Monday, May 02, 2005

He Said: The Best Part of Waking Up
She Said: You're Gonna Pay Me For This??

Today is my first day at my new job. I was re-hired at Starbucks. You can read about it on Michael's blog by going to the "He Said" link.

Michael is napping now. I'll spend the next two hours preparing for one hour of work. I tend to do that -- over prepare. I'll spend two days preparing for a dinner with friends that will last two hours. The hour of work isn't what's driving me, it's the excitement. I know it will only be an hour of orientation or what Starbucks calls "First Impressions." I'm excited about the free latte I'll get when I walk through the door. I'm excited about meeting my new co-workers, most of whom are young enough to be my children. I'm just excited.

As Michael mentioned in his post, I worked for Starbucks for a few weeks but then took a better-paying job for an attorney which seemed to be the right move at the time. We needed the money and we had bills to pay. In reality, the pay wasn't that much better and it wasn't worth the strain it put on me mentally, physically and even spiritually. When it came down to it, I probably would have made more at Starbucks considering the overtime I worked for the attorney (he immediately changed me from hourly to salary when he saw that I actually worked hard and was willing to stay late). If any of you have worked for an attorney, you know what I'm talking about.

I'm excited about earning less than $10.00 for the day. That's enough to pay for a couple of lattes on another day when Michael and I can sit down (at Starbucks) and do the USA Today crossword puzzle together. I can't wait.

Tuesday, February 01, 2005

Comments

I've changed from Blogger's comments feature to my old one (Enetation in the UK). Therefore, all old comments are gone.
Peace,
Amy


Sunday, January 30, 2005

It's All About Angles

I spoke those very words tonight while under Gordon's kitchen sink. I got a semi-frantic call from him -- he was heading out the door for a very important meeting and they had a leaking sink. I won't go into details, but I'm pretty much they're handyman. I picked up my pipe wrench and adjustable wrench and headed out the door.

Our oldest daughter, Tiffany, is a math teacher. Don't ask me where she got the genes for math -- if she didn't come out of the womb looking EXACTLY like me, and if I hadn't endured 20+ hours of back labor, I'd say she must have been adopted. By the age of three, she was smarter than her father and I put together. When she was in college majoring in math and started talking about imaginary numbers, I said, "hold it right there, cowgirl... yeeerrr talkin' gibberish!" How could I get a handle on imaginary numbers when I could barely handle the real ones??

I've learned a lot about numbers, theorems, hypotheses, catenaries (the St. Louis Gateway Arch is an example of a catenary curve shape), and angles. Ok, I really haven't learned, but I've paid attention to the vacation conversations between my genius brother and my genius daughter (26 +/- years his junior). Uh... a little FYI here, the link to the numbers page is just a joke (the first part), according to the person who posted -- but ya gotta admit, it did have you thinking!). Fibonacci numbers (fascinating and cute all at once because it talks about math AND fluffy bunnies)... The Golden Ratio -- this tells us why our brains determine whether people, places and things are attractive --- it's intriguing, fascinating and mystifying all at once. Honestly, though, math scares me; Not as much as those ubiquitous imaginary numbers (which my imaginary friends are counting on their imaginary fingers as I type), but how everything adds up perfectly... that mystifies me. Math, plain and simply, is pure.

I had to preach... strike that... I got to preach one Sunday because God had laid a message on my heart about worship. The night before, I asked our daughters, "what does worship mean to you?". Tiffany suddenly got excited. She has known all of her Christian life that God speaks to us all in different ways. She could see it happen to other people. She could see God revealing himself in a way that they could understand. That hadn't happened for Tiffany yet, or at least in a way that excited her enough to tell us about it. I tell her all the time that I pray that God will surprise her in some new way every day. I don't recall when this happened -- I believe it was at a Focus convention up in Dallas... or maybe in one of her small groups. But somewhere along the line, she was directed to the book of Revelation where John, in a dream state or trance, sees a new heaven and a new earth. Then John does what any normal mathematician would do.... he measures it. "And he who talked with me had a gold reed to measure the city, its gates, and its wall. The city is laid out as a square; its length is as great as its breadth. And he measured the city with the reed: twelve thousand furlongs. Its length, breadth, and height are equal."

I can't tell you how exciting that was for Tiffany. She felt that God could have put that in there just for her, because that's something she understood. God showed her that heaven is a perfect cube. She felt full of worship and awe because God cared enough to reveal heaven to her in His own way... mathematically. Surprise! It was all about angles.

So there I am, Real Live Plumber, on my back with my head sticking under Real Live Preacher's sink. I disconnected the offending pipes. You can't just undo one... you end up with PVC all akimbo. The important part is putting it back together. You have a pipe coming from the wall that joins to a T-joint and an elbow joint. One end of the T-joint connects to the garbage disposal, the other end connects to the other sink. If one is off only a fraction, it's gonna leak. So with my body, head, and elbow braced, I lined them up best as I could and tightened them. We turned the water on and, voila, no leak. The angles don't have to be equal, but they do all have to add up. It's all about angles.

