- I read an interesting story about the new St Louis Rams coach Steve Spagnuolo. This story from when he signed his last contract with the NY Giants: “With his signature, Spagnuolo writes “HEB 11:1”. Hebrews 11:1 is a verse from the Bible, and it says: “Now faith is the assurance of things hoped for, the conviction of things not seen.” Source
- Maybe a repost: Things Other People Accomplished When They Were Your Age
- I couldn’t help but think of my friend Jimi the other day. Jimi is the type of friend that gets annoyed easily, and sure way to get his attention is to say “PIN Number,” because you are basically saying “Personal Identification Number Number.” Well, Brian Williams was on the Daily Show last week and when he said “PIN Number,” he stated it was his favorite redundancy.
- And why do we say cheddar cheese? Is there any other kind of cheddar?
- And what about tuna fish? Is there another kind of tuna? Tuna chicken? Tuna beef? Tuna pork?
- One of my personal favorites is the ATM Machine. This drove me batty as I worked at a credit union.
- Or how about the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim? Los Angeles is translated from Spanish to English as “The Angels,” so you are basically saying The Angels Angels of Anaheim.
- I was looking at Michelle Obama’s official White House photograph and found a bit of funny irony that Jefferson is right above her shoulder.
- After replacing a faucet for WifeGeeding, a task that took much longer than it should have, I decided to play catchup with what I had on the DVR, which just happened to be two HBO specials.
- The Trials of Ted Haggard was extremely interesting. It’s another Alexandra Pelosi documentary. I have so many thoughts on this film, but I’ll just try to keep it to a few. First of all, I find his relationship with Pelosi, the daughter of the Speaker of the House, quite interesting, She filmed an earlier documentary in which Haggard was highly featured, who at the time was a very popular and powerful Evangelical preacher, and then you had this liberal film maker, a culture clash if you will. But he must of somehow bonded with her as she followed him around after his exile from the church, and he was extremely honest and transparent. It was amazing to see a man that would be the feature speaker at a packed stadium, and then be so down on his luck he had difficulty in finding a job, having to settle on a commission based insurance sale job. He talked about suicide as an escape and a way to free him and his family from the stress and embarrassment, and I felt I could totally relate; and then you could see the pain in his face as he spoke on how bad he felt that his family had to weather the storm with him, and moved about four times in a year shacking up with empathetic friends. There were times his former church made statements on his behalf which turned out to be untrue, and no matter how much the press lambasted the statements, he never once tried to discredit the man who said them. It was interesting to see how the church gave him a years worth of salary on the condition that he leave the church and the state. This is one of my criticisms of the church in general. When a person is in need of love and support, that person shouldn’t be outcasted. Instead, it’s a prime opportunity for ministry and grace, along with discipline. And all of this coming from someone that never really liked Ted Haggard. In closing, it was interesting to see him talk about how he now read the Bible in a different perspective.
- The second HBO film I watched was called Taking Chance, and I will be surprised if this film based upon a true story doesn’t win anything come award time, and it was one of those films that had WifeGeeding tearing up profusely. In short, Kevin Bacon plays a Marine Core lieutenant colonel, who finds out that a Private First Class from his home town was killed in action in Iraq, and feels compelled to escort the body. The film shows a lot of things one normally wouldn’t consider. You see how the bodies are in body bags and transported in ice from Iraq to the mortuary at Dover Air Force Base. You see how the bodies are cleaned and prepped with the utmost respect and care, and you see how the personal items on their bodies are removed and cleaned; for instance, the watch and necklace the Marine was wearing was blood stained. One thing worth noting, is that you never really see a high ranking officer escort such a low ranking enlistee, so that was touching in itself. But you get to observe from the lieutenant colonel’s point of view how the public reacts to him as he escorts the body in full uniform. It was just extremely touching, and as I stated, it was based upon a true story. More about that here. It’s one of those gut-rentching movies that makes you feel like a better man for watching it.
- There was one point in the film that you notice the Marine being buried doesn’t have shoes on, and I guess that was done on purpose but I don’t why.
