Posts tagged as:

family

A Brave New World

by Rick on June 18, 2008

When it comes to politics, I usually find myself stressing1 over American issues.

Today I hang my head and grieve for our friends to the North, where in Quebec a 12 year old girl is able to have a judge overturn her father’s disciplinary grounding.

I’m halfway through the book Brave New World2 by Aldous Huxley; in it, the concept of parentage is one for the history books. The state raises children, and the state controls them through pleasure. Rampant and experiential sexuality is encouraged as young as possible.

Today, seventy-six years later, a Canadian father is unable to discipline his preteen daughter for posting inappropriate pictures of herself on the Internet.

I hear a lot of people comparing certain things with 1984, but folks, I submit we’re heading fullspeed into a collision with a truly brave new world.

Hat tip: Dan Phillips

Popularity: 5%

  1. I don’t necessarily mean distressing, but just stressing in general. []
  2. Disclosure: This is an affiliate link. []

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Week Wrap-Up

by Rick on June 1, 2008

It’s been a while since I’ve blogged, and I apologize for that. I spent the week watching movies & playing video games — particularly the most excellent Wii 2-in-1 game The House of the Dead 2 & 3 — with my step-brother. Even aside from the five days he visited, it’s been busy.

Last weekend, Alicia & I hosted the annual Memorial Day gathering for Dad’s side of the family, which was quite an experience. We owe a huge debt of gratitude to Alicia’s mom for helping us prepare for the gathering — my cooking / domestic skills being fairly elementary and Alicia being sidelined due to (minor) injury, so to speak.1

Still, I tried my hand at grilling burgers on an outdoors grill for the first time. Alicia was close at hand to supervise, and my aunts and uncle offered some great bits of advice as well. The first batch of burgers wound up not being fully cooked, but now I know how to check for that. The second round went over with everyone very nicely, and a few days later I grilled some more for my brother, Alicia, and I. Yes, I realize 25 is probably far too late to be learning how to cook something as simple as a hamburger, you don’t have to tell me that. :-)

If you’ve been reading here lately, you’ve surely noticed that I’ve been working on a new(ish) WordPress theme called NeoBox, which will be, I guess, a fork of the theme I use here.2 So that’s been occupying a lot of my time as well. I’m very happy with the progress I’m making on it, even if the 0.5 release will essentially be completely different from the 0.4, representing a change in direction I’m taking in development. When I first started working on 0.5 features, I realized I was biting much more than I could chew and had lost site of what NeoBox was initially supposed to be. So now, 0.5 is back on track, I’m nowhere near “finishing” it for release, and even after 0.5 is released, there’s still so much to do!

I won’t say much about NeoBox, and if you try out the 0.4 release, you may not be totally impressed. That’s fine, but 0.4 is not quite representative of the final release, let alone 0.5. Stay tuned!

Now, just for fun, here are some ultra-brief ratings for movies I’ve seen recently and games I’ve been digging lately:

