4.30.2010

One less thing to worry about.









how about that.  I'm done with those payments.

Anything I say












 . . . will be held against me,
so I won't say much or I'll spill it all.
By the light of day it's an elusive feeling,
but every single night that's immaterial.
 . . . . . .
If I try to pray, it's like a game of red rover.
I take a real good run at it, but I can't break through.
Don't matter anyway. I'm so redhanded.
The game is over. I'll just tell the truth.

(Detweiler) 

4.29.2010

Past is prologue















Consider this a representation of me and my three sons in the next couple of decades.  From the left:
Piers, Vulcan Beebee, Big Brother, and . . . Little Red, of course. 

Speaking of whom, he had a really rough night last night.  Poor guy couldn't breathe!  The Spouse had to give him not one but two breathing treatments, at something like 12:30 and 3:00 this morning. 

Vulcan Beebee came and visited me in my office today . . . caused a stir amongst my co-workers, and got held by CR, a remarkable young woman who's one of our student workers.  He kindly dropped off to sleep so I could keep grading papers.

Big Brother is being a great big brother; he and Little Red play outside and do really well together--the elder is really good at coming up with games for them to play.  Though I will say that on Sunday, I guess it was, we heard the two of them shouting, and when I went outside to find out what the big deal was, Big Brother was getting mad at Little Red . . . for coming to tell us that Big Brother had hit him on the noggin.  One of those times you discipline while choking back the laughter.

4.28.2010

Button that lip!























"I take it as self-evident that, if everyone knew what was said about him, there would not be four friends in the world.  This is clear from the quarrels which are occasioned by the indiscreet remarks which we sometimes make."

**

"King, and tyrant--

I too will have thoughts at the back of my mind--

I will beware of every journey."

Pascal, Pensees 646, 650

4.27.2010

Adventures with Students, vol. 15
















I told the students in my class today, impromptu-like, that they need to consider carefully before they step off into the world of graduate study.  This was after I asked them to think about whether or not professors are normal people, and after I did an imitation of RB starting that Milton class several years ago on the bottom floor of Greenlaw.  The discussion ranged wide, but essentially, I advised them to keep their wits about them and to keep their options open.  Grad school can be a good thing, but even the best students aren't sure of where (or if) they'll land.

The end of the term is when classes begin to get a little loose in the joints, and also when the really strange requests start coming in, like the student who has missed 70% of the class meetings just now trying to explain that he had good reasons for being gone, like taking a job that conflicted with class time, etc., etc.  I sympathize, I really do--but what goes unsaid for now is that they need to choose which is more important.  If the work & money are important, then pursue that.  If doing well in classes is more important, then pursue that.  There are times that it's not possible to do both.

I wish that students would give term papers some thought before the week they are due.  Not for my sake, honestly--I don't mind helping--but because it would be so much easier and turn out so much better for them.

I did tell the students this, too:  that my interactions with them, dealing with the works we get to deal with, is the major payoff.  So true.  Sure as hell ain't the meetings.

4.26.2010

$ <==|==> F















Student in (I say "in," though it should be "from," given his attendance) my 11:00 MWF class strolls into the office, hands me the paper due today.  Says the following:


"I'm sorry I've been missing class.  I took a job that means I have to work all day Monday, Wednesday and Friday."  

Let's think about that for just a moment, k? 

At least he's polite about it!

Literary Hero!















An interview with the incomparable Jorge Luis Borges in Philosophy and Literature 1 (1977): 337-41.

snip:
Lawrence I. Berkove: “Tlön” is a good example of one of your stories where, however the story ends, the reader is encouraged to continue applying your ideas.
Borges: Well, I hope so. But I wonder if they are my ideas. Because really I am not a thinker. I have used the philosophers’ ideas for my own private literary purposes, but I don’t think that I’m a thinker. I suppose that my thinking has been done for me by Berkeley, by Hume, by Schopenhauer, by Mauthner perhaps.
MP-R: You say you’re not a thinker…
Borges: No, what I mean to say is that I have no personal system of philosophy. I never attempt to do that. I am merely a man of letters. In the same way, for example that — well, of course, I shouldn’t perhaps choose this as an example — in the same way that Dante used theology for the purpose of poetry, or Milton used theology for the purposes of his poetry, why shouldn’t I use philosophy, especially idealistic philosophy — philosophy to which I was attracted — for the purposes of writing a tale, of writing a story? I suppose that is allowable, no?

