  13. You Got Me (Elk City)
  14. What You Call Love (Guster)
  15. Loch Lomond (Jesse Ferguson)
  16. Thick as a Brick (Jethro Tull)
  17. All These Things That I've Done (The Killers)
  18. 21st Century Schizoid Man (King Crimson)
  19. Dragon Island (Koji Kondo, from The Legend of Zelda: The Windwaker)
  20. What Is and What Should Never Be (Led Zeppelin)
  21. Houses of the Holy (Led Zeppelin)
  22. The Best Way to Travel (The Moody Blues)
  23. The Cave (Mumford and Sons)
  24. Knights of Cydonia (Muse)
  25. He Reigns (The Newsboys)
  26. Away from You (The O.C. Supertones)
  27. Creatures of the Earth (The Pages)
  28. Free Four (Pink Floyd)
  29. Bohemian Rhapsody (Queen)
  30. Crazy Little Thing Called Love (Queen)
  31. Can't Always Get What You Want (The Rolling Stones)
  32. Decatur, or, Round of Applause for Your Stepmother (Sufjan Stevens)
  33. Gone (Switchfoot)
  34. Dynamite (Taio Cruz)
  35. Galop and Dance of the Parents (Tchaikovsky, from The Nutcraker)
  36. Tribute (Tenacious D)
  37. Mama Told Me Not to Come (Three Dog Night)
  38. Over the Waterfall and Harvest Home (Tropical Harps)
  39. Hotel Yorba (The White Stripes)
  40. Joker and the Thief (Wolfmother)

Thursday, July 7, 2011

Reading Nooks

One thing I've finally had time to do again this summer (along with getting adequate amounts of sleep!) is reading for fun. Really I needn't even add "for fun," because I usually don't even do "required" reading during the school year. Almost as important as choosing a book to read is choosing a place to read. I have found several good locations, and it is my aim to briefly glance at all of them here. Some (namely those that are particularly awesome and accessible to the public) will get their very own posts in the future.

The balconies:
I have two: a sunny southeast-facing one and a shady nortwest-facing one. The sunny one has a hammock and is great for mornings or cool days. Sometimes I pretend to tan while I'm reading back there, but I don't think it really works. The shady one is perfect for afternoons, evenings, or warm mornings. On warm afternoons, I don't go outside unless I'm working. It can get pretty brutally humid and gross out there.

The kitchen table:
It's the perfect place for morning Bible-reading. I can eat at the same time, and it's not so comfy that I risk dozing off. The next reading place is the exact opposite.

The circle chair:
My good friend the circle chair has followed me from place to place since my freshman year. Anyone who has ever sat in it knows how amazing it is. I can curl up in a dozen different ways with a book and a drink and spend happy hours on a day off.

The sofa:
The sofa is only a short distance from the circle chair, but it has a few advantages over the dear old chair. It's next to a light for greater evening visibility and allows me to completely sprawl out after a long day of work.

Buy the Book:
I found out about this place by happy accident. I was discussing my plans to read Dune with someone at fighter practice, and she said that I would want to buy it and that a little used book store called Buy the Book would be the best place in the area to get it for cheap. Not only did I find a cheap copy of Dune (permeated by that wonderful old book smell, no less), but I also found a bright, clean little coffee shop within walking distance of my apartment. This place will definitely be getting its own post.


Purdue's HSSE Library:
I haven't tried doing any leisurely reading here yet, but I know it's good for low-key school reading. I go there when it's too cold to be outside and I don't need to be super serious about getting to work. They have lots of comfy chairs and some tables, but it's usually pretty full. Quiet, but full. If you do find an empty chair ring or table, you can count on being joined by a stranger at some point. You can also count of them to be silent and pick a chair at the appropriately courteous distance.

Purdue's Hicks Library:
The undergrad library is underground. It opens earlier than the rest of the libraries, so if I need to get work done before a 7:30 or 8:30 class, that's where I go. Like HSSE, it's quiet, but it has more space and therefore less crowding. It's also a bit more dreary and less comfortable which somehow makes me more productive. It is worth noting that this may be the absolute worst place to study during dead week and finals week. It becomes packed and noisy.

The Union at Purdue:
The Union is much like HSSE, but better for rainy days. It also doesn't have books and computers like HSSE, but I usually have everything I need. It does have the advantage of being above campus' non-dorm food central. When it's lousy outside, it's nice to stop by the Starbucks in the basement and pick a comfy old chair next to one of the tall old windows. It's particularly quiet since approximately half of the sofas and chairs are occupied by sleeping students between 8:00 am and 5:00 pm.

The Krannert Lobby at Purdue:
If you want to get down to business and defeat the Huns, you go to the Krannert lobby. With an abundance of comfy but not too comfy chairs with moveable tabletops and tables perfect for group meetings, I can always count on being more productive here than most other places. Maybe it's the business-like atmosphere of the school of management, or maybe it's just the well picked and placed furniture.

