New Year’s Questions!

Beth Anne tagged me for this meme (that she procrastinated in filling out). I have no desire to tag anyone so I’m just doing this for fun and to have something to do while icing a swollen foot.

Four names that people call me:

1. Jen

2. Jenni

3. Lepicat (college email address)

4. Jenni-fur (mother-in-law)

Four jobs I have had:

1. Camp counselor

2. Library Assistant

3. Bookseller (Barnes & Noble)

4. Administrative assistant for an import brokerage owned by UPS

Four movies I have seen more than once:

1. Forrest Gump

2. The Princess Bride

3. Monty Python and the Holy Grail

4. The Birdcage

Four books I’d recommend:

1. Surprised by Joy

2. What’s So Amazing about Grace?

3. A Year of Biblical Womanhood

4. The Chronicles of Narnia

Four Places I’ve Lived:

1. Santa Cruz, CA

2. Bexley, OH

3. Madison, MN

4. Galata, MT

Four Places I Have Been:

1. Dublin, Ireland

2. Lethbridge, Alberta

3. London, England

4. Salt Lake City, UT (Not Mormon but I seriously love SLC!)

Four Places I Would Rather Be Right Now:

1. A redwood forest

2. Asleep

3. Seattle

4. Not staring at laundry to be put away

Four Things I Don’t Eat:

1. Broccoli

2. Spam

3. Thai food

4. Mexican food

Four of My Favorite Foods:

1. Sushi

2. Lamb gyros

3. Lamb kebab

4. My mother-in-law’s chocolate peppermint vegan cupcakes

Four Things I’m Looking Forward to This Year:

1. Making healthier choices

2. Possibly getting my mid-life crisis tattoo

3. Seeing what God has in store for me 🙂

4. Daniel hopefully starting to talk more.

Four Things I’m Saying:

1. “Seriously?!?!?!?!?”

2. “Yeah… no.”

3. “What the fur?!?!?!?!?” (I live in a house of cat-punsters.)

4. “Gentle hands!”

Four People I’m tagging:

Nobody. 🙂

7 Quick Takes: Latin Woes, Why You Should Not Watch the Jordanian Pilot Execution Video, and More.

7 Quick Takes

— 1 —

I despair at the state of our public education system. An eighth grade girl in Vermont suggested that Vermont adopt a Latin motto and the Senate minority leader of the state decided to take her suggestion up in the state legislature. Things go horribly awry as various Vermont citizens flip out about adopting a state motto in “Latin” because *gasp* it might have something to do with Latin-Americans, also known as “illegal immigrants”. Reading some of the comments made my inner grammar Nazi convulse.

— 2 —

New Year’s resolution update: plank challenge. As I mentioned last week, I didn’t get to finish the plank challenge and I am not able to hold a plank for 5 minutes straight. However, I am still able to consistently plank for more than 60 seconds each and that in itself is pretty amazing. I might repeat the challenge again later this year and see if I can do better then.

— 3 —

There’s sane and then there’s Kelly. I’m sure many of you have seen the 23 tips for sane eating, right? Kelly of This Ain’t the Lyceum decided to add a few of her own. 🙂

— 4 —

New Year’s resolution update: Bible reading. In the Old Testament, I’m through Genesis and into Exodus now which means lots and lots of information on the various commandments and laws being put into play. (My reading on Wednesday had to do with the priestly garments and how to make them as well as the various specifications of the altars and the sacrifices offered.) In the New Testament, we crucified Jesus. Definitely not the most uplifting reading! On the plus side, we got to resurrect Him today and I’m loving all the Psalms I get to read.

— 5 —

Pick my Lenten discipline for me. I’m raffling off the right to choose my Lenten discipline for me. Click here for more information. The only rules are that it has to be doable (bread and water is not as I’ve got health conditions that preclude that) and I have to be able to do it around my schedule with Daniel. Otherwise, BRING IT!

— 6 —

Got picky eaters? Here are 32 kids who are hilariously picky eaters. Scarily enough, I know some adults who are worse! I’ve had co-workers who will not eat foods that are touching other foods on principle.
*

— 7 —

Simcha nails it again! I really recommend the piece by Simcha Fisher where she talks about the dangers in watching the execution video of the Jordanian pilot and ties in the watching of Fifty Shades of Gray. She mentions this post by Marge Fenelon and I agree wholeheartedly with it. There is no good that can come from watching it.

