Bag of Randomness for Monday, July 25, 2022

  • The unexpected burp can be quite satisfying. After the belch, you’re like, “Man that felt good, but I had no idea I was feeling uncomfortable. Now I feel refreshed. I didn’t know I needed that. I wonder what other ailment I’m dealing with that I don’t know about that can be remedied with a quick and easy fix?”
  • I watched the NFL Network’s A Football Life on Steve Young. I was curious to hear about his formative and high school years and his connection to the Mormon church. The show didn’t touch on any of that. Well, it did with his great-great-great-grandfather who founded the religion, but only spoke of it briefly in a historical context. I was hoping the show would talk about it like Mitt Romney has, about how it helped shape him into the person he is today. The show did mention that the night before in the Super Bowl he won; he watched City Slickers to distract him from the pregame nerves.
  • City Slickers was the movie I chose for me and the kids to watch on Saturday night. I told them to give it a chance, it would start off slow, but would pick up. Thankfully, they loved it. I haven’t watched the movie since high school, but recall watching it with my father thinking that Billy Crystal’s character was somewhat old. Talk about a punch to the gut when I discovered his character is only 39, and here I am going through a mid-life crisis at 46. I’ll be 47 in a little over a month. Watching it at this age, well past the age of his character, compared to when I was a 16, is quite different. It really has me thinking about “that one thing.” I didn’t get it then, but I somewhat get it now. But re-watching some of these movies about a midlife crisis that I’ve seen in my youth and now as an adult a bit past midlife who is recovering from a crisis is pretty eye-opening.
  • Holding hands has always been a bit weird for me. On a few occasions, when we were in DC, 10-year-old BoyGeeding would grab my hand as we walked. Did I think it was weird? Did I think my son was too old or not manly for wanting to hold his dad’s hand? Heck, no. Without hesitation, I held on to my boy’s until he let go. Each time I thought it might be the last time he would ever want to reach out and hold my hand as we walked.
  • I had the kids for a whole week and it was great. It’s so great not to feel that an hourglass has been turned and the sand is quickly giving in to gravity. Well, I still feel that a bit, but not as much. I had a several very touching conversations with the kids that I think would only come about through the development of time. Those conversations don’t happen when you are crammed for time with your children and not be able to spend time with them separately. But, I’m a little upset at myself. When the kids left, I cried. I still cry when they leave. I’m upset at myself for not being tougher and thicker skinned.
  • One thing I love about the drive home after church with family in my car is talking about what everyone got out of the sermon. Our pastor talked about the life of John Wesley, the father of Methodism. Our church is Presbyterian, so I applaud him of speaking highly of the leader of “another team.” One thing which stuck with me is that waiting isn’t always a passive action, one can actively wait. I never really thought about that before.
  • DaughterGeeding woke up on the wrong side of the bed on Sunday and did not want to go to church. The old me would have talked to her sternly about having the right attitude. But Keith 1.5 who is trying to upgrade to Keith 2.0 used patience and kindness. She was a little hangry, and so was I, so I stopped and got us donuts. Usually, she goes into the donut shop and gets our order as I wait in the car, but she was sporting a little attitude. So, this time, I had BoyGeeding do it. When he came back, he said they gave us donuts right out of the oven. Oh boy, they were so good, and all I could do was talk about their greatness as I drove us to church. DaughterGeeding started laughing at my envious and gluttonous routine of two of the seven deadly sins. I carried it into church, and told her I was replacing every “amen” with “donut.” She laughed at the absurdity, and I held true. Luckily, a lot of the songs had “amen” in it, so there were plenty of donuts to go around. All of this to say, I think she got out of her rut faster with this approach than the old approach.
  • One thing I miss about being a husband is being an encourager. The school year is about to start, and I’d do would I could to help shape my spouse’s attitude as summer winds down and getting back into the groove of things, telling her how cool it is that she will be the very first teacher in most of their lives and they will always remember her as they become lawyers, doctors, food service employees, plumbers, and other contributing members of society.
  • I finally have something positive to say about our lieutenant governor – Texas Lieutenant Governor Dan Patrick tests positive for COVID
  • How two Texas megadonors have turbocharged the state’s far-right shift
    • Gun owners allowed to carry handguns without permits or training. Parents of transgender children facing investigation by state officials. Women forced to drive hours out-of-state to access abortion.This is Texas now: While the Lone Star State has long been a bastion of Republican politics, new laws and policies have taken Texas further to the right in recent years than it has been in decades.
  • “We failed”: Gay Republicans who fought for acceptance in Texas GOP see little progress
    • Gay Republicans who have fought for acceptance within the Texas GOP over the past three decades told The Texas Tribune progress has been excruciatingly slow. Many of them have left the party, even as the number of Log Cabin Republicans in Texas continues to grow.Gay Republicans who have fought for acceptance within the Texas GOP over the past three decades told The Texas Tribune progress has been excruciatingly slow. Many of them have left the party, even as the number of Log Cabin Republicans in Texas continues to grow.
  • I thought this was an insightful article and sums up a lot of reasons why I left the evangelical church, this attitude started to spread like wildfire and nothing was beeing done to put it out. Below is a Cliff Note’s version I created. – An ‘imposter Christianity’ is threatening American democracy
    • White Christian nationalist beliefs have infiltrated the religious mainstream so thoroughly that virtually any conservative Christian pastor who tries to challenge its ideology risks their career, says Kristin Kobes Du Mez, author of the New York Times bestseller, “Jesus and John Wayne: How White Evangelicals Corrupted a Faith and Fractured a Nation.” “These ideas are so widespread that any individual pastor or Christian leader who tries to turn the tide and say, ‘Let’s look again at Jesus and scripture,’ are going to be tossed aside,” she says.
    • The ideas are also insidious because many sound like expressions of Christian piety or harmless references to US history. But White Christian nationalists interpret these ideas in ways that are potentially violent and heretical. Their movement is not only anti-democratic, it contradicts the life and teachings of Jesus, some clergy, scholars and historians say.
      • Here are three key beliefs often tied to White Christian nationalism.
        • A belief that the US was founded as a Christian nation
          • One of the most popular beliefs among White Christian nationalists is that the US was founded as a Christian nation; the Founding Fathers were all orthodox, evangelical Christians; and God has chosen the US for a special role in history.
        • A belief in a ‘Warrior Christ’
          • While warlike language like putting on “the full armor of God” has long been common in Christian sermons and hymns, it has largely been interpreted as metaphorical. But many White Christian nationalists take that language literally.
          • “They want the warrior Christ who wields a bloody sword and defeats his enemies,” says Du Mez. “They want to battle with that Jesus. That Jesus brings peace, but only after he slays his enemies.” And that Jesus sanctions the use of righteous violence if a government opposes God, she says.
        • A belief there’s such a person as a ‘real American’
          • Such language has been co-opted into a worldview held by many White Christian nationalists: The nation is divided between “real Americans” and other citizens who don’t deserve the same rights, experts on White Christian nationalism say.
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