5.11.2006
done
my parents will be here in about 15 hours to once again begin the packing and prepare for the move on monday. it'll be a little different this time though. i'm not just moving across campus. i'm leaving. madison, here i come. so if you're ever in the neighborhood, look me up. i'm sure we can find something fun to do.
5.06.2006
random days
then today, i got up about 9 to get ready to go to starved rock national park (or maybe state...i'm not really sure). well, it was amazing. we hiked some where in the range of 6 miles, ran through a waterfall, and climbed rock walls we really shouldn't have climbed. then we came back to my place and grilled. what a great day. in fact what a great two days.
5.05.2006
one more about the apartment
5.01.2006
more about the apartment (i'm excited, can you tell?)
4.30.2006
new apartment
4.24.2006
mystery commenter
4.22.2006
JOB!!!!!!!!
well, they called me last night at 5:30 and offered me a job as a project manager (the one i really wanted). i won't go into all the details, cuz i'm sure you don't really care, but they are awesome. believe me. i was so excited. as i told my dad about 10 minutes later on the phone, i really owe a big thank you to God on this one. He really provided for me. and it's pretty awesome to see prayers answered. so, if you want to come visit me in madison, let me know. i'll be moving up there right after graduation. of course i won't be around for a while because jake and i will be on our road trip, but i'll start working june 5th. so after that, i'll be a permanent fixture of the madison area. oh, and i'll probably post more about what the job is later.
(and yes, i know the picture has nothing to do with the post, but it's funny)
4.13.2006
senior thesis
well, the presentation went really well. i got a lot of good feedback from professors from other schools. in addition, i found a bunch more examples yesterday of amphicheiral knots that are ribbon amphicheiral (if you really want to know what i'm talking about, i'll send you a copy of my paper). and speaking of the paper, it's all done, save the title page, table of contents, conclusion, and reference (piddly easy stuff).
so anyways, now that the paper is done, my life may return somewhat to normal. although i do still have two photo portfolios and a presentation on the project to give. yeesh, i feel like i'll never be done with all this junk. oh well...
i leave for wisconsin tomorrow. i'll be heading home for the easter weekend and then to madison on sunday afternoon. i have my second round interview with epic systems on monday. that'll be the last job interview of this job hunting "season". hopefully it works out, cuz it's a really cool company. but more on that later, i'm heading to bed.
p.s. the picture is a little taste of what's been going on in my senior project. if you can tell me what's going on there, i'll be very impressed, and may buy you lunch.
3.31.2006
update
funny
- Jay Leno
business trips and rainstorms
the big news is that they told me i would be contacted by tomorrow, and since i haven't heard anything yet, i'm assuming that means i will hear from them tomorrow. it's really strange, in the past, i would have been freaking out about this, and worried and nervous, but i feel like God has really put me at ease about it all. case in point, the rainstorm going on right now. i just went outside a little while ago and sat on the porch for a while and watched the rain and listened and thought. rain always has a really calming effect on me, even during massive thunderstorms (kinda like this one was a while ago). i'm not really sure why the calm me, but they do. so i just went outside and revelled in the fact that this thunderstorm was like a calming gift from God. so as i sat there, i just thought, and listened, and i can't say that anything profound came, other than it felt like a short, intimate time between me and God. i haven't had a lot of those lately with all of the craziness associated with my graduation coming up, so it was nice to just kick back and relax for a little bit.
i'm sure that in a few hours there will be another post, relating to the world what happened with target. until then however, i'm going to sleep.
3.19.2006
countdown to the end
in another conversation from church today, with none other than josh graber, i realized, that i'm pretty excited about the possibility of living in minneapolis next year if i can land the job with target. we were discussing the idea of living in big cities. basically, we decided that minneapolis/st. paul has all the advantages of being a big city (e.g. cool downtown apartments, arts, sports, etc.), but they don't have the closed off attitude that a lot of people in other big cities have. basically, as i put it, it's a "big city that still feels like your hometown".
twin cities...here i come (hopefully).