For more Quick Takes, visit Kelly at This Ain’t The Lyceum.

#FiveFaves: Miscellanea (XXVII)

#5Faves

One

Dr. Scholl’s Massaging Gel Insoles. The commercials for them are pretty lame but those suckers are incredible. I felt like I was walking on air this morning. Now if only the scraped-up toes would heal…

Two

Every State Described by a Single Sarcastic Line from a Bitter Resident. The one for Montana is painfully true. Go read it here.

Three

NCIS: New Orleans. It’s not quite as good as the regular NCIS but it has definitely grown on me, especially the team of Pride/LaSalle/Brody. I’m also a fan of Sebastian.

Four

People who vaccinate their kids. Dead serious here… every time a parent takes their unvaccinated kid out in public, they put Daniel and my father-in-law at risk of whatever preventable diseases their kid has picked up. Measles is not a joke. You and your small podunk town in the Midwest might have gotten off lightly but those of us who live in places with actual populations actually know real people in our lives who have suffered some kind of complication from it.

Five

Daniel Tiger’s Neighborhood. I love anything that can buy me 15 minutes of time to take a shower and comb out my dreadlocks. It’s also not the worst thing to have to watch if you have to engage in some screen time with your kiddos so you can get some rest.

Go love up Jenna and the others.

Roald Dahl and the Numbers Argument for Vaccination

I saw a letter on Facebook from author Roald Dahl (author of “Charlie and the Chocolate Factory”) concerning vaccination and his daughter’s death from measles. I’m quoting it here in its entirety.

Olivia, my eldest daughter, caught measles when she was seven years old. As the illness took its usual course I can remember reading to her often in bed and not feeling particularly alarmed about it. Then one morning, when she was well on the road to recovery, I was sitting on her bed showing her how to fashion little animals out of coloured pipe-cleaners, and when it came to her turn to make one herself, I noticed that her fingers and her mind were not working together and she couldn’t do anything.

“Are you feeling all right?” I asked her.

“I feel all sleepy,” she said.

In an hour, she was unconscious. In twelve hours she was dead.

The measles had turned into a terrible thing called measles encephalitis and there was nothing the doctors could do to save her. That was twenty-four years ago in 1962, but even now, if a child with measles happens to develop the same deadly reaction from measles as Olivia did, there would still be nothing the doctors could do to help her.

On the other hand, there is today something that parents can do to make sure that this sort of tragedy does not happen to a child of theirs. They can insist that their child is immunised against measles. I was unable to do that for Olivia in 1962 because in those days a reliable measles vaccine had not been discovered. Today a good and safe vaccine is available to every family and all you have to do is to ask your doctor to administer it.

It is not yet generally accepted that measles can be a dangerous illness. Believe me, it is. In my opinion parents who now refuse to have their children immunised are putting the lives of those children at risk. In America, where measles immunisation is compulsory, measles like smallpox, has been virtually wiped out.

Here in Britain, because so many parents refuse, either out of obstinacy or ignorance or fear, to allow their children to be immunised, we still have a hundred thousand cases of measles every year. Out of those, more than 10,000 will suffer side effects of one kind or another. At least 10,000 will develop ear or chest infections. About 20 will die.

LET THAT SINK IN.

Every year around 20 children will die in Britain from measles.

So what about the risks that your children will run from being immunised?

They are almost non-existent. Listen to this. In a district of around 300,000 people, there will be only one child every 250 years who will develop serious side effects from measles immunisation! That is about a million to one chance. I should think there would be more chance of your child choking to death on a chocolate bar than of becoming seriously ill from a measles immunisation.

So what on earth are you worrying about? It really is almost a crime to allow your child to go unimmunised.

The ideal time to have it done is at 13 months, but it is never too late. All school-children who have not yet had a measles immunisation should beg their parents to arrange for them to have one as soon as possible.

Incidentally, I dedicated two of my books to Olivia, the first was ‘James and the Giant Peach’. That was when she was still alive. The second was ‘The BFG’, dedicated to her memory after she had died from measles. You will see her name at the beginning of each of these books. And I know how happy she would be if only she could know that her death had helped to save a good deal of illness and death among other children.

It kind of humanizes the whole thing to hear a fairly well-known author make this argument. I mean, why would you not do something to keep other kids from suffering the way your child did? How are people that stupid?!?!?!?!?