The Hort Gardens:
I can't really count on getting anything at all done once I sit down out there, but for a relaxing afternoon of reading and nature-watching, it can't be beat. The surrounding beautiful plants and intriguing wildlife, the periodical passing of a friend or professor, and the quaint view of the old glass and brick headhouse make the hort gardens glorious at any time of year.

Tippecanoe County Public Library:
So far I've only walked in to look for a periodical (which they didn't have, as I expected), but it had the air of a place I'd like to be. I'll have to give it a more thorough review after I've actually spent some time there. It has sort of an aged feel, but not ancient or anything. Just well-loved and well-worn.

West Lafayette Public Library:
Like the Tippecanoe County Public Library, I've only been inside once looking for the same periodical. But I've seen it many times, and have always liked the look of it. If you saw it, I'm sure you would agree. It's a newer building that makes no efforts to fake age and venerability, but there are subtle hints that show its respect for the past. The decorative tiling looks to be inspired by historically significant tiling on an old bank a few black away (on a fuller review of the place I'll give more detail) and the font used on the website and elsewhere has ties to Frank Lloyd Wright's Samara House a few miles away. I'm sure there are even more little nuances like this that I'm missing, and I'd love to be privy to them.


I look forward to continuing to discover books to read and places to read them for the remainder of the summer. I've still got four or five weeks left, and what's to stop me from continuing to explore once school starts back up? Spending the summer here has helped me learn what the Lafayette-West Lafayette area is about: community. Especially downtown Lafayette and the West Lafayette neighborhoods north of campus. I'm sort of looking forward to being a local for the next handful of years, and I no longer wonder what on earth I'll do with myself between graduation and leaving this area. It feels more and more home-like all the time. Having multiple home places is a mixed blessing, but that's another post for another time.


Also note the background change corresponding to book-reading season. Here's a picture for future reference:

Thursday, June 9, 2011

Finally Some Apartment Pictures

It's another Thursday, and so another free day. I've already cleaned and whatnot, so now I get to finally upload some pictures. Later I'll mail some long-delayed letters and paperwork and head to the local libraries and a little used bookstore to look for Dune. I may add another post for those adventures if they prove noteworthy. Our tour will begin outside...

Here's the building.
the door inside


Up the stairs...
It's my door, Apt. 6.
As we enter, the first room is the kitchen.
Here's my awesome fridge.
The dining table with a slowly dying
Margot.
A sliding door leads to the
sunny balcony.



But first we stop to see my
little makeshift terrarium of
new plant friends.

My hammock gets to be loved again!
Here's all but one of my full-
grown, not-dying plant friends.
From this balcony you can also
see some chairs on pavers
arranged like an awkward sea
turtle without back legs.
If you turn right coming
through the front door, you
see the living room.
A better view of said living room.
This is an extremely comfy sofa. You can't
see it in the picture, but above the sofa
are some pictures of artifacts and ruins.
End table #1 houses Nigel, the
armadillo, the little squishy pig
thing, and some other friends.
End table #2 has some writing
utensils, a lamp, and my
favorite of my sculptures.
The center table is decked
out in cribbage, coasters, and
a happy-smelling candle.
Across from the sofa is Elaine, my
circle chair, and the leasee's huge TV.
Off of the living room is the shady
balcony. It just has a chair.
As you can see, it was rather windy
this morning.
Past the living room is my bedroom.
Storage area with rapier stuff, music
stuff, art stuff, books, and miscellany.
The bedside table has earrings, another
happy-smelling candle, and various
other things.
As usual, my clothes are
arranged chromatically.
Yoda watches over Harold,
Millie Mae Maude, and I as
we sleep.
The creepery mirror and shelf used to
hang on the wall, but they fell. I still
need to fix the mirror frame.
The last room is the bathroom. It's not
very exciting. The shower is out of the
picture.
The nicely organized sink doesn't stay
nicely organized for long.

That's it. I didn't post every single detail of the interior, as that would have been a little tedious, but this is a pretty thorough overview of my summer dwelling. I'm loving living on my own. After these months, I'm not going to be looking forward to going back to the dorms. I'm excited about eventually having my own place long-term. There are so many thing I'd love to do that just aren't practical right now, like more extensive decorating and growing my own herbs and vegetables. I guess I'll just have to wait another year or two. With as quickly as college is flying by, that won't be long at all.

Saturday, May 28, 2011

Free Day #2

Today my accomplishments included dressing cute to go grocery shopping, making homemade granola, starting plant cuttings of eight plants, oiling and polishing my sword, and finishing my first SCA garb skirt. I highly doubt that this exact to-do list has ever been assembled before. I also did normal things like sweeping, vacuuming, and laundry, and later I'll do normal things like exercise and watch a movie. But I'll be doing as much of that as possible in my SCA garb of a full skirt, makeshift chemise, and borrowed bodice. That's unusual.

