November 23, 2003

Holiday prep

Posted by Scott at 07:43 PM

Holiday movies - The holiday movies are already starting. Tonight we watched Eloise at Christmastime. We also recorded the original Santa Clause with Tim Allen. We plan on watching the DVD of the sequel over Thanksgiving holiday. Tonight we are also recording the Charlie Brown Thanksgiving. It's that time of year when there are plenty of holiday shows. Our TiVo will be busy for the next several weeks. Michelle also took advantage of the unseasonable warm weather to get a jump start on decorating the outside of the house with Christmas lights and decorations.

Mario Party logoMario Party 5 - On my way back from Mass this morning I stopped by Kaybee toys to pick up Mario Party 5. We plan on surprising the kids with it on Thanksgiving. Claire has Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday off from school for the holiday. I'm sure by Thursday she'll be saying "what are we going to do now?" It'll be hard for me to wait until then. *grin* It'll be even harder to wait for Mario Kart.

Misc. News - On the whole it's been a pretty uneventful weekend. The Milford Spartans won the state football title. I took the older four kids down by the brook to watch, listen, and throw rocks in it -- they're kids after all. Now that it's autumn it's flowing briskly again. Claire said she never really appreciated how lucky we are to have something so pretty right on our lot. Claire spent this afternoon at a classmate's. The two of them went bowling and out for Burger King. Michael has finally figured out how to pedal -- at least on the tricycle. Daniel seems to have gotten the knack of dribbling a basketball. I have to see if I can use my camera to make a small movie of it. I went to a parent meeting for children who will receive First Confession this March. I have to start preparing Claire for it. It was a bit sad to hear how little some of the parents have been catechized regarding Confession. I've been practicing Bach's Prelude - Wohltemperierte Klavier I in C major - on the piano. I also want to try my hand at Beethoven's Mondschein. [Oops! Those links won't work because the host site doesn't allow "deep linking". Sorry...] They're both slow and a little repetitive, which is good for getting back to the piano. They're also quite beautiful. I'm hoping to hear from Suzy on how mom and dad's visit went. I also hope to hear from Lyss on their trip up to the lake.

Chestnuts - On my drive into work on Friday, I learned an interesting tidbit about our heritage. It seems that at the beginning of the 20th century, 1 in 4 trees in the eastern US was an American chestnut tree. These trees were huge! They could reach 100 feet and be 5 feet in diameter. Alas, the chestnuts you eat at the holidays are usually Chinese chestnuts because around 1904 a blight spread across the US that quickly wiped out the American chestnut trees. Chinese chestnuts are immune to the blight. Through successive cross breeding, researchers have recently developed a strain that is 97% American chestnut but still immune to the blight. When these seedlings become available to the general public, I'd love to plant some in our conservation land. It would add some diversity to the monstrous pines we have back there. If TJ or Cassidy would like to do a school report (down the road) on this, read more at NH public radio or the American Chestnut Foundation.

TiVo - Several months back Adelphia added a bunch of channels at the high end (62 through 77) to our regular lineup and rearranged a few channels at the low end. Unfortunately TiVo's scheduling service was unaware of Adelphia's changes. After our TiVo did a recent synchronization, it finally reported this lineup change. I'm happy because there were several good shows on those new channels that I wasn't able to schedule for recording on TiVo, so we didn't tend to watch them. Once you own one, it changes your mindset. You don't tend to let television scheduling dictate your life. You don't tend to watch "what's on now" but rather "what's played in the last couple of days".

Marriage - Certainly the Massachusetts recent ruling in favor of same sex couples being allowed marriage licenses is pretty big news up here. One of the top arguments I often hear is "how will this hurt you if we get recognized as being married?" It's an interesting question but a precedent that we probably don't want to start. This "how would it hurt you if I call myself x" line of argumentation can be a big problem. Imagine if tomorrow I decided to practice law or medicine, how would this hurt real doctors and lawyers? There are a lot of spheres in this world where we define something as meeting certain requirements. In marriage we outlaw bigamy, polygamy, and polyandry. We don't allow you to marry children or within one's own family. Using the language of the homosexual lobby, one might argue that those arrangements could theoretically be committed, loving relationships. We don't define them as marriage. They are trying to re-write a standard that has held for a long time. I've read some better op-eds endorsing same sex marriage, but I think the "how would it hurt you" defense is a weak approach. I think that in some respects it's similar to "how does it hurt you if I choose to have an abortion".