sweet 16
3.18.2006
MVC
America East 0-1
ACC 4-4
Atlantic Sun 0-1
Atlantic 10 1-2
Big East 5-8
Big Sky 1-0
South 0-1
Big 10 3-6
Big 12 2-4
Big West 0-1
Colonial Athletic 1-1
Conference USA 1-2
Horizon League 1-2
Ivy League 0-1
MAAC 0-1
Mid American 0-1
Mid Continent 0-1
MVC 2-4
Mountain West 0-2
Northeast 0-1
Ohio Valley 0-1
Pac 10 3-4
Patriot 1-1
Southeastern 4-5
Southern 0-1
Southland 1-1
SWAC 0-1
Sun Belt 0-1
West Coast 1-1
Western Athletic 0-2
i think i'm missing a team in there somewhere, but that's not the point. seeing that i attend an MVC school (Bradley, which upset #4 Kansas last night), i was a bit peturbed on selection sunday when the analysts from cbs were ragging on the selection committee chair for giving 3 at-large-bids to teams from the MVC, which put them to a total of 4 tournament teams. well, the big problem with that was that meant they had the same number of teams as the ACC which could not happen, because the ACC is the college basketball golden child, and no one is better than the ACC (please note, that's a sarcastic comment). Well, anyways, 2 of the MVC teams advanced, and quite strongly beat the teams they played, and the two that lost gave their competitors quite a game. so to all you MVC hating analysts out there, get off your high horse, and realize that college basketball does exist outside the ACC, and the mid-majors are ready to make a name for themselves.
3.14.2006
God's will: part two
lately, i've been thinking about God's will, and the "plan" for my life everyone keeps telling me about. i've been wondering if it were really possible for there to be exactly one job, one city, one woman, one everything in my future. is it really possible that God has planned my life out in advance for me? i'm not so sure i believe that. if that's it, then life feels like one big guessing game, kind of like memory, that God is just seeing if we can figure out. and frankly, that type of thinking stresses me out. so i started looking more into God's will, and what the Bible says about it.
i think maybe the key point to following God is more like seeking him, and spending time with him. prayer, meditation, learning, i think those are the things God really wants us to be doing. i heard a good analogy once. God's will is like a pasture, and the fences are his moral boundaries for us. and as long as we stay within them, his blessings will continue in our lives. so basically, no matter what job i take upon graduation, so long as i continue to seek God, i'm living within his will. that, is a very relaxing revelation. i don't feel as much pressure to make sure i'm making the right choice. so for now, i'll just continue with the prayer and the reading and things, and just make the decision that seems best for me.
3.08.2006
God's will: part one
I call them Blue Like Jazz Boys. I’m sure you know a few of them. Maybe you’re dating one. Maybe you are one.
A Blue Like Jazz Boy is someone who manages to seamlessly weave an enthusiastic recommendation of the book Blue Like Jazz into every conversation he has. I had a hunch that two such boys were sitting next to me at a table in Starbucks. Several clues gave them away, including their lengthy analysis of the latest David Crowder Band CD and their excessive use of the word “postmodernism.” Oblivious to my eavesdropping, the boys continued conversing while sipping their $5 lattes.
“Did you decide about California yet?” “Nah, not yet …” “It’s a tough decision …” “Yah … I know … it’d be a great opportunity, but I’m just not sure … I’ve been praying a lot … reading my Bible … just really trying to figure out which choice is God’s will, you know?”
I tuned out the boys so I could begin reading my book. I had just come from Barnes & Noble, and my book was brand new; their conversation, on the other hand, was not. I have heard many twentysomethings discuss their future in much the same way, talking as though God had pre-picked a specific route for their life—which college to attend, which major to choose, which place to live after college, which job to take, which person to marry and so on.
These twentysomethings routinely say things like “I’m just trying to find God’s will for my life” or “I’m wondering what God’s will is.” Their very language implies that deep down they believe God is playing a big game with them. He’s created a great riddle for them to try and solve … a divine round of hide-and-go-seek in which they are forced to participate. But I don’t think God delights in making things difficult for His creation. Although we might all wish that God would spell out His thoughts regarding what job to take or whom to marry, that’s generally not how it works.
People who become obsessed with finding and doing God’s will right before they have to make big life choices often miss the point entirely. That’s because the only time we really need to know and do God’s will is right now—in this present moment. Whether we follow His will in the small choices we make during the next hour of our lives has the greatest significance.
