Happy Anniversary to Me! /OTA

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Yes, as I mentioned yesterday, today is the anniversary of the day I struck it rich in the Life Lottery, and my Wonder Woman, despite all factors to the contrary, bound herself irrevocably to me. I say “irrevocably” because, well, she did something that’s becoming rarer and rarer nowadays: she made a committment. No, really, not the “committment” of many couples to “stick together until I get bored, something better comes along or times get tough.” No, she’s someone with an even rarer affliction (in the eyes of today’s “grups”), an adult with a keenly-developed sense of morality and ethics that views a committment, a promise as, well, real.

And how can a yutz like me respond with anything but a like committment to someone such as she?

So, happy, happy, joy, joy! 🙂 Twenty-eight years and—mirabile dictu!—she still loves this yutz. Lucky (or more accurately, blessed) guy, me.

Thank you, Wonder(ful) Woman!


Do note the posts Carl (The World According to Carl) asked me to check out: the first is a perfect example of why I have opted out of after-Thanksgiving shopping (yep: all finished for this year, well before Thanksgiving) and the other is just plain interesting. Thanks for the advance tipoffs, Carl. There, I’ve salted the mine, as it were, so y’all just chime on in with some more interesting reading, wouldya?


T 13, 1.9: 13 things that make me glad to be growing older

Semi-liveblogging Thanksgiving day…

This one’s a countdonw list…

13. The 10% discount I get at Taco Bell. Without even asking.

12. Heck, ANY “senior discount” I get, whether I have to ask for it or not. Cos I’m a cheap bastard.

11. I can claim my hearing’s bad whenever some dunmbass starts to give his view of the world. (“Eh? What was that? Violins in the Middle East? Whatsa problem with that?”)

10. Heck, I’ve reached the point in my life when can tell dumbasses they are dumbasses and not care that I hurt their po’ widdle feewings. Just think where I’ll be in 10 or 20 years, at this rate!

9. Every sunrise is a miracle of grace, cos if I got what I deserved outa life, I’d have been dead and in hell long ago… just like every person who’s alive today. (Ain’t it great to NOT get what ya deserve?)

8. Every day I spend on this earth, I have the opportunity to learn something new. Today, I’ve already learned how to make festive holiday candles (Lovely Daughter’s been reading home deco mags, I guess :-)) using cranberries, tea lights and crystal drinking glasses. What other discoveries await me today?

7. Every day is another chance to get one more thing right… this time (and a chance, of course, to screw something new up in strange and interesting ways).

6. Kittens.

5. Watching our children grow “in wisdom and stature and in favor with God and man”.

4. Autumn.

3. Sleep is an option.

2. Every time “I gaze into the night sky and see the works of Your fingers… ” I’m led to realize

1. Every day older is another day with my Wonder Woman.

tb-posted at the Thursday Thirteen Hub (where Thanksgiving Thursday falls on Wednesday the 22 this year :-))

Give Thanks? For what? And to whom?

This Thanksgiving, I’m posting this one “omnibus Thanksgiving post,” complete with an exhortation to reexamine your own (as I am my own) lives for blessings you may have discounted, overlooked or indeed, thought to be curses, disasters or other hard cheese.

And yes, it is a rough compilation of old and new, borrowed, but nothing blue.

First, something I am daily, continually and deeply grateful for: Twenty-eight years ago tomorrow, as a result of Divine blinding of a good woman’s eyes and heart (*heh*), I became the husband of my Wonder Woman. Yes, our wedding rehearsal (and the lavish rehearsal dinner given by my aunt and uncle) was on Thanksgiving day, November 23, 1978. So this year, even Thanksgiving Day matches up with the events of our wedding.

In addition to our twenty-eighth wedding anniversay tomorrow, I get to celebrate our eighth wedding anniversary since my Wonder Woman “died” three times one day in the Fall of 1998.*

Yes, I’m grateful. And my gratitude has two subjects to whom I am thankful: my Wonder Woman, of course, and the God who, according to her “moved into my little Pinto as I was driving through Colorado and told me to answer ‘Yes”.”

🙂

And who returned her to me eight years ago, despite what the medical folks kept saying and she lay asleep…

But my gratitude is for apparently iexplicably miraculous events (Wonder Woman’s “yes” and her eyes opening and looking into mine with recognition, awareness and love, after the medical people warned me again and again that it was unlikely to happen that way.

But for others, real people in a real world, the story turns out differently… and still they find things to be grateful for… and Persons to thank.

It was the worst of times; it was the worst of times. (Not so Dickensian, but oh, so true.) War ravaged the land for 30 years. During that time, Martin had served as one of the pastors of a once-prosperous town that had suffered greatly in the war. Sacked three times. Saved from sacking once only by courageous negotiations with a conquering general/king by one simple pastor… but still ruined again economically at the end of the negotiations.

This simple pastor had also seen his family, friends, colleagues and thousands of townspeople and refugees killed by plague and hunger, and during the war years, when he was the sole remaining pastor of the town, he was called upon not only to conduct the funerals of his own wife and children, but also to conduct as many as 40-50 funerals a day for families of friends and neighbors-the townspeople he served so long and knew so well-and of those from the crowded masses of refugees from the war-torn countryside. All-in-all, he performed nearly 5,000 funerals during these years.