Someone sent me an argument by my official troll. Here it is in its entirety:

I’ve said it before so I’ll just reiterate it – I totally understand parents NOT wanting to give them to their children. But whereever one stands on the issue, I don’t think it is appropriate to say things like:

“As far as I’m concerned, not vaccinating your child is about as irresponsible as driving drunk with your toddler in the back seat jumping around without a child restraint.”

My kids have had some vaccines and I’ve passed on others. I did not follow the schedule at all for Rosie because I thought it was too much too soon – and I agonized about all of it. But bottom line for me is that Doctors and hospitals aren’t always right. They just aren’t. I know that’s hard for people to accept but it’s true. They media also lies and sensationalizes things. Right now it’s measles. But the death rate of measles is less than 0.1%. Prior to the vaccine it was way less than that. So let’s quit guilting each other okay? Here’s a post I wrote earlier this year on the topic. This also seems like a reasonable case for when to vaccinate and which vaccines to get. (Source: Quick Take #7)

Let’s do the numbers here. The USA has 300 million people. If all of them get measles and we assume a death rate of 0.1%, that means a death rate of 300,000 people. That would be equal to obliterating most of the population of North Dakota or a few of the larger cities in the USA.

Incidentally, the study about MMR vaccines in Canada that all the anti-vaxers on my wall are quoting to try and show causation between measles and autism actually shows an increase in febrile seizures amongst those who are either selectively vaccinated or who have been on a delayed schedule. I’m guessing that none of them have had the “joy” of watching their child start seizing? I have. It’s terrifying.

Responding to the arguments that it wasn’t that bad for my official troll when she had it, she had a mild case. She is also the only baby boomer I’ve encountered who doesn’t have some horror story about a sibling ending up in the hospital, ending up deaf, or dying from measles. (I’m a mainline Christian. My church is full of people in that age group and I’ve asked all the ones with whom I deal.) I truthfully cannot understand why a parent would put their child at risk of contracting something that is that hideous and be so blasé about watching them suffer.

Let’s also factor in people who can’t get the vaccine such as children under 12 months old, transplant patients, cancer patients, and people with other health conditions that preclude being vaccinated. Are we just supposed to enclose them in a plastic bubble and tell them “good luck”? Many of these people *HAVE* to be outside in the world and people who don’t vaccinate themselves or their kids put all of them at great risk. Measles is highly contagious and can remain in the air and on surfaces for hours. Why would you be so selfish as to put them at risk? I’m arguing this because I live with someone who has a severely compromised immune system due to chemo and a child who hasn’t met a virus that he doesn’t want to engage. Please, for the love of all things holy, stop putting them at risk!

The Simple Woman’s Daybook: February 1, 2015

Simple Woman's Daybook

FOR TODAY February 1, 2015

Outside my window… dark. Yet again, I’m writing after everyone else has gone to bed.

I am thinking… about some of the things I’m hearing in the Rachel Held Evans video I am listening to. I seriously want to be her when I grow up.

I am thankful… for the snuggle and nap with Daniel during the Super Bowl.

In the kitchen… darkness as I sit in here typing.

I am wearing… my Online Debate Team shirt and black sweats from Target.

I am praying for… healing from my fibro flare-up, a call for Jon, some special intentions, and for the needs of my #Cathso chicas.

I am going… to be spending tomorrow morning scanning auto loan paperwork to email to my credit union.

I am wondering… if I need to order more yarn for Daniel’s “big boy blankie”.

I am reading… Yarn Over Murder by Maggie Sefton.

I am hoping… I get some entries for my giveaway in which I’m offering the winner the option to pick my Lenten discipline.

I am looking forward to… Bible study at church on Wednesday morning. I’m the youngest by quite a bit but it’s fun to go and listen and the other women there are wonderful.

I am hearing… the Rachel Held Evans talk.

Around the house… darkness.

A favorite quote for today… “Now invariably after I’ve gone through this whole litany of things [on what millenials want in the church in terms of social justice], someone in the back will raise their hand and say, ‘So what you’re saying is we need a cooler band?’ And I proceed to bang my head against the podium.” — Rachel Held Evans

One of my favorite things… time to just sit and read.

A few plans for the rest of the week: lots of walks (with my foot taped up — gotta love bursitis!), bonding with my core ball, errands, Bible study and inquirers class on Wednesday, and whatever else come up.

A peek into my day… the video I have been referencing!

Hosted by The Simple Woman.

Yarn Along: January 28, 2015

I’m linking up with Ginny of Small Things today and showing off what I’m reading and what I’m crocheting.