Update: it is now later, and I have made a normal dinner, cleaned up like a tidy girl, and sat down with a bag of popcorn and the newer version of the movie of "Pride and Prejudice" to wait for Josh to get home and skype. All in all a good day.

As you may have noticed (I'm not sure who "you" even is at this point, if they exist), I changed my blog background again. I'm rather fond of this whole new realm of font options. I'm just waiting for the day when uploading your own background actually works. But that doesn't matter much if I can't salvage my thousands of pictures that I lost when I destroyed my hard-drive not too long ago. This theme is a summery one, because it's becoming summery outside. Yes, it's going to be less than 50 Fahrenheit when I go to work in the morning, but it will be 90 on Sunday. But I digress and ramble. Hopefully within the next few weeks I'll have interesting things to say about my first real SCA event, my brother's graduation, and work, along with posting some of the many reviews I've started. Who knows? I may even finally get around to taking good pictures of my summer apartment and posting them.

Current view of blog for future reference:

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Why do I like storms?

I'm currently sitting in the stairwell of my apartment building looking up granola recipes and waiting for our fourth or fifth tornado warning of the day to pass. And with the way things have been going since 9:00, as soon as 11:00 (the current end time for the warning) approaches the warning will be renewed. It certainly is fierce out there.

Today I got to thinking about why I like storms. I think it's similar to why I like heights and various other things. I've become convinced that I like storms because I'm secretly afraid of them. Just afraid enough to get my adrenaline pumping, but not afraid enough to have me cowering in a corner. I'm an adrenaline junkie when it comes to physical danger. There is something in me that craves the twinge of fear and hungers after the thrill of pushing it aside because the exhilaration brings a certain joy and simply because I can.

But it's not just the smidgen of fear that makes storms so great; their terrible power adds a whole new level of beauty. Heights are fear-inducing because you might fall, but it's not as if the height is trying to hurl you against the earth (usually). A storm, however is not just a passive possibility. It is very much alive and very much angry. Such as display of power, with breath-taking rush of wind, heart-stopping crash of thunder, eye-dazzling bursts of lightning, and ear-filling frenzy of rain, inspires a captivating awe. I just can't turn away. And so I sit and watch and listen in exhilaration until I fall asleep or am called by responsibility or - if I'm lucky - the storm runs its course. Because I'm just enough nervous to be all the more excited and happily overwhelmed.

P.S.: Observe also that I have once again changed my background.

Sunday, May 15, 2011

I bet Mr. Dodson is secretly a linguist.

We all know well the words of the poet Dodson:*
He's climbin' in yo window.
He's snatchin' yo people up.
He's tryin' to rape 'em
So y'all need to hide yo kids, hide yo wife
Hide yo kids, hide yo wife
Hide yo kids, hide to wife
And hide yo husband, too
Cuz he's rapin' errybody our here.
I was thinking about this song the other day when I noticed something intriguing about Mr. Dodson's choice of words in the phrase "snatchin' yo people up." You see, the word "rape" comes from a Latin word meaning "to catch up or carry off." As you can see, the lyrics to the song demonstrate a clear understanding of the etymology of the word "rape", thereby suggesting that Antoine Dodson is secretly a linguist.

*If, perchance, you don't know about Mr. Antoine Dodson, I refer you to these two videos. First: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EzNhaLUT520  Second: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hMtZfW2z9dw.

Saturday, May 14, 2011

Moving Day

I meant to type and post this on Thursday, but I had more cleaning and whatnot to do than expected, and yesterday was an early day at work. Thursday I moved into my apartment for the summer. For the first time (and perhaps the last time) I'll be living on my own. I'm excited and nervous. Excited because it's something completely new, and nervous because it's something completely new. I'm confident that I'm capable of cleaning and cooking and shopping and whatnot, but there's still some apprehension.

First I unpacked. That actually only took like two hours, even though I did a lot of dilly-dallying. I discovered a few things: I left my shoe sorter at home, there is barely any bathroom storage space, and the kitchen cabinets are made for tall people. I also discovered that getting all set up and sorted out was sort of fun. I got to decorate some, too, although it's sort of silly decorating. All I have to work with is what was in my dorm room, so nothing is to be taken seriously. I've got Yoda and the creepery up in my room and the armadillos and the whattery up in the living room. I think I'll take some pictures and post them later.

Shopping was the hardest part of the day. First I had to find the grocery store. In the process of heading to one about fifteen minutes away from home, I found one two minutes away. I felt completely overwhelmed at first even though I've been grocery shopping dozens of times. Maybe starting with meat and produce was a bad idea. Too many choices. I made it through alright, but it took a while. At the end I signed up for a Payless Plus Shopper card (which also works at Kroger stores) and felt all official and whatnot.