- In one part of the movie a lot of vehicals pass the one carrying the body, and they all turn their lights on. I’m not sure what that was suppose to mean or symbolize. I know a lot of times during a trip to the cemetary all the cars part of the funeral drive with their lights on, but in this case these folks just happen to by driving by. Maybe that was the point, that they just wanted to be a part of it and how their respect.
- I couldn’t help but think of my father’s funeral while watching this film. My father wasn’t killed in action, but he did have a military funeral. I remember speaking to the officer in charge (a captain) of the funeral detail as he was prepping my father’s uniform. When I expressed my appreciation for being a part of this for someone he never knew, I will always remember his response. With the highest respect and a most serious and genuine look on his face, he told me it was his honor, and I totally believed him.
- I also remember that captain giving my mother the flag that was on my fathers coffin, and I remember my mother saying “Thank you, sir” in a very shakey voice.
- There was a point in the film where the Marine’s body stayed in an airport storage building overnight, and the escort stayed the night just to be with the body even though he had the option of staying in a hotel for the night. He stayed with the body because he didn’t want him to be alone. That reminded me of when my father was disinterred and moved to the Dallas – Fort Worth National Cemetary several years after his death. He was disinterred the afternoon before, kept in his coffin and sealed vault, and transported the next morning, which meant that my father was staying overnight at a transporter’s place. After I saw that scene in the movie, I wish I would have stayed with my father. From my understanding, since the casket and vault weighed over a ton, it just sat on a trailer overnight, something I just totally didn’t feel comfortable about.
- I still have much regret for not serving in the military
- On to other things . . .
- I had about twenty emails regarding Standing verse Sitting, all of which were quite interesting.
- If your a fan of the Price is Right fail sound, just click on the big blue button. Link
- I remember one evening WifeGeeding and I were eating out and ran into one of my students and her family. That student introduced me to her family as “Professor Geeding” which still makes WifeGeeding chuckle, so I guess I now need to give her the memo.
- Since I feel like I have a lot to learn in our new church, I’m doing what I can to be quiet, not be noticed, and simply observe and absorb. That’s not working out too well. That plan backfired when we started the Denominational Differences series in Sunday school, which I wrote about before. But last week our classes were combined with another to take part in a True Colors personality assessment. Last week I went pretty much unnoticed, but this week we continued were we left of from last week. As I mentioned last week, I was a Green. Well, this week we started off in our group color for more discussion, but then we were told to go to the color we scored lowest on. Well, in a class of about 40 people, I was the lone person in the Gold group. I was the laughing stock of the class, which I didn’t really mind, because I found it pretty humorous myself.
- The presenter also provided two examples of professions of Greens, analysts and college professors. Funny thing, since I’m an analyst and my name page now states that I’m a college professor.
- OK, I’ve listened to the U2 album some more and it’s started to grow on my, especially the first two songs on the album.
- Remember, it’s U2 week on Letterman, that’s five nights of my favorite band and late night host.
- Grace
A preview of the next U2 tour
After selling out countless arenas this decade, U2 are heading outdoors this year with their first U.S. stadium tour since 1997’s PopMart Tour. The band members, who release No Line on the Horizon on March 3rd, haven’t yet announced dates for the tour or details about what they’ll play. But they hope to keep ticket prices unusually low, and they’re already planning an innovative setup that will allow for 360-degree seating around the stage, which will be moved closer to the center of the field than in any other stadium show. “It’s an engineering feat that creates this real physical proximity to the crowd,†Bono tells Rolling Stone, adding that the band wants to maximize space in the enormous venues to accommodate the many young fans it has made this decade with hits such as “Vertigo.†“We’re going outdoors to try to meet that audience.
An Unexpected Visitor Came to the Office Today
Since the Texas Rangers aren’t going to win this thing anytime soon, I thought I would get a picture with the trophy when I had a chance.
Facts about the trophy I did not know:
- It’s made by Tiffany & Co, just like the Super Bowl’s Vince Lombardi Trophy.
- It weighs about 30 pounds and is made of sterling silver.
- There are 30 gold painted flags, each representing a MLB team.
- The latitude and longitude lines symbolize the world, but you can’t see them in this picture.