Big boy blankie and book.

The crocheting: I’m making a “big boy blankie” for Daniel because he is shredding his baby blanket. I’m hoping to get it done by his birthday in April. The yarn is Bernat Super Value in the Whirlpool colorway.

The book: Close Knit Killer by Maggie Sefton. It’s your basic cozy murder mystery but involving yarn.

Want to see what others are making and reading? Head on over!

Being a Titus 2 Woman in the 21st Century (I)

(I’ve been wanting to write this entry for a long time and am only now getting around to it.)

I honestly can’t think of too many phrases that make my formerly fundie friends more twitchy than the words “Titus 2 woman”. What is a “Titus 2 woman” you ask? Well…

“Likewise, tell the older women to be reverent in behavior, not to be slanderers or slaves to drink; they are to teach what is good, so that they may encourage the young women to love their husbands, to love their children, to be self-controlled, chaste, good managers of the household, kind, being submissive to their husbands, so that the word of God may not be discredited.” (Titus 2:3-5)

It doesn’t sound that bad, right? I mean, I know a lot of young moms who could use encouragement.

The problem: most older women I deal with online and in person who subscribe to the thinking in this passage are the biggest scolds I’ve ever met. It seems like their sole reason for existence is to criticize people, give unwarranted advice, and try to get people to conform to their viewpoints. It is one of the reasons young women like myself don’t get involved with women’s ministry stuff at church (other than the fact that we have kids and probably can’t find a babysitter). It’s also a reason why a lot of us leave the church — why would we be part of a community of faith where all we hear is how “young people” are screwing things up?

So… here are a couple suggestions is my manifesto from my perspective as a pastor’s wife and as a young woman.

[+] Realize that the epistle to Titus has a specific context. One thing that drives me crazy is people just taking various verses that prove their point and using them in a completely different context than they were written. Paul was giving instructions to Titus on how the people of his church plants should behave so that none of the people in the area could find anything to criticize about them. This is applicable to today where you don’t want your church members’ behavior to reflect badly on the church but it isn’t a license to be critical of every freaking thing that people do.

[+] Realize that our lives today are different than yours was when you were raising your kids. Back in the day, women didn’t work outside the home, homeschooling wasn’t a thing, and girls were groomed specifically to manage a household. In the 21st century, we’re running a household and having a career because it’s probably not doable to live on just one salary. A lot of us stay-at-home moms (SAHM) would absolutely *LOVE* to work outside the home but it’s not feasible because of daycare costs. This is something that most of the older women I deal with haven’t faced. If you see us out grocery-shopping by ourselves, don’t ask nastily where the kids are and why we’re leaving them with our husbands. Our husbands probably came home and saw a dazed look on our faces and sent us out to shop for groceries alone to help us maintain our sanity. If you see us sitting in a coffee shop reading with our baby asleep in the car seat next to us, don’t make snippy remarks about how “I never got to do that when my kids were little.” We’re there reading as a way to get out of the house and decompress a bit to save our sanity.

[+] Realize that we probably don’t give a rat’s butt about your opinion on something because we’re concerned with other things. I had a parishioner (we’ll call her “Delilah”) who always had to give me her opinion on something I was doing… which was apparently always wrong. (This would be the same person who called me 30 minutes after I’d gotten home from being in the hospital for a week with the HELLP Syndrome and chewed me a new one because I wasn’t down in Great Falls with Daniel. Almost six years later, I’m *STILL* angry about that.) It got to the point where I would be sneaking around the church and checking the parking lot at the grocery store to see if Delilah was there so I wouldn’t get ambushed by her. She actually wanted to lead the youth group because she had some things to say about how messed up the youth are these days. (The kids actually had a code word that they used to warn each other about her coming up behind them.) I don’t think she realized that when she was berating me, I was usually planning blog entries in my head, figuring out how to pay Jon’s self-employment tax (clergy are considered self-employed by the IRS), making a grocery list, or doing any number of things instead of listening to her. Seriously, if we want your opinion on something, we’ll ask for it. Otherwise, accept that you’re wasting our time and leave us alone.

[+] Unless you gave birth to us or have legally adopted us, quit attempting to parent us. If I had a nickel for every time I’ve been told that someone has a kid my age/someone is old enough to be my mother, I could pay off Jon’s college and seminary loans in one shot. Really, I have a mother. We’re incredibly close. I don’t need another one. I’d rather deal with you as a peer.