Then I had to find the best route to Target. I picked the shortest based on my navigational knowledge, but that turned out to be rather out of the way. I gave up and pulled out my GPS to get back to my apartment, and it turns there was a much, much easier way than what I took. Oh well.

When I made dinner, it turned out well, but I made about twice as much as I needed (...and then ate it all anyway). I did the same last night, so I guess I get something better than a sandwich when I'm rushing out the door to head to Cincinnati today.

In honor of my moving in experience, I've temporarily given my blog a grocery background. Look for something a bit more orthodox soon.

Current blog appearance for future reference:

Monday, May 9, 2011

In Which I Discuss My First Real Job

It turns out I am hire-able after all! At least by a hardware store desperate for people who can tell a petunia from a geranium and work in the garden center. This summer I'll be working full time in the Ace Hardware garden center up here near school. No, it's not exactly a glamorous internship, but it is a full-time job. Furthermore, it fulfills the work hours in my field required to graduate, it gives me lots of people experience, teaches me to balance people needs and plant needs, teaches me about plants, provides me with a part-time job in the fall (and presumably a job after I graduate while I'm waiting for Josh to finish), and a great resume builder.

Five days a week, I stand outside for eight hours a day and take care of plants, people, and the store. For the plants, I water, deadhead, and keep an eye out for pests and other problems. For the people, I act friendly and welcoming, answer questions, and help them find and carry plants and other garden materials. For the store, I do all of the above plus running the cash register and keeping everything organized and in working order. I have a very multi-faceted job.

It's not a career, but I enjoy it as a relatively short-term option. I also like the people I work with. The guy I interviewed with told me they were all "cold", but I have yet to see any evidence of that. Sure, they're sturdy hardware store employees, but I like everyone without effort. Then again I tend to like just about everyone without effort. The only downsides I can see are that my feet are not yet used to standing for forty hours a week (my new shoe insoles should help) and that the sunnier it gets, the busier we are. That means that the more I need sunscreen, the less time I have to apply it. This poses a serious problem for a ginger. I'll just have to get 50 SPF or something and put it on in the slight ebbs in customer flow.

Friday, April 29, 2011

I'm typing this primarily so that I can have at least one post for every month this year.

And as a reminder to myself that this does exist and that I should get back to it this summer. I will either have lots of spare time this summer, or none at all. I should be deciding soon. If you've ever been suddenly expected to make major life decisions in a week or less, I'm sure you know what great fun it is.

My long hiatus was brought on by a whole slew of things demanding my undivided attention, often at the same time. Trying to split your undivided attention is a tricky business, so all the less demanding things got put on hold. As was mentioned before, I hope to return this summer.

I can't think of too many non-stressful things to post about at the moment, so I'm just going to once again redesign the look of my blog and share a few wonderful things that I've found/that have been brought to my attention since the last time I posted:
Hmm. A list of blogs, recent music artists, not super mainstream movies, and other strange things. I'm not a hipster, I promise (although I get along quite well with the nice ones). I should probably also note that my beau is responsible for/involved in the discovery of half of these things. I guess that makes him cool or something. It could even mean that I like him.

Ta-ta for now. I hope to post again soon.

Edit: I didn't redo my blog's look until after I posted this, so I had no idea what I was about to do. Apparently with one of the templates, changing the background picture just makes it pop up in the title area behind the main part of the site. I was messing around and thinking about the ridiculous possibilities when I tried out the chicks. It was perfect. Especially that one to the left of the center. It's begging for your help with its little orange felt beak and beady black eyes. It just makes me giggle. A little dark, perhaps, but you have to admit it's amusing. Since I was going to be silly anyway, I chose the font "Lobster" for my title and headings. It's such a great font name, but I'll never use it in a "serious" layout, so I decided it would get its chance to shine today.

Thursday, March 17, 2011

And I Get Lost Again

I've developed a habit of posting most of my stories from getting lost. Not all of them, because if I posted all of them I wouldn't post much else. I'm not sure if this really counts as being lost, but I'll let you be the judge of that.

Today I went to interview for a possible summer job in Indianapolis. The woman I was emailing offered to give me more detailed directions, but upon checking Google Maps it looked pretty easy to find. All I had to do was drive toward home, get off at a different exit, and stay on that street until I found the relevant office. Just to be safe, I left with ten minutes of buffer room in case I somehow managed to get lost.

I made it all the way to the desired street without event. As the checkered flag indicating my goal on Janet (my GPS) drew nigh, I scanned both sides of the street for any signs of the office. I couldn't find it. I turned around, and drove back the way I had come until I had once more passed Janet's flag. I still didn't see it. So I turned around again. And still didn't find it.