- The baseball contains 24-karat vermeil baseball stitches.
And yes, I actually had to look up the word vermeil. The only vermeil I knew was a guy that coached in the NFL.
So far I’ve taken my picture with the Stanley Cup, and now this trophy. I’ll see if I can find that Stanly Cup picture and post it. Jerry won’t let me in his office to get a picture with the Super Bowl trophies. Snob.
Bag of Randomness
- Not everyone is comfortable about bathroom talk, but it’s a topic I’m about to talk discuss. So if you aren’t comfortable with bathroom talk, skip the section below in blue. It’s my blog, and I’ll blog what I want to, so before you rake me over the coals for writing about such a topic, please consider I didn’t have to warn you in the first place.
- Yesterday I made a comment about people that wipe standing up. Yes, I’m talking about what you do after you go poo. Well, some readers were too shy to comment, but several Standers emailed me. They were completely perplexed as to why someone would actually do such a thing sitting down as they didn’t want to touch the toilet seat or get their hands near what’s in the toilet. But off hand (no pun intended), and I don’t know how to delicately put this, I just think standing makes things messier by the smearing when cheeks come together and the possibility of stuff running down the leg. Now it turns out one of the Standers is Canadian, and he took an informal office poll of the male office workers and just about all of them are Standers. They thought maybe it was just a male thing to do. Perhaps this is a regional or Canadian thing? I did search The Google and this forum on Yahoo! Answers was the cleanest one I found, and offhand I would say 80% are Sitters. I’m emailing Gordon Keith of The Ticket about this.
- Southwest now has a customer for life.
- Once upon a time
- Tom Selleck was on the Daily Show the other night and talked about his ranch and how his family got really attached to this one cow. The cow died and he had it cremated so he could spread the ashes, and was actually surprised that when the ashes came back there in in a very large container about the size of a pop-corn bucket.
- I can’t recall the last time I wore cowboy boots, probably back when I was in elementary school.
- Nope, I remember, it was for a high school play called Roaming Joe and Julie.
- I can’t recall the last time I wore a pair of Wrangler jeans, I’m thinking it was elementary school.
- The last time I wore anything corduroy was in middle school.
- I think it was the same for a netted shirt.
- I haven’t posted a random TV show intro in a while, but no one has said anything, so I guess that wasn’t a real popular feature.
- I once sat in Don Ho’s lap.
- I once wrote a letter to Donald Trump. A reply was sent back to me, but it wasn’t from him.
- It was almost 90 degree yesterday, but this weekend the temperature should be in the low 60’s.
- WifeGeeding was once a Yamboree dutchess.
- I wasn’t popular in high school, but I wanted to be included in one of those “Most Likely to” or “Best” or “Worst” categories, so I campaigned to be the “Worst Driver.” When the results were tallied up, I was tied for “Most Friendliest” and “Worst Driver.” I was so friendly, I turned down the “Most Friendliest” so one of my friends could be in a category and I am now known as the Worst Driver of the the class of 94 from Mineral Wells.
- I never had to wear glasses or contacts.
- I like writing with a cheap Bic pen, preferably black.
- I simply cannot wear tube socks with shorts.
- I think the last time I had tube socks with stripes was in elementary school.
- There was a span in my young adult life that I just didn’t really care about my appearance and would show up to work with bed hair.
- Life would be so much better if I could take my dog to work.
- In high school a lot of friends carried around a beeper/pager. I never really understood the reason for it.
- I’m thinking about cooking a brisket this weekend.
- The best potato salad in the world is found in a restaurant in Abilene.
- I often think I’m not living up to my potential.
- I don’t have any tattoos.
- I never thought I would live to see the day, but Pat Robertson’s Regent University now has a young Democrat group. Article I don’t think such a group existed at my university, and don’t know if one was formed since I left. But the Young Republicans were a popular group on campus. I never knew such as thing existed until a saw a bunch of college students wearing a t-shirt of Ronald Reagan in front of an American flag saluting.
- My cell phone is falling apart, I wish the Palm Pre would already release.
- I’m looking forward to some R and R this weekend.