Worse yet, like so many other things of recent change, it's not happening through the elected legislature and executive branch. It's law declared via the judiciary. When you can't get your way via normal democratic methods, use the judiciary as a back door. The same groups that worry about undo power of corporations via political lobbying seem to have no problem writing laws via the courts. I think that in both cases they circumvent representative rule by the people.

If you want one Catholic perspective on why same sex unions are not the same, read the recent US Catholic bishops' statement. It hits the highlights in a pretty readable format without sounding like ranting political pundits.

Quote - I'll part with a good quote for Thanksgiving:

"If you haven’t got all the things you want, be grateful for the things you don’t have that you don’t want."
Comments

Hi Scott- first of all..Thank You so much for my new tires! Its amazing how much better my car turns now. When those tires were always so low in air, turning it was like a work out for my arms! Its so smooth now, thank you so much.
"Clark, thats the gift that keeps giving the whole year"
In other news, I'm on Thanksgiving break. What am I still doing in Normal? working. This is the first year ISU is giving us the whole week off! It is nice, however, i feel like they should call it "the several days so you can try and finish all the papers that are due the day you come back break". Part of me doesn't want to come back just so I can finish homework! But, soon will be Christmas break, and what a break it will be :)
(even though my thesis supervisor gave me some work to do)
Take care!

Posted by: Suzy at November 24, 2003 10:27 AM

Glad you like the tires. Dad says he asked them to really clean and re-seal those rims. The problem with many alloy wheels (like yours) is that when they age they can develop microscopic little holes along the edge due to corrosion. The only hope is to really give them a good scrubbing and reseal them. Hopefully in a week your tires will still be full.

Do you remember all the times I came home from Rose-Hulman during holiday and school breaks? I always spent the entire time working at All Rite. From the morning after I got home until it was time for me to drive back. It really made it a bit harder to feel like I had a break. On the positive side, it usually provided all the loose spending cash I needed for the upcoming quarter for books, restaurants, etc.

Nevertheless, enjoy your Thanksgiving break. After Thanksgiving we are going to spend an afternoon up north in Belmont, NH visiting our friends, the Nix's. They have two girls that are almost exactly Claire and Abby's ages -- and blondies, too!

Posted by: Scott at November 24, 2003 05:59 PM

Hey there! It is kind of scarey that 3/5 of my kids make it on to your upcoming birthday list! It also scares me that my son is going to be 13, and that on Dec. 7 his whole class is coming over to watch the Bears v. Packers game for his birthday party!
Anyway, have a great Thanksgiving! We all have much to be thankful for. I was telling Cassidy, who was commenting how in school everyone always writes the same things they are thankful for, like friends and family, to be creative and think of something different. She asked me what else I was thankful for, besides the obvious, and I said baby wipes, Nick Jr., and take out food. She finds it funny that little things make me happy, like fresh baked cookies (I actually made macaroons tonight- a first for me). Anyway, I am thankful for my wonderful husband who is cleaning upstairs while I write here, so I better go help out. Take care and have a great weekend! Alyssa

Posted by: Alyssa at November 26, 2003 11:55 PM

Hi Lyss,

Pretty soon we'll have 3/5's of our kids on the birthday countdown as well -- our three sons. TJ as a 13 year old! Wow! I hadn't thought much about it. The woman in the cube next to me just had her daughter turn 13 this past month.

I think if you were to ask Michelle about the "little" things she's thankful for, it might go along similar lines. Disposable diapers (a biggy for a family with three in diapers), the dripless sippy cup, the velcro and LED lights used in gymshoes, modern minivans with dual sliding doors, remote power car locks and garage door openers, microwave ovens, central air, cheap long distance rates, dishwashers, TiVo. I'm sure given more time, others would come to mind.

I was looking over the recent set of search engine terms that landed on this website somewhere and this week "things I'm thankful for" rates pretty high for the writeup I did last year. If you'd like to see a recent breakdown of the search engine words that land here, go to:

http://bilikfamily.com/HitAnalysis.html

I re-run the analysis about twice a week. No automation at this time. This past month the words Yamaha Clavinova shot way ahead of all the ones I was used to seeing. I was amazed that our Google.com ranking on that term would surpass a number of internet stores that sell musical instruments.

Anyway, Happy Thanksgiving to you and yours. Let the Christmas holiday season begin!

Posted by: Scott at November 28, 2003 02:31 PM