  • Iron Man - Great movie, stunningly realistic graphics, fun script - 9.5/10
  • Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull - Decent movie, too much Mutt and not enough Marian, lost a lot of the spirit of the previous movies - 5.5/10 - Aside: The character of Indiana, despite being invulnerable to even the largest of explosions, isn’t much different from real men. After witnessing the power of God and His Christ through the Ark and Grail adventures, he seems unaffected and unchanged; seems quite like how the apostles were after seeing Christ crucified — He had performed miracles and appeared in glory before them, but when push comes to shove, it’s always easier to walk away. Indiana, rather than walking away, seems to have simply forgotten. Yes, I realize this aside is longer than the main point of this list item. :-)
  • Hellboy - Good movie, interesting storyline and mythos (think H. P. Lovecraft), seemed anti-climactic at times - 7/10
  • Super Smash Bros. Brawl - The best Wii game I’ve played yet. There is frankly too much to do in this game! Sure, I’m close to 100% in the adventure mode and I’ve opened up all of the characters, but I’m achieved less than 50% of the challenges, still have well over 250 trophies to earn, plenty of events to clear… Nintendo outdid themselves with this one. The inclusion of Solid Snake & Sonic the Hedgehog are just icing on the cake, and I love the Knuckles cameo in the Green Hill Zone level!
  • Mario Kart Wii - I want to simply love this game. I really do! My last encounter with the Kart series was Mario Kart 64, and I spent so many hours on that thing that without much effort I could shatter the pro records published in the Nintendo Player’s Guide. Mario Kart Wii isn’t garnering that sort of addiction from me. I won’t deny the game is fun — and funner with friends — but the game just doesn’t seem as polished as it could/should have been. The amazing detail of Super Smash Bros. Brawl is nowhere to be found. The tracks — even the classic tracks that I’m used to — seem way too short. Either the vehicles are moving way too fast, or in an effort to dumb this down as much as possible into a party game, the tracks had a strict shortness guideline… I for one miss the six minute+ epic races on Rainbow Road in Mario Kart 64. Item balancing is terrible — being in first place was never so frustrating in Super Mario Kart or Mario Kart 64. Still, I spent $3 to rent Super Mario Galaxy just to open up another character in Mario Kart Wii (Rosalina), and I love the ability to race as my Mii. When all is said and done, though, I can’t help but compare this side-by-side with Super Smash Bros. Brawl as they are two games released at the same time with Mario as the front man. If you have to choose, get Smash Bros. It has more characters, more levels, more items, more modes, more challenges, more detail, more, more, more, more, more.
  • The House of the Dead 2 & 3 - These are by no means new games — I had 2 on the DreamCast six or seven years ago — but the graphics are still gorgeous (especially when compared to Mario Kart Wii), and the gameplay seems perfectly suited to the Wii. Buy a Zapper accessory for some truly enjoyable zombie fragging. Definitely play with a friend, and blast away!

Popularity: 16%

  1. She’s doing great, your prayers for healing are appreciated, and thanks for the concern. []
  2. Neoclassical by Chris Pearson. []

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All babies are not gifts of God…

by Rick on March 30, 2008

…As a matter of fact, some of them are little more than punishment to the mother-to-be. Well, that’s what Senator Obama foolishly believes. Hat tip: Mark @ Chester Street.

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My Father

by Rick on March 29, 2008

My Father at the Cracker Barrel Old Country Store

This picture of my dad was taken Easter Sunday of this year (2008) using a Canon PowerShot SD1000 purchased just a few hours before the picture was taken. In other words, I was just learning how to use the camera. This picture was also tweaked in Adobe Lightroom; in fact, it was the first picture I edited on my own, without my wife’s aid. Basically, this picture was a learning experience all around. I like how it turned out; feel free to click it for a larger version.

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In the spirit of giving thanks, let me quickly say that I’m thankful Amy scours the net, finding good links so that I don’t have to do the work. :P These are two pages from her archives today:

The first is on the lighter side and is about a couple who have adopted twenty foreign children. As per Amy’s comment about the site, be sure to watch the slide show, which has pictures (obviously) and some audio.

Twenty kids, aged 21 and under. Would you believe they’re home schooled? Amazing!

The second link isn’t nearly as joyful — more so because someone close to me is facing the issue at this very moment. It’s called, Divorce in the Church: Exploring the Epidemic (part 1). Why is it that divorce rates within the church are just as high as they are without? And why do fellow Christians do so little to stop divorce among their numbers? I honestly had never thought about it this way before, and so I want to share two quotes which were extremely poignant to me:

When a man (or woman) in a church body announces his intention to set off down the road to divorce in spite of clear teaching from Scripture, he ought to find it a rocky one. In this case, it is the duty of his Christian family to put up as many obstacles as possible between him and his sinful end. This man should know he is not simply rejecting his wife, but Christ and His church as well. And the church need not make it easy for him.

And this one from JimmyV in a comment:

Without trying to minimize the difficulty of being married to someone with whom one is “miserable”, I have yet to find in Scripture where God wants us to be happy more than holy. I have had this argument given to me. “I just want to be happy. God would want me to be happy.” Yes, but not at the expense of going against His Word. He will *never* contradict His Word.

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