From today's reading


"Tolstoy's ardent strides toward perfection never resulted in any semblance of peace or serenity.  Up to the moment of his death the diaries and letters kept circling back to the rueful theme of failure, exposing the vast gap between the high ideals of the gospel and the sad actuality of his own life."

"Tolstoy reminds us that, contrary to those who say the gospel solves our problems, in many areas--justice issues, money issues, race issues, personal issues of pride and ambition--the gospel actually adds to our burdens."

I'd add a few items to that list, Mr. Yancey, but the point is a good one. 

N. B.: I'm no author, and certainly no Russian author!

4.25.2010

It's been that kind of weekend.



busy children = sleeping like a train wreck

4.23.2010

There's a simple explanation



















why do people share so many intimate details online?  Don't they know better?

Sure:  but the desire to feel like we matter trumps every other consideration.

So much for perspective.


Piers became "puff-tail kitty" when the report of Big Brother's pre-K test came back.  Not that there was anything wrong with his performance--he did perfectly fine, and really:  what does one expect from an introverted 5-year-old, hmmmm?

But Piers did indeed get a bit hissy.   The Spouse had to talk him down and help get that fur all smoothed back in place. 

I guess we now know who'll more frequently be  dealing with the teachers.

4.22.2010

pre-K













Big Brother has Kindergarten Placement Testing today.  We did not do any practicing, or even tell him what he's doing.  We're not going to post on Facebook how wonderfully he does.  We're going to let him treat it like something fun, and that's the sum total of it. 

Still, it's a bit of a big moment for our little (?) family.

4.21.2010

"Hip," "gritty," "food"




This article in the NYTIMES "Dining" section has the following as a pull-quote (in the print edition I have before me):

"The Food Network spins off a channel with a hipper, grittier attitude."

um.  Riiiiiiiiggghhhht.  "Hip" and "gritty" food programs.  Because we all like grit in our cheezburgrs.

Phrase of the day


Amour-propre.

I uttered something this morning that I think sums up a lot of what I've been experiencing/thinking:  it's the shame and guilt that does the worst damage.  My changed perspective is that people make choices and indeed have to live with the outcomes of those choices--whatever the outcomes may be, it's the added burden of shame that breaks them, drags them under.

4.20.2010

Eyjafjallajokul

















The stupidest thing I've heard about the Iceland volcano eruption:  a news item on NBC a couple of days ago that attempted to explain its effect on "Man-made Global Warming." 

Let's just think about that for one moment, shall we?

It's like Home Depot selling "Earth-Friendly Vegetables." 

Boxer the Horse


















From childhood onwards people are entrusted with the care of their honor, their property, their friends, and even with the property of their friends.  They are showered with duties, the need to learn languages and exercises.  They are led to believe that they will never be happy if their health, honor, and wealth, and those of their friends, are not in a satisfactory state, and that if one element is amiss they will be unhappy.  So they are given offices and duties which keep them hectically occupied from daybreak.  You may well observe that it is an odd way to make them happy.  What more could we do to make them unhappy?  What do you mean, what could we do?  We would only have to remove all these preoccupations from them because they would then see and think about what they are, where they come from, where they are going.  So you cannot give them too much to do, too much to distract them, and that is why, after creating so many duties for them, if they have some spare time they are advised to amuse themselves, play games, keep themselves totally occupied--

(Pascal, Pensees 171)

4.19.2010

two months old
























and showing a little personality.  Even a little bit of cooing and laughing going on!

4.18.2010

grass clippings















It's a good thing we don't have these in the house; for some reason, last night I had a MASSIVE craving and would have eaten several pounds of the things if I'd been able to.

This was after watching Into The Woods at The Dixie; Brother B's last production with some of his first big stars:  JM, MM, AH.  I've seen just about every show they've done over the past four years, so it's a little bittersweet even for me to see them take their last bows.