The war was the Thirty Years War (1618-1648), a time of such brutality, hardship and deprivation that our modern minds cannot (no, really canNOT) begin to comprehend it. The town was Eilenburg, in Saxony. The man was Martin Rinkart. In direct response to all those years of affliction, he penned these words:

Now thank we all our God, with heart and hands and voices,
Who wondrous things has done, in Whom this world rejoices;
Who from our mothers’ arms has blessed us on our way
With countless gifts of love, and still is ours today.

O may this bounteous God through all our life be near us,
With ever joyful hearts and blessèd peace to cheer us;
And keep us in His grace, and guide us when perplexed;
And free us from all ills, in this world and the next!

All praise and thanks to God the Father now be given;
The Son and Him Who reigns with Them in highest Heaven;
The one eternal God, Whom earth and Heaven adore;
For thus it was, is now, and shall be evermore.

Martin Rinkart knew at a deep, profound level the truth that blessings aren’t always what we think they are, that gratitude for blessings we often overlook or even condemn as bad luck, affliction and woe is not only possible, but can yield blessings of its own.

Be thankful for your blessings? Yes. But even when you cannot see any “blessings” be thankful still. And know who to give thanks to… and why.

Once again, I say:

Look deeply at the things you are thankful for. SOMEONE other than yourself alone is due thanks for the blessings of possessions and health, family and friends… and it ain’t you, cos no matter what lies our society tells you, neither you nor anyone else—and certainly not I—deserve all the blessings y’all have. Oh, maybe you “deserve” some, but never all.

So WHO do you say “Thank you” to?

tb-posted to STACLU’s Open Thanksgiving Post

Continue reading “Give Thanks? For what? And to whom?”

Live Post: Thanksgiving Dinner Prep

Well, my “battle plan” for an easy T-Day dinner is well under way. The turkey breast is in the rice cooker (which has just clicked over to from “cook” to “slow cook”–@ about 180 degrees fahrenheit) along with some medium-sized red potatoes, quartered, some turkey gravy fixin’s and as much stuffing as I could fit inside the cavity of the small, quadraplegic bird (just the breast portion of a a small turkey, that is, minus legs and wings).

Lotsa dressing left over (crumbled cornbread, poultry seasonings–like sage, lots and lots of black pepper, etc.–onion and celery, etc.) and put in a baking dish to join Lovely Daughter’s “smashed yams” and green bean casserole in the oven.

The pumpjin bread’s making in the bread maker and everything except the liquids is measured out for the wheat/bran/ground flax seed egg bread that’ll go in the bread maker in the a.m.

I’ll be sure and post about how it turned out, but so far, easiest thanksgiving meal involving turkey and fixin’s I’ve tried. (All-time easiest Thanksgiving meal: second-day—or third-day, when it’s even better—chili. Yum. It’s what I’d fix for Thanksgiving and Christmas every year, by preference… cos I’m a very lazy cook, of course. :-))

So, Who are you thankful to?\OTA

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I hear a lot of talk this year about thankful for this, thankful for that.

Right.

So, WHO do you thank? I mean, if you have things to be thankful for, surely someone recieves your thanks, or is it just some nebulous No One (who, really, would deserve thanks for Nothing, if at all, don’t you think?).

Being “thankful” and not thanking SOMEONE, someone specific, is not being thankful, it’s just mush.

Look deeply at the things you are thankful for. SOMEONE other than yourself alone is due thanks for the blessings of possessions and health, family and friends… and it ain’t you, cos no matter what lies our society tells you, neither you nor anyone else—and certainly not I—deserve all the blessings y’all have. Oh, maybe you “deserve” some, but never all.

So WHO do you say “Thank you” to?

Better make a long, long list.

Tomorrow, I’ll post in this space about someone who knew much more about thankfulness than you very likely ever will. Oh, yes I will. Wanna bet?

Approaching Thanksgiving

[Note: given the sometimes hectic approach to holidays, expect a few pre-posted posts this week and laggardly clearing of my moderation queue. I’ve not deserted twc, just may be busy. :-)]


Here’s a bald-faced theft of material from Chip Stam’s “Worship Quote of the Week.”

GIVING THANKS OR GRUMBLING? WHICH WILL IT BE?

We are to be “always and for everything giving thanks” (Eph. 5:20). Most of us give thanks sometimes for some things; Spirit-filled believers give thanks always for all things. There is no time at which, and no circumstance for which, they do not give thanks. They do so “in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ,” that is because they are one with Christ and “to God the Father,” because the Holy Spirit witnesses with their spirit that they are God’s children and that their Father is wholly good and wise. Grumbling, one of Israel’s besetting sings, is serious because it is a symptom of unbelief. Whenever we start moaning and groaning, it is proof positive that we are not filled with the Spirit. Whenever the Holy Spirit fills believers, they thank their heavenly Father at all times for all things. —John Stott. BAPTISM AND FULLNESS, Second Edition. Downers Grove: InterVarsity Press, 1976, p. 58. ISBN 0877846480.