Convinced that turning around and driving past the alleged location once more wouldn't be very helpful, I pulled over in a parking lot to get out the business card of the woman I had been emailing, only to discover that I had left it in my dorm room. I called my mom, and she was kind enough to look up the location on Google Maps again. We pin-pointed the block on which the place should have been, and she tried to get me there that way. I still wasn't seeing anything.

My ever-helpful mother then checked online to find a phone number for me to call. She couldn't find the person I had talked to, but she did find a number for me to try. I called the number, and a friendly man answered it. He was happy to help me find the office. After describing my location, he found the place where he thought I was on Google Maps and then instructed me to drive north. I did so. He named places and streets I should be passing, but I didn't see any of them.

Apparently I was supposed to have headed south rather than north, so I turned around yet again. A few minutes later, I finally found the office thanks to the kind man. It wasn't labeled. It was in a warehouse complex, but the company name wasn't on the sign by the road. Nor was the name on the building itself. There was a pleasant woman sitting outside eating lunch, and she confirmed that the building I had pulled up to was in fact the correct one.

In the end, I was twenty minutes late. My buffer time had not been sufficient. I somehow managed to be lost on the same mile-long stretch of road for a half hour. Fortunately, the interviewers didn't seem too upset by the delay. The interview went well, so hopefully I get the job. I should know sometime next week.

Sunday, March 13, 2011

Spring Songs

It's time once again for another season playlist and blog background. Today's background is not only spring-like, but relates to what I would be doing right now if I were responsible and hadn't lost my keys: science. It's time for planting arabidopsis like crazy in the lab. I was tending to some plants in the greenhouse when I got my keys locked in the lab. Since it's Sunday, nobody was there to unlock it and let me get my keys. So now I'm unable to finish what I need to get done, so I'm just going to publish this post instead.

I finally got around to categorizing all of my iTunes music by season, and as a result I have far too many songs in each season to continue my 20 songs per season trend from fall and winter. I have 270 just for spring, and that's one of my short lists. With great effort, I've narrowed it down to 40. In the process I had to get rid of some excellent spring songs, so just because I've missed a nice song doesn't mean I don't believe it suits the season.
  1. Prelude No. 1 (Bach)
  2. If You Want to Sing Out, Sing Out (Cat Stevens)
  3. The Door in the Air (from The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian)
  4. Raindrop Prelude No. 15 in D flat Minor (Chopin)
  5. Analyse (The Cranberries)
  6. Danses Sacree et Profane (Debussy)
  7. La Fille Aux Cheveaux de Lin (Debussy)
  8. Sons and Daughters (The Decemberists)
  9. Old Old Fashioned (Frightened Rabbit)
  10. When U Love Somebody (The Fruit Bats)
  11. Ballooning (Gulley)
  12. That’s No Way to Get to Heaven (Guster)
  13. Death of a Tune (Hidden Cameras)
  14. Moths (Jethro Tull)
  15. Saria’s Song (from The Legend of Zelda: The Ocarina of Time)
  16. Title Theme (from The Legend of Zelda: The Windwaker)
  17. Houses of the Holy (Led Zeppelin)
  18. Many Meetings (from The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring)
  19. The Morning: Another Morning (The Moody Blues)
  20. Nice to Be Here (The Moody Blues)
  21. Flaming (Pink Floyd)
  22. Dawn (from Pride and Prejudice)
  23. Leaving Netherfield (from Pride and Prejudice)
  24. Intro et Allegro (Ravel)
  25. Scheherezade - The Young Prince and Princess (Rimsky-Korsakov)
  26. Tendrement (Satie)
  27. Je Te Veux (Satie)
  28. Allegro (Satie)
  29. Meet Me by the Water (Saturday Looks Good to Me)
  30. Black Hole (The Silent Years)
  31. For Emily, Wherever I May Find Her (Simon & Garfunkel)
  32. America (Simon & Garfunkel)
  33. Rustles of Spring (Sinding)
  34. Kiss Me (Sixpence None the Richer)
  35. Nutcracker – Waltz of the Flowers (Tchaikovsky)
  36. Swan Lake – 7. Sujet (Tchaikovsky)
  37. I’ve Always Loved You (Third Day)
  38. Whiskey in the Jar (traditional Celtic tune)
  39. Drowsy Maggie (traditional Celtic tune)
  40. All Creatures of Our God and King (traditional hymn)
Edit: I've decided that since I typically refer to new blog layouts as they are used, but once I change it again it's hard to know what I'm talking about, I'm going to post screen-shots of the new-to-that-post design after I've changed things. Here is what my blog looked like when I published this:


    Monday, March 7, 2011

    Unexpectedly Unnerving Experiences

    I was looking at a picture from a visit to Spring Grove Cemetery back at home, and it reminded me of a rather unsettling experience I had immediately after taking that picture. What follows is an explanation of what happened along with several other things I find oddly unpleasant.