And that was after spending the better part of the afternoon working on the yard.  Once it gets going, it really takes up the time.  But it looks so nice when it's mowed & pruned, etc.!

Also, Kung Fu Panda is hilarious.  It's the new favorite amongst the preschoolers in this house.

4.16.2010

When Little Red Becomes Big



















the hair, the baggy eyes, the wide mouth . . . it's there, I tell you.

Probably not as tall, and probably without the movie career (and attendant cash money), but still.

4.15.2010

rounding up a few stragglers
















"It is unfair that anyone should be devoted to me, although it can happen with pleasure, and freely.  I should mislead those in whom I quickened this feeling, because I am no one's ultimate end, and cannot satisfy them.  Am I not near death?  So the object of their attachment will die.  Therefore just as I should be guilty if I caused a falsehood to be believed, however gently persuasive I had been and however pleasurably it had been believed, giving me pleasure too, in the same way I am guilty if I make myself loved and if I attract people to become devoted to me."
--Pascal, Pensees 15


I have a student who has missed probably four weeks of class; he is now explaining that there are some personal and family issues in play here.  Sigh.  You know how tired this makes me?  To his credit, he has submitted all the written assignments.  Still, if attendance is mandatory, it's mandatory.  argh.


White pants can be stylish, when worn with care (no, Piers has no white pants, and isn't likely to).  The thing is, really tight white pants on a person well on the far side of "buxom" . . . um, perhaps another option, yes?  The same goes for those t-shirts that are screen printed with character faces (Spongebob, Elmo, Cookie Monster).  Probably ought not be worn in sizes above XL.


I read some nice things about myself today.  Actually, I think they said less about me and more about the students that wrote the comments, but still.  It's good to have a reminder that my efforts are not utterly in vain.


There was a Really Important Meeting about our ORP (Optional Retirement Plan) today.  We were all urged to attend.  I chose to not attend, being engrossed in my own work, and knowing that whatever is said today will change sometime within the next five years--thereby making today's meeting entirely irrelevant for those of us who have only been here five years.


I really like it when my students are successful. 

4.14.2010

Things that are awesome, Vol. 15









The Coudal Partners T

seriously, an incredibly comfortable t-shirt.

I'm also fond of the cheeky shirts from Cottonfactory and woot (the latter also quite comfy).

I know there are zillions of cheeky t-shirt makers out there, and sometimes said shirts show up even at Wal-Mart, but I'm only speaking of t-shirts of which I have first hand experience.

So there you go. 

From the words of my master























Aye, and for this neglect, the coarser sort
Of earthen jars there may molest me too.
Well, with mine own frail pitcher, what to do
I have decreed:  keep it from waves, and press,
Lest it be jostled, cracked, made nought or less;
Live to that point I will for which I am man,
And dwell as in my center as I can,
Still looking to and ever loving heaven,
With reverence using all the gifts thence given;
'Mongst which, if I have any friendships sent,
Such as are square, well-tagged, and permanent,
Not built with canvas, paper, and false lights
As are the glorious scenes at the great sights,
And that there be no fev'ry heats nor colds,
Oily expansions, or shrunk dirty folds,
But all so clear, and lead by reason's flame,
As but to stumble in her sight were shame;
These I will honor, love, embrace, and serve,
And free it from all question to preserve.
So short you read my character, and theirs
I would call mine, to which not many stairs
Are asked to climb.  First give me faith, who know
Myself a little; I will take you so
As you have writ yourself.

(Ben Jonson, "An Epistle Answering to One that Asked to be Sealed of the Tribe of Ben")

**
I know, I know:  "Sir, I know Teddy Roosevelt.  Teddy Roosevelt is a good friend of mine.  And you, sir, are no Teddy Roosevelt."  fair enough.   Hell, I'm no Ben Jonson either.

4.13.2010

In which Piers needs to get some exercise


















It would probably help if I got this bum elbow looked at, and if I could breathe properly.  But still. 