And along those lines, if you think you have little to be thankful for, try Romans 8:28 (and surrounding verses) and then consider these words from Cynthia Clausen:

God is too wise to be mistaken.
God is too good to be unkind.
So when you don’t understand,
when you don’t see His plan,
When you can’t trace His hand, trust His heart.


Late-breaking *heh* addition: The Random Maniyak has a complementary post that deals with a subject central to Thanksgiving (yes, it does), while the Random Yak tries to create a sense of purpose (ex nihilo, as it were) in Random Thanksgiving thoughts.

Can you say, “Eaten by locusts?”/OTP

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Today is already eaten by locusts. Short shrift on blogging, if y’all come up with some good linkage for me to explore later, then I’ll have my reading list made up for when I finally get a breather tonight. Thanks.

Oh, “short shrift mode” means I may not get a chance to check in for trackbacks caught in moderation as often as I usually do. Don’t be overly concerned, though, cos I WILL check for tbs caught in the moderation queue and clear them as soon as I can.

Christmas is is not for children

The paradox of the Incarnation is not just for the very young…

“Great is the mystery of the gifts! For this visible infant, who seems so young, who needs swaddling clothes for His body, who in the substance which we see is newly born, is the Eternal Son, as it is written, the Son who is the Maker of all, the Son who binds together in the swathing-bands of His assisting power the whole creation which would otherwise be dissolved.”

Random thought for the Christmas Alliance: Christmas is not for children. Oh, that’s one of the meme-themes we start hearing around this time of year, but by virtue of its categorical nature, it is simply false.

“Angel trees” for children in needy families, “toy drives” for the same purpose, MASSIVE pushes by toy sellers, Christmas programs featuring child after talentless child (or children in whom the talent bug has been well and truly squashed by teaching that doesn’t help them develop their talents but instead “clelebrates” incompetence**, blah, blah, blah.

Sometimes I/m tempted to think the spread of that meme is purposed to trivialize Christmas, but nah, it’s just a result of the general dumbing down of society. Yes, Christmas is for children, but it’s not just for children—or even “the child in all of us” as some would have it.

No. Christmas is for everyone, but especially for adults. And I don’t mean chronological adults who are still refusing to grow up (“grups”?). I mean people who see behind the tinsel and wrapping paper and gimme, gimme, gimme spirit of contemporary commercial “Christmas” to the wonder of the paradoxical Incarnation. See it and realize that giving of themselves is the only way to honor that Incarnation, that first giant step in the greatest gift given.

So, for those of y’all who are adults and do see behind the curtain of tinsel, wrapping paper and gimme spirit to the Incarnation all of that strives to hide, here’s a suggestion for some gifts to give in the season of Advent and Christmas:

Give the present of your presence. really be WITH your family and friends. Listen to them and respond to their needs, desires, hopes and aspirations. be there in that same sense with anyone who is trapped on the other side of the curtain of tinsel and wrapping paper and gimme, gimme, gimme spirit of contemporary commercial “Christmas”—listen to them and respond with a revelation of the Incarnation, in large part by responding as well as you can to their needs, desires, hopes and aspirations.

And always, always do what you can to let the children you meet, no matter what their age, see a bit of the true wonder of Christmas hidden behind the curtain of their quotidian lives: the paradoxical wonder of the Incarnation.

Here’s where you start:

5 Let this mind be in you which was also in Christ Jesus, 6 who, being in the form of God, did not consider it robbery to be equal with God, 7 but made Himself of no reputation, taking the form of a bondservant, and coming in the likeness of men. 8 And being found in appearance as a man, He humbled Himself and became obedient to the point of death, even the death of the cross. 9 Therefore God also has highly exalted Him and given Him the name which is above every name, 10 that at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, of those in heaven, and of those on earth, and of those under the earth, 11 and that every tongue should confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father. —Philippians 2:5–11

Continue reading “Christmas is is not for children”

T-Day Recipes

If Thanksgiving Day is a Day of Dread for the cook in your house, be of good cheer! The Thanksgiving Edition of Carnival of the Recipes is here juuuust in time to save the day. (*heh* For some reason, I heard in my mind’s ear an “announcer voice” announcing the old Chicken man radio program, adding in a touch of Mighty Mouse, just then. :-))

Head on over to add a lil variety to your Thanksgiving meal or simply to catch a few recipes that may help you deal with leftover turkey (substituting turkey in the chicken enchilada recipe featured there is one idea).

Newsmax, we have a problem…/OTP

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[Note: if you can’t take a “fact-based opinion piece” for what it is, skip to another rant… *heh*]

I get mailouts from Newsmax alla time. I don’t know what I clicked on or “signed” to get on their emailouts, but it’s an inbox flood of highly-slanted (though sometimes interesting) right-wing (though rarely truly conservative) pseudo-news.

Hey! Don’t get me wrong, here. It’s usually much, much less slanted and less poisonous than the typical Mass Media Podpeople’s Hivemind dreck, but so obviously and thoughtlessly slanted that it’s not a marked improvement over left wingnut Mass Media Podpeople cant.

Continue reading “Newsmax, we have a problem…/OTP”