Oh, and remember... 1 + 1 really CAN equal 3, and, according to Tiffany, math is easy as pi.

PS: Because of my shameless namedropping (RealLivePreacher), I'll plug his book. You can buy it here. You can also read his most recent article in The Christian Century here. It's one you don't want to miss.



Friday, January 28, 2005

He Said: Skyline Chili in Texas
She Said: The Best Darn Chili Both Sides of the Pecos

This time, my "He Said" is from RealLivePreacher.com. Gordon reluctantly admitted that something good can come out of Ohio. We're talking Skyline Chili (or generically, Cincinnati Chili).

I found many comrades through the comments on his blog. Many asked for the recipe. I'm not going to sing the praises of Cincinnati Chili -- Gordon did a great job all on his own. All I'm going to do is share two recipes that I have.

You can find out the different variations for serving it on the Skyline website (3-way, 4-way, etc...).


WARNING!! I have NOT tried these recipes!!

When I make it at home, I use the packets that you can get at Krogers. So if anyone tries these, let me know how they work out!

Original Cincinnati Chili
1 qt. water
2 # ground beef
2 medium onions, finely chopped
2 8-oz cans tomato sauce
4 cloves garlic
5 whole allspice
5 whole cloves
1/2 tsp. red pepper
1 tsp. cumin
4 Tblsp. chili powder
1/2 oz unsweetened chocolate
2 Tblsp. worcestershire sauce
1-1/2 tsp. salt
1 tsp. cinnamon
2 Tblsp. vinegar
1 large bay leaf, whole

Cook water and ground beef together for 1/2 hour (do NOT brown the meat first... put the raw meat in the cold water and stir it up with a fork or whisk until it all separates... then start to cook it). Add all other ingredients and bring to a boil. Simmer for 3 hours. Refrigerate overnight to skim fat. Remove whole spices before serving. Serve over spaghetti and top with finely shredded cheddar cheese. Serves 8.

Sky---- Chili
1 48 oz. tomato juice
1 tsp. cinnamon
1 tsp. allspice
1 tsp. cumin
1 tsp. pepper
1 Tblsp. salt
1-1/2 Tblsp. vinegar
2 Tblsp. chili powder
1/4 tsp. red pepper
1/8 tsp. garlic powder
5 bay leaves
1 large onion, minced
2 # ground beef
1-1/2 c. shredded cheddar cheese

Combine all ingredients except onion, and cheese. Do not brown the meat first -- put it into the pot while the water is still cold so it will fall apart. Stir it up with a fork or a whisk. Heat and cook uncovered slowly for at least an hour. Serve over spaghetti and top with cheese and onions.




Saturday, January 15, 2005

He Said: Silence Speaks
She Said: The Sounds of Silence

I love Simon & Garfunkle.


Hello darkness, my old friend. I've come to talk with you again.
Because a vision softly creeping left its seeds while I was sleeping
And the vision that was planted in my brain still remains within the sound of silence.

In restless dreams I walked alone narrow streets of cobblestone,
'neath the halo of a streetlamp I turned my collar to the cold and damp
When my eyes were stabbed by the flash of a neon light
That split the night and touched the sound of silence.

And in the naked light I saw ten thousand people, maybe more.
People talking without speaking; People hearing without listening;
People writing songs that voices never shared.
And no one dared disturb the sound of silence.

"Fools," said I, "you do not know silence like a cancer grows.
Hear my words that I might teach you. Take my arms that I might reach you."
But my words like silent raindrops fell ... and echoed in the wells of silence.

And the people bowed and prayed to the neon god they made.
And the sign flashed out its warning in the words that it was forming.
And the sign said, "The words of the prophets are written on the subway walls
And tenement halls ... and whispered in the sound of silence.

I especially like that song. I'm not sure why -- I don't care for silence as much as Michael does. The tortured soul that is the "narrator" in that song doesn't seem to care for it either.

I spent the last year or so in my own little world. For most of the time, I was on IV medication that made me quite loopy. Gordon recently said it was nice to talk to real Amy as opposed to Space Amy. There were times, however, that I had things to say but couldn't. In a very, very small way, I think I may have an inkling of an idea what it must be like to be someone with an impairment that limits or eliminates speech. I started to talk, I forgot what I was talking about, someone reminded me, I got flustered, I stuttered, I stopped. Over the course of the year, it became easier to simply keep my mouth shut and sink deeper into my silent, loopy world.