[+] Respect is earned, not automatically given. My mama raised me to be polite to people but it doesn’t mean that I’m going to respect you just because you happen to be older than me. Respect is a two-way street and it does not mean that I have any respect for you just because I happen to be polite. For example, I live with my in-laws. Having two alpha women sharing a house can be really tricky. What makes it possible for everything to work is the fact that my mother-in-law respects me enough to let me do things my way most of the time and I respect her enough to ask her how she would like certain things to be done. (It is her house, after all.) She has shown me in the 14.5 years I’ve known her that while she has opinions on how things should work (LOTS of opinions), she trusts that I am capable of getting things done correctly and sometimes even better than her way. In return, I value what she has to say even if I choose to go in a different direction with something.

[+] Understand that generalizations about “young people” are going to turn us off of hearing what you have to say. In Jon’s last parish, one of the things that drove me crazy was the complaining about “young people”. Apparently, we can’t read music (I can sing harmony on hymns and sightread choir music like nobody’s business), we can’t cook (said to me by someone who was eating a pesto pasta dish I made from scratch with pesto made from the basil grown in my garden), we only like “holy roller rock n’ roll worship” (ummm… not my generation — we go for the traditional stuff), and we don’t want to be involved with the church (yeah… Bible studies at 2:30 p.m. don’t work for women who have jobs). First off, the “young people” in question are 50-60 years old and were run out of the parish by people who didn’t attempt to listen to what they had to say. Secondly, why would we want to stay in a place where everything we do is wrong, where we’re blamed for the church declining, and where people tell us they want our kids there but give us the stink eye if our kids make one sound during worship? This goes back to understanding that our lives are different from yours. We need a church where the childcare isn’t just the mother who happens to be there with her 4 kids and is forced to decamp to the nursery where her kids run around and play while she feels completely banished and disconnected from the people worshiping. We need a church which has something for women who have to work. We need a church which listens to us and asks us in what areas we need to be fed. In short, we need you to be open to what we need in the year 2015 and not just do things a certain way because it’s the way that it has always been done.

[+] Speak words of encouragement to us, not words of criticism. In Jon’s last parish, there was a woman named Joyce who made it her mission to encourage Jon and I. She would find something to praise about Daniel even if it was that he was “exuberant” during worship, she always found something in Jon’s sermon to praise, and she made sure to compliment me on whatever I did. Her birthday was the same day as mine and I always had a beautiful card from her and a phone call on that day. She suffered a stroke about three weeks before we left and when I walked into her hospital room and introduced myself, her family all hugged me and told me that they had heard such wonderful things about me from her. Did that completely make my day? You betcha. I’m not saying that I’m perfect — I will be the first one to enumerate my many flaws — but having someone telling me about the good I was doing made me want to try harder in various areas of my life. She died the day we arrived in Claremont and while I was really bummed that I couldn’t be at her funeral, I had stories of how she impacted my life that I was able to tell to the colleague of Jon’s who performed it.

[+] Rather than harp on how you had things so hard when you were in our shoes, try to make it better for us so that we don’t have to suffer the way you did. When I have “Titus 2” women harping on me about how they didn’t get to do ________/have ____________ when they were my age/when their kids were little, I usually want to suggest in my completely snarky way that maybe that’s why they need to do ______________ so that young mothers in their lives don’t have the same problem. An example: I was sitting and reading at a coffee shop near where I used to live in Montana with Daniel in his carrier beside me. “Delilah” (whom I spoke of earlier) came in and when she saw me, she felt she had to tell me that she *NEVER* had time to herself when she had babies or young kids. I really wanted to tell her that this is why she should be offering to babysit, not criticizing me for actually doing something that was keeping me mentally healthy. (Daniel was also asleep and totally fine in his carrier so it’s not like I was ignoring him.) Does a mom at church seem harried as she’s trying to keep her toddler quiet? Maybe you should offer to take the kiddo for a walk around the church so she can focus on worship and you should definitely stop giving her the stink eye. Yeah, I’m sure your kids were perfect in church and you’ve told me that you practiced making them sit for 15 minutes quietly. However… neither of your kids (who live at the opposite end of the local Amtrak route to get as far away from you as possible) had autism or the developmental delays that Daniel had.

This has gotten to be a pretty long entry so I’m going to cut things off here and resume tomorrow with a list of women in my life who are worthy of being referred to as “Titus 2 women”.