    First we have car washes. I hate car washes. Being moved slowly through a dark tunnel with all sorts of bristles and brushes and floppy things attacking my car makes me incredibly nervous. It's even worse if I'm in the front seat. I don't mind Mike's Car Wash, but that's because they make it child-friendly. It's white and well-lit on the inside with stuffed animals chilling around. For practical reasons, it also shoots liquid and soap at you rather than attacking you with large, frightening, apparati.

    I also hate having my blood pressure taken. Anything that restricts blood flow makes me queasy, but one would think such a little thing as the blood pressure cuff shouldn't be a problem. The worst was when we did a lab in A.P. Biology involving taking each other's blood pressures. I decided to face my fear and permit my classmate to take my blood pressure. First he pumped it fuller than he needed to. I started panicking, and he fumbled about for a few seconds (it seemed like forever at the time) before finding the release valve. I was not a happy camper.

    This next one is probably the only one that has a good chance at being genuinely unsettling to others. If you don't like needles, skip to the next one. My brother once had me try to re-pierce his ear. It was terrible. He gave me a needle or safety pin or something and told me to just make it go through. I have no doubt that he would have withstood whatever pain I might have caused, but after a brief try I just couldn't continue. You see, I felt the pin ripping through layers of skin. Little vibrations or something came through the pin and I felt it. It was terrible.

    And now we move on to a surreal, H.G. Wellsian sort of experience. Just north of Purdue on I-65 is the Fowler Ridge wind farm. Hundreds of wind turbines stand in military-like ranks on hundreds of acres flanking the highway. In the daylight, they are impressive and intriguing. I'm sure they might intimidate some, but mostly they just look neat. It's a different story in the dark. Each of these windmills has a red light on top that blinks to warn planes. That wouldn't be too bad all on it's own; I could just pretend they were red fireflies or something. But they all throb on and off in unison in a steady beat. It's eerie. Not the thing you want to drive past at 5:30 on a dark December morning.

    Sometimes if you're driving and making a turn, you can't immediately see the lane you're planning to get into. I'm sure we all know of an intersection or two like that. I always have a moment of panic in which I believe I'll somehow end up on the wrong side of the road. I will highlight two such turns: the turn left from going north-west on Northwestern to going west on Stadium, and the turn left on the East Ronald Reagan entrance ramp in Colerain.

    I've saved the best for last: being slowly approached by a flock of walking Canadian geese. Josh and I were at Spring Grove Cemetery walking around and taking pictures one fine afternoon. I saw several geese down by a pond and decided to take a picture of them. They even turned to face me, much to my delight. My delight quickly turned to dismay as they stretched out into a line facing me and began to slowly advance. At first I believed they were just going to cross the street or something, so I turned and walked in a different direction. The line shifted to follow me. Josh offered the rational explanation that they were probably just hoping for me to feed them, but that didn't help me out much. I think in the end we ended up semi-leading them to some other people, but I don't remember for sure. I just remember that it was creepy as all get-out. I haven't even seen Alfred Hitchcock's Birds and I was afraid. As far as I was concerned, they were closing in for the kill. Josh didn't seem to be bothered by it, but just ask him and he will verify that I was irrationally terrified of those birds.

    Here they are, gathering to scare the living daylights out of me.

    Thursday, February 24, 2011

    Spring, Please Hurry Up

    This may have been the longest, greyest, snowiest winter I've ever experienced. We didn't see the grass up here at Purdue from Thanksgiving through mid-February. With the wind chill keeping things down in the teens or single digits for daytime highs, most of the winter has also been rather cold. Yes, I know, there are colder, greyer places to spend the winter, but there's a reason I'm not living in one of them.

    Last week we got a nice warm spell with days up to fifty degrees. It was grand. I even got to wear a skirt. Naive as I was, I thought that this faux-spring would be enough to hold me over until vrai-spring arrived, but I was wrong. I'm more impatient than ever. It's currently below freezing, and it snowed enough yesterday to stick to the wet, half-thawed ground. Punxsutawney Phil predicted an early spring, and if we don't get one I'm going to have a choice word or two for him.

    People keep on reminding me that it's still February, and that early March is just as bad. Yes, I know that. Yes, I also know that spring will get here soon enough if I'm just patient. But I'm not, so I'm just going to mentally huff and puff at the weather for a few more weeks until it does what I want because it's the proper time and not because I told it to. In the meantime, I'm making my blog more spring-like, as you may have noticed.

    I hope you haven't minded my complaints. They're only to be taken moderately seriously. On another note, I should be writing more often this semester, so I'll see you again soon. Have a happy stupid, grey, cold February day.