Keeping counsel 4
























Even if all the brilliant minds of the ages focused their attention on this one subject, never could they sufficiently express their wonder at this blind spot in the human mind.  Men do not allow anyone to take possession of their estates, and, if there is the slightest dispute about the limit of their property, they rush to pick up stones and weapons:  but they allow others to make inroads into their life, even extending personal invitations to those who will one day possess it.  No one is found who would be willing to divide up his own money:  but when it comes to his life, each one of us gives others a share in it, and how many others!
...
No one will restore your years, no none will restore you once more to yourself.

--Seneca, "On the Shortness of Life"

4.12.2010

gut-check time







"It won't happen here."
"They wouldn't!  They couldn't!"

To paraphrase Mr. Bennett:  "you believe that, Lizzy--if it brings you comfort."

I recognize that it's in the interest of the system president to exaggerate the negative impact of budget cuts--but this curdles the blood.  Once they start talking about faculty jobs being on the chopping block, uh oh.

Around here, it will be non-replacement of retiring faculty--but who knows what that will leave us with in a few years?

This ain't the time to be getting into higher education, friends.  Look at other options if you got them.  If you don't, start developing some.  I'm serious.  Practical skills, especially (Read Matt Crawford's book if you want an "intellectual" rationale).

4.10.2010

Yardening, 2010 Edition, Volume 1


















Today will be the first real planting day of the season.  Above and below, pictures of the lilac just outside the back door.  This is the first year in the five at Hawks Road that it has really produced masses of blooms (it looked so bad when we first arrived in '05 that we nearly cut the thing down).  Don't know if I should take credit for it or not, but I'm pleased with it this year.  And the scent!


















Later today:  tomatoes and peppers and other edibles go in the ground; forsythia, creeping phlox, knockout roses and azaleas to follow in various key locations.

Now, if only I could get over the incredibly bad allergic reaction I've been having to all this pollen.  Someone get this man some Nasonex!

4.09.2010

I'm not a prophet, promise.

















But I will point out that I've already said publicly that one of the markers of conflict when there's a  status & power differential between two parties in a conflict is that the powerful party tends to be the one constantly calling for  "civility" and "restraint"--on the part of the critics:
The congresswoman told the audience she shared their frustration over jobs lost and economic hardships.
She also asked for civility and drew a parallel between outbursts on the floor of Congress and in the meeting at Londonderry Town Hall.
"It is disappointing," she said. "Can we disagree without personal attacks?"

I don't know Carol Shea-Porter from Adam's Housecat, and apart from my general antipathy toward members of our governing body, I don't have anything against her. I just couldn't help but remark on her cry for civility, since it appears to be in line with what I've previously asserted.

Keeping counsel 3
























"You need to reflect whether your nature is more suited to participation in affairs or to leisurely study and contemplation, and you need to turn to that course to which the force of your natural ability shall guide you:  Isocrates laid his hand on Ephorus' shoulder and led him away from the forum, thinking he would be more of use in writing the records of history.  Natural abilities do not respond well to compulsion; when Nature is in opposition, labour is fruitless."
--Seneca, "On the Tranquility of the Mind"

(I dispute his characterization of study as "leisurely")

Introversion is not a sickness or a problem or a crime.



















If it makes you uncomfortable that I'm quiet and withdrawn, that I sometimes don't say anything,  you're welcome to go find someone who talks all the time . . . I promise, I won't mind.

And no, this doesn't mean that I don't like people.
Actually, acknowledging and embracing our nature as introverts may open the door for better interactions with other people. If we don't expend our limited energy for socializing on unsatisfying interactions, we can put it to better use.

4.08.2010

Greek Stoic.


Proof Positive


















Look closely, if you can read backward.
I can't decide if I like using the full & initialed form of my name.

4.07.2010

I was reminded of this today












Joy, I did lock thee up: but some bad man
Hath let thee out again:
And now, me thinks, I am where I began
Sev’n yeares ago: one vogue and vein,
One aire of thoughts usurps my brain.
I did toward Canaan draw; but now I am
Brought back to the Red sea, the sea of shame.

For as the Jews of old by Gods command
Travell’d, and saw no town:
So now each Christian hath his journeys spann’d:
Their storie pennes and sets us down.
A single deed is small renown.
Gods works are wide, and let in future times;
His ancient justice overflows our crimes.