I was silenced once before -- for nearly 25 years. When my best friend's sister and her boyfriends sexually molested me, I didn't speak a word about it for fear they would make good on their threats to kill my parents. Vicki had already killed one of my cats, or so she said. My only memories of abuse by their father are sketchy. Mr. Brown comes into the bathroom, he pulls four squares of toilet paper off the roll, and he tells me that it's plenty. He stays there while I use it. Mr. Brown comes into the bedroom where we are sleeping on bunkbeds. I'm on the top bunk. Ann is on the bottom. He hands me a pair of panties and tells me that I left them somewhere. He shushes Ann as he explains that he's "just playing tricks" on us. If he threatened me, I don't remember. I was 6. It ended when I was 12 because we moved away.

The only time I attempted to "tell" was when I was in 6th grade sex education. We were allowed to ask questions in secret by writing them on a piece of paper and putting them into a box. I wanted to know whether a little girl would have puppies if someone put a dog on top of her. The teacher gasped and didn't read the question aloud. All she said was that mommies only had little baby girls and little baby boys; That if someone needed to talk to her after class or after school, it was OK; And that she had answered enough questions that day.

When I finally "told," I was 30. When Mr. Brown died, I did a little victory dance and I vowed never to be silenced again. Wrong. Hello darkness my old friend, I've come to talk with you again.

This time it was my health and my medications that had silenced me. I'm an ENFP and an Otter. If you're familiar with the Myers-Briggs and Gary Smalley personality assessments, you know what that I'm talking about, and you know how hard it is for an ENFP/Otter to keep silent. Over the course of 2004, my E became an I. My N was gone completely. My F was dulled. My P was blurred. The "party waiting to happen" Otter in me quit playing and became more of a dead fish. Depression sunk its sharp, ugly talons into me and wouldn't let go. Eventually, the tables turned and I wouldn't let go of the depression.

At times, I felt I was having out-of-body experiences. I had many visitors at the hospital and at home. And in the naked light I saw ten thousand people, maybe more. I could see myself talking to someone, but I couldn't hear what either of us were saying. I knew we were having conversations, but I couldn't speak. People talking without speaking, people hearing without listening. When I was able to go church and lead singing, I sang, but I had no song in my heart. People writing songs that voices never shared. After awhile, most of those people became uncomfortable talking to me. No one dared disturb the sound of silence. It hurt, but I understood. I've been in their shoes and have done the exact same thing.

It's good to be "back." I may be louder than normal this time around. I'm trying to make up for lost words and lost time. And I'm definitely making up for lost songs. I sent an e-mail to Gordon telling him he may have to use the front and back of our song sheets because the songs I chose are rather wordy. No more songs than usual -- just lots of words. The song in my heart is back, and I'll sing every single word knowing that the One who is listening is hearing.

The silence is broken.

**NOTE** Cat Addendum: From the time my cat, Frieda, disappeared until I was too old to make birthday wishes, I wished Frieda would come home. I guess that was my way of keeping some hope alive that my cat was just lost and not really dead. When I told my parents what had happened to me as a child, they were mortified. It was then, at the age of 30, that I learned the truth about Frieda. She had a habit of sneaking into another neighbor's yard. They threatened to poison her or something of that nature, so my mother took her to the animal shelter and didn't tell me. They told her that if Fireda wasn't adopted in three days, she would be put to sleep. Mom felt so guilty after two days, she went back to the shelter to bring her home. She was no longer there, so she assumed she was adopted. The official story was that Frieda had run away. So there you have it. Frieda lived, and so did I :-)




Monday, January 10, 2005

BlogAmy??

I started blogging in February of 2003. Since I chose marriage and motherhood over college, and when my youngest was about to start college, I figured I should at least make an attempt to get a college education. I was able to take a free class at a local university because I was old and had lost my job in the last year. My teacher was an imbecile, but she did require us to keep a journal. That was the only good thing I learned from her.

I decided to make my blog my journal. My first blog was called "College?? What the h*** was I thinking??" When the class ended, I created a new blog called "BlogAmy." My first post was on May 6th, 2003. A few days later, I figured I should explain why I called it that. I explained that it wasn't a play on words -- it was simply Amy's Blog - Blog by Amy - BlogAmy.

I was elated when I did a search on MSN for blogamy. I was #1 (of two). The second one was a blog, but the reference to "blogamy" was just the word at the bottom of his page with no link. Since I haven't posted in forever, I'm nowhere to be found these days.

A month later, blogamy.com appeared. I could kick myself for not registering that domain. It's a blog by another Amy. At the end of her first post she says, "Finally, and to the point, if you're wondering why "blogamy"? Well, it brought to mind blasphemy to tell you the truth. Since I feel that most of what I have to say here, overall, will probably be considered as such...well, there you have it."

That Amy and this Amy are as far away politically as the east is from the west. But that's what makes the world go 'round.

I guess I could have changed it this time around. As I mentioned in a comment on Michael's blog, I was toying with the idea of doing a he said, she said kind of thing, which I may still do. But I'm stubborn and I don't want to change the name. So BlogAmy it is, and BlogAmy it'll stay.


Sunday, January 09, 2005

I'm alive. I'm back.


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