    Wednesday, February 23, 2011

    Book Review: Life Is Too Important to Be Taken Seriously

    This short book by Mandy Smith matches its curious title with an even more unusual subtitle: Kite-Flying Lessons from Ecclesiastes. Emily McClure picked this book out to study with the ladies at the college group at home, and after working through one chapter with them I decided to read the entire thing on my own.

    The goal of the book is to teach you to re-prioritize your life to find true meaning and in the process truly enjoy the things under the sun that aren't meant to give you meaning. Whether it's health, money, job, education, relationships, or just about anything else that you find yourself putting ahead of God, Solomon touches on it in Ecclesiastes and Smith expands on it in her book. When we learn to loosen our death grips on the less important things and put them under God, our lives will be more peaceful and focused through the good and the bad, and we may even re-learn to have fun. She also includes a list of carefree little things to do in the back.

    While I've never lost the ability to enjoy the trivial joys in life, I do tend to run the risk of trying to focus on a dozen morally-neutral pursuits to the point that God becomes my fall-back when I've been run to the ground by the stress of chasing everything else. To use Smith's analogy, I tend to chase the wind and try to catch it rather than harnessing it to fly a kite. I highly recommend this book. It's a short, refreshing read with welcome reminders and a redirected look at what I once considered a depressing book of the Bible.

    Thursday, February 3, 2011

    My Testimony

    I suppose this is something good to have on hand, and I remember things I write. Since it's written, why not put it somewhere? It's longer than I'd like, but there's a lot to say. For years I thought I didn't have a testimony, or at least not one anybody would be interested in hearing. But that's because I've spent most of my life not actually having the faintest idea of what I was doing, at least in a spiritual sense. I was still as confused as many who had never prayed or stepped into a church. You don't get to read about a life of crime and recklessness, but hopefully my less outwardly dramatic account resonates with common folk.

    I grew up in a Christian family. However, the church we went to for the first ten years of my life was not a healthy one. Through the family of a brother's friend, we started going to the church where my family still belongs today. At that church, I started to actually learn what Christianity was all about. In fourth grade I was baptized.

    It wasn't until three or four years later that I actually started to change as a result of my faith. I wasn't the best kid in middle school. To cut to the point, I'll just summarize my middle school self as a malicious coward. At some point, it occurred to me that I wasn't living like Christians were supposed to. Primarily motivated by duty I began to change my actions.

    By the time I graduated from high school, I was a much nicer person and had even occasionally talked about God to friends, but I never really understood it. Deep down, I was always just doing the things I was supposed to do, not the things I was excited to do because I had a personal relationship with the God of the universe. I fooled myself into believing that intellectual pursuit of God was my way of personally relating to him. I was very Bible literate and could put down most arguments against God, but all this knowledge didn't amount to much without personal knowledge of the God I supposedly served.

    At college I joined a little house church that was part of a association of churches known as the Great Commission Movement. The people there loved God with their hearts, minds, and everything else they had. But things started to get interesting after winter break. My roommate and her parents had gone on a winter retreat with the Great Commission Movement and uncovered some serious mistakes made in the history of the movement. She and I and the third girl of our inseparable trio didn't know what to do. We prayed, researched, and talked with each other, our parents, and the leaders of the church for about a month of the most emotional pain I have ever endured. The church had become our home, and we were terrified that we would need to leave it. In the end, we arrived at the decision the church was safe. Yes, the founders had made some mistakes, but they had apologized and redirected themselves since then.

    However, not all the complaints against the Great Commission Movement were valid. Some of the things people didn't like were things taught in the Bible that are simply more "extreme" than what most churches today ask of their members. They called for a faith and dedication that put God unreservedly at the center of every Christian's life. That wasn't something I had. In fact, there were all sorts of things I saw in my brothers and sisters leading the church that I didn't have and didn't understand. What was I missing about God? Thus began the often painful but spiritually vivifying pruning that extended through the rest of the calendar year.

    The next significant phase started that summer. By June when I went to a youth conference as an adult leader, I knew things were amiss with my spiritual life. It didn't really feel like life at all. I had never really been close to God at all ever, and I didn't know what to do about it. I had set goal after goal for myself and fallen short of every one of them. I jumped on the opportunity to participate in a summer discipleship program, but even that became a ritual for me. While many of the others left feeling like they had grown, I left knowing more than ever that I was spiritually malnourished.

    With the fall semester came the hardest and most rewarding lessons I've ever learned in my life. I began to read Crazy Love by Francis Chan and was convicted by the lukewarm Christian he described. His description fit me to a T, and I desperately wanted to change that. I just didn't know how to give up control, even though I knew I couldn't make it work on my own. I guess I didn't know well enough yet that I couldn't succeed on my own, because I kept on failing for a while and not really letting God work. At my college church's fall retreat I finally broke and understood just how much I really can't succeed spiritually at all on my own.

