mapsedge: Me at Stone Bridge Coffee House (Default)
Before I go back to bed I want to get Premiere going on some footage. It'll take all night to render. While I'm waiting for Premiere to import the footage, I've got some things to get off my chest.

Last weekend I was asked by the Seekers class at church to ride along and videotape while they prepared and delivered lunches to Kansas City's homeless. It was a long day, and difficult in ways that I didn't expect.

Cut for length. )
mapsedge: Me at Stone Bridge Coffee House (Default)
Before I go back to bed I want to get Premiere going on some footage. It'll take all night to render. While I'm waiting for Premiere to import the footage, I've got some things to get off my chest.

Last weekend I was asked by the Seekers class at church to ride along and videotape while they prepared and delivered lunches to Kansas City's homeless. It was a long day, and difficult in ways that I didn't expect.

Cut for length. )
mapsedge: Me at Stone Bridge Coffee House (music at the coffee shop 2)
It has taken a certain amount of getting used to, switching from the Church of Christ, Temple Lot to Christ United Methodist. At CoCTL, the Easter Bunny and colored eggs (among other things) are considered symbols of "ancient pagan fertility rites" (sic) and are therefore discouraged. 

Like fertility rites are a bad thing.  Like they actually know what those are.

CUMC?  Easter Egg hunt Saturday morning, with a visit from * gasp * the Easter Bunny.  The festivities opened with a prayer, then a puppet show (God save us from ever having to watch THAT again), then a mad dash for the south lawn and several hundred plastic eggs.  Better there than my living room, that's all I have to say there.

And, another thought: like so much else, such symbols long ago lost any significance they might once have had.  Complain all you like about Christianity supplanting the Old Ways: Madison Avenue is far better at it than the ancient Church could ever be.  The 11th century Catholics didn't have electronic media and instantaneous global reach.

Easter service was well populated (they always are) and the sermon was good.  It was a bit of battery recharging that I certainly needed.  It's a sense of community and acceptance that I never felt with previous churches (or covens, for that matter).  There are several people there who feel like family to me, made all the easier by the fact that if I miss a Sunday or two, upon my return I hear "Nice to see you!" instead of "We missed you at church last Sunday."  The difference is subtle, but significant. 

Of course, the weekend included work on the house.  Apologies to anyone coming over Tuesday night: the place is - as always - under construction, only moreso.  Got the arch-wall re-'rocked, doing the entire job with leftovers.  Saved a bit of money there, not having to buy new drywall for the project. 

Casualties this weekend (a few more than usual, since I had what I was standing on tip out from under me at one point):
  • Left hand. Index finger: cuticle split; palm: big-ass splinter
  • Right hand. Index finger: cuticle, cut on k2; thumb: cuticle
  • Right wrist.  Scraped all to hell and gone.
  • Right shin.  Likewise.
  • Left ankle.  Twisted
  • Right shoulder.  Sore, deep down.
The upside to all this (yes, there is an upside) is that my upper body is getting a helluva workout, and it shows. 
mapsedge: Me at Stone Bridge Coffee House (music at the coffee shop 2)
It has taken a certain amount of getting used to, switching from the Church of Christ, Temple Lot to Christ United Methodist. At CoCTL, the Easter Bunny and colored eggs (among other things) are considered symbols of "ancient pagan fertility rites" (sic) and are therefore discouraged. 

Like fertility rites are a bad thing.  Like they actually know what those are.

CUMC?  Easter Egg hunt Saturday morning, with a visit from * gasp * the Easter Bunny.  The festivities opened with a prayer, then a puppet show (God save us from ever having to watch THAT again), then a mad dash for the south lawn and several hundred plastic eggs.  Better there than my living room, that's all I have to say there.

And, another thought: like so much else, such symbols long ago lost any significance they might once have had.  Complain all you like about Christianity supplanting the Old Ways: Madison Avenue is far better at it than the ancient Church could ever be.  The 11th century Catholics didn't have electronic media and instantaneous global reach.

Easter service was well populated (they always are) and the sermon was good.  It was a bit of battery recharging that I certainly needed.  It's a sense of community and acceptance that I never felt with previous churches (or covens, for that matter).  There are several people there who feel like family to me, made all the easier by the fact that if I miss a Sunday or two, upon my return I hear "Nice to see you!" instead of "We missed you at church last Sunday."  The difference is subtle, but significant. 

Of course, the weekend included work on the house.  Apologies to anyone coming over Tuesday night: the place is - as always - under construction, only moreso.  Got the arch-wall re-'rocked, doing the entire job with leftovers.  Saved a bit of money there, not having to buy new drywall for the project. 

Casualties this weekend (a few more than usual, since I had what I was standing on tip out from under me at one point):
  • Left hand. Index finger: cuticle split; palm: big-ass splinter
  • Right hand. Index finger: cuticle, cut on k2; thumb: cuticle
  • Right wrist.  Scraped all to hell and gone.
  • Right shin.  Likewise.
  • Left ankle.  Twisted
  • Right shoulder.  Sore, deep down.
The upside to all this (yes, there is an upside) is that my upper body is getting a helluva workout, and it shows. 

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