Then have we too our guardian fires and clouds;
Our Scripture-dew drops fast:
We have our sands and serpents, tents and shrowds;
Alas! our murmurings come not last.
But where’s the cluster? where’s the taste
Of mine inheritance? Lord, if I must borrow,
Let me as well take up their joy, as sorrow.

But can he want the grape, who hath the wine?
I have their fruit and more.
Blessed be God, who prosper’d Noahs vine,
And made it bring forth grapes good store.
But much more him I must adore,
Who of the laws sowre juice sweet wine did make,
Ev’n God himself, being pressed for my sake. 


George Herbert, "The Bunch of Grapes" (1633)

4.06.2010

Keeping counsel 2



No one who goes astray affects himself alone, but rather will be the cause and instigator of someone else going astray; it is harmful to attach oneself to the people in front, and, so long as each one of us prefers to trust someone else's judgement rather than relying on his own, we never exercise judgement in our lives but constantly resort to trust, and a mistake that has been passed down from one hand to another takes us over and spins our ruin.  It is the example of others that destroys us:  we will regain our health, if only we distance ourselves from the crowd.  But as things are, the people, defending their own wickedness, set themselves up against reason.

(Seneca, "On The Happy Life")

All you need to do is read what I've been reading




















"The urge to save humanity is almost always the false face of the urge to rule it."
--H. L. Mencken

4.05.2010

To recap the long weekend--




















Papa and Honey came to visit, which made for some happy little boys (and happy grandparents)--also some tired little boys, who wore themselves right out.

Piers and Spouse wore themselves out as well:  lots of yard work (still lots to do, but you have to start somewhere, right?), and of course there is still the Beebee to look after.

Big Brother had his first bicycle crash yesterday!  I was so proud.  Especially when he got up and, after crying a little and being assured that he was okay, started riding every bit as fast as he had been riding the first time.

We made good use of Papa's pickup truck, which the boys especially loved because--shhhhhhh!--they could sit in the little jumpseats in the back of the cabin.  Little Red kept trying to convince everyone that we needed to go for a ride in the truck. 

I have to say it's funny to watch the cats try to get a handout or a sign of affection from Honey.  She is a most affectionate lady--but not to cats.  I'll hear, "you don't know who you're dealing with here, cat!" and it makes me laugh.  It's as if it never occurred to them that someone might not want to spoil them!

My bike is in desperate need of a thorough cleaning & tune-up, and I'm thinking something may be wrong with the headset.  Maybe when I get to go purchase the singlespeed (!!!) I can take this one in for a bit of work as well.  I rode it to work today, which meant that I looked silly.  Fortunately, it doesn't matter how silly I look!  Still want a white helmet, though.

I finished DFW's collection of essays A Supposedly Fun Thing I'll Never Do Again, and I must say that the title essay--it's a long one--is one of the funniest things I've read in a long long time.  Highly recommended.

We downplayed the gifts & candy for the boys this Easter--we'll probably continue to keep it low-key, not wanting them to focus on the goodies at the expense of the other important things about Easter.

This is boring, maybe because I'm still pretty tired from the weekend. 

4.04.2010

Keeping counsel



















Give not that which is holy unto the dogs, neither cast ye your pearls before swine, lest they trample them under their feet, and turn again and rend you.
--Matthew 7

I mistrust the judgment of every man in a case in which his own wishes are concerned.

--Daniel Webster

I always distrust people who know so much about what God wants them to do to their fellows.
--Susan B. Anthony

However we distrust the sincerity of those whom we talk with, we always believe them more sincere with us than with others.
-- François de la Rochefoucauld


4.02.2010

New pictures
























here.

...featuring the three boys, and Piers, and the photography of The Spouse.

4.01.2010

om nom nom



Yesterday at the church Easter dinner, Little Red was playing with some of the other preschoolers after he had finished eating . . . we discovered that he was munching on something (which is not uncommon:  rocks, dirt, bark, legos, sand . . . you name it).   He was asked, "what are you eating?"  His response:  "cheese."  Our problem there was that no cheese was in evidence anywhere in the room.  We're trying not to think of the possibilities.

Seriously, that child will put anything in his mouth.