    But the pruning wasn't done yet. For one thing, I still had never truly known what it was like to know God. The following weekend I headed back home to be a leader for the high school fall retreat at my home church. We read A.W. Tozer's The Knowledge of the Holy. One of the last chapters was on the omnipresence of God. I got partway through and stopped. It made absolutely no sense to me. I knew omnipresence wasn't some sort of pantheistic Pocahontas sort of thing, but I hadn't a clue what it might be. If God was everywhere all the time, how come I never sensed it at all? I was rather frustrated with God at this point. I crossed my arms and rather irately prayed something along the lines of "God, this doesn't make sense. You've been hacking away at me for a while now, and I'd like a little comfort. If you're there, show me. But I don't want some sort of mystical feel-good experience. If that's all you have to offer, I'm not interested."

    I can't accurately describe what followed, but even as I type this I'm starting to tear up at how powerful it was. My stubborn glare and crossed arms turned into sobbing into my hands with joy and I don't even know what else. God was there, and I knew it. It wasn't precisely a feeling or thought, but it was real. It was more real than anything. I'd felt "spiritual highs" after high school church conferences, and this wasn't it. This was something so much more real and yet so much more beyond my comprehension. God was there. I suppose he always has been and always will be, but I don't often know it the way I did on that chilly October afternoon.

    Do I understand what omniscience is? No. Can I answer the other theological questions I've been unable to fathom? No. Do I know how to go about changing and surrendering to God? Still no, but that at least is getting better. The difference is that I no longer have to go through intellectual arguments every time I feel like life is hopeless and God an illusion. I can remember back to that day and other instances since then and know that God is real because I've been in his presence. I don't have to do things the Bible says because a book tells me to. I choose to try to do the things the Bible says because I love the God behind it. I'm still a coward who messes up a lot, but after that experience I was at the point where God could begin to help me do something about it.

    I still can't get past the fact I can't tell you what it was like. I know it sounds trippy to anyone who's never been there. I, too, have heard people describe similar situations and rolled my eyes at what I interpreted as sentimentalism and an over-active imagination. I've sneered at people who claimed to have communicated with God and loathed the phrases I'd heard others use to try to describe the indescribable. And yet now I understand that the words don't exist to say what you mean. I'm stuck with things that sound absurd from the outside, hoping that my sincerity and the fact that I'm not prone to wishy-washiness will somehow make me believable to those who have never been there. You simply have to meet God on your own. There's no other way to understand. It's definitely worth it.

    Thursday, January 27, 2011

    Audiobook Review: Lilth

    Thanks to Librivox I can now listen to books instead of not having the time to read them. I started re-reading George McDonald's Lilith this summer on the plane ride back from Colombia, but unfortunately I left the book on the plane when I was just a few chapters in. I mentioned this to a friend a few months ago, and he introduced me to the wonderful world of Librivox. Visit their site for more information. I finished listening to Lilth not too long ago after driving to Purdue, back home, and back to Purdue again plus some lab time.

    I remembered Lilith being dark but good, but I didn't remember how dark and good it was. Some of the images evoked could have made Poe shudder, so beautifully written but fantastically grotesque they were. Death, decay, and disfigurement both physical and spiritual were woven liberally into this tale of the redemption of things twisted by evil. But along with the horror was beauty, compassion, and wonder. The 

    Mr. Vane is the protagonist of the story. He is a young man who has just come into inheritance of the family estate after graduating from college where he invested far more time in books and knowledge than in people. Through a series of odd events, he finds himself in another world (sort of) where he is befriended by Mr. Raven, a man of paradox and mystery. In this other world he learns that he is dead, though he believes himself alive, and that the only way to be alive is to go to sleep in the cold house of Mr. Raven. He fears sleeping there, however, and the adventures that ensue are what it takes to get him to realize that he really does need to sleep and really can trust Mr. Raven. This is a rather incomplete synopsis, but to go into too much more detail would require more explanation and the book might be spoiled.

    MacDonald is clearly using sleeping and waking as a symbol for death to self and rebirth into the kingdom of God. Some people take more convincing of their need of sleep than others, but they all wind up there in the end. If all MacDonald meant to say with the book is that anyone can be redeemed through Christ no matter how long and painful the process is, I would agree wholeheartedly with him. However, he takes things a step too far. MacDonald asserts that everyone, even the shadowy representation of Satan, will be redeemed in the end. To be fair, he doesn't say that God will just decide to forgive everyone and be all nice and lovey dovey. He still thinks everyone has to arrive at the point of brokenness and surrender necessary for God to work. He just thinks everyone will get there. If you ignore several hints and outright statements in the last few chapters, the theology is excellent. Again, I can't elaborate without spoilers. I definitely recommend that you read/listen to this book.