St. Francis of Assisi offers a good example of this. While he was raking leaves one day, a neighbor asked, “If you knew for certain that Christ Himself were coming back in a half-hour, what would you do?”
St. Francis replied, “I’d finish raking the yard.”
Many of us have come to view our daily routine as boring—just empty space to be filled with an array of distractions. But the key to knowing and doing the will of God is seeing that empty space for what it is: exceedingly important. We need to become vigilant about that space and remain unwilling to take small detours from God’s will—speaking disrespectfully to loved ones, watching trash on TV, wasting valuable time at work. It’s the wrong choices we make in everyday life that put us instantly out of God’s will for our lives.
In The Will of God as a Way of Life, author Jerry Sittser says, “The Bible tells us what we must do today, which often involves mundane tasks we tend to overlook. It tells us precious little about what is going to happen tomorrow, except to say that God is in control. We spend much of our time wishing the reverse were true. ‘Forget today,’ we say to ourselves, ‘I already know about that. It’s boring. I want to know about tomorrow because that’s unknown and exciting.’ But Jesus wants us to devote our time and energy to all the little tasks we must do every day, not just to the big decisions we have to make every so often …”
The good news is that we can decide right this moment to get back into the center of God’s will—by simply making the right choice in the next decision we’re faced with.
I wanted to tell the single-white-male-seeking-God’s-will-in-Starbucks that he had already found it. He was praying and reading God’s word; he was obviously concerned about giving God a central place in his life. Therefore, he was right where he needed to be—-trying to please his Creator through his ordinary, every day life. If he continued doing that, he’d probably remain in God’s will whether he moved to California or stayed in Chicago.
I glanced up from my book as the two boys stood up to leave. “See you Wednesday?”
“Yah, I’ll definitely be there…we changed it back to 7, right?
“Yep … Oh, and don’t forget to bring Blue Like Jazz for Dave to borrow …”
I looked back down to hide my smile.
Jennifer Ruisch is the author of Faith and the City (RELEVANT Books). She lives in Des Moines, Iowa with her husband.
2.28.2006
an adventure well worth taking
i love college and the miscellaneous late night hyjinx that occur. i hope that doesn't stop once i'm graduated and into the working world.
2.25.2006
debunking the myth of soulmates
i think this article made a really good point. i think the idea of soulmate's or "the one" becomes a scapegoat in our society. how many people say something to the effect of "they just weren't the one" or "we fell out of love" when things get hard and they get divorced. wasn't that what the wedding was supposed to be about, declaring to the world that that person was your "one" for the rest of your life? apparently not though. or what about someone who remarries after their spouse passes away? did that person draw the good straw in life, and have two "ones"? i find that a bit of a stretch. and the other thing to think about is that people are imperfect and make bad decisions sometimes. so what if my "one" happens to marry someone else? am i supposed to wait around for them to figure out they aren't meant to be together or do i just find someone else, how may not be my specific one, and then cause trouble for someone else? i think there are just too many factors in the whole scheme of relationships and marriage to try and pin it down that definitively.
don't get me wrong, i think God knows what's going on with all of it. and that there is some sort of plan going on. but as the article i previously linked states, the only case of a specific man and woman being set aside for each other are adam and eve. and frankly i think that was supposed to be rather metaphorical for us. eve was created as a companion for adam, or a little more generally, woman was created so that man would have a compainion, someone to share life with. (as a quick note, i don't mean that in a man dominant sort of way, just in a "man life would be really lonely without women" sort of way). looking through the rest of the bible, the rest of the relationships are a bit looser in their designs. isaac's servant wasn't told to go find rebekah, just the woman who first watered his camels, or hosea was told to take a prostitute as a wife, not necessarily gomer. or how about jacob? he worked for seven years to get rachel as his wife and ended up with leah. then he worked another seven for rachel. or how many of the kings of israel had multiple wives?
so for jacob, was leah his "one", or rachel? or how about the kings, did they have 300 some "ones"? and i doubt hosea spent his teens thinking, "one day, when i want to start a family, i would really like to have a prostitute mother my children."
maybe i'm just being cynical, but i think that there might be some validity to this. i'd encourage you to think about it. let me know what you think.
2.22.2006
22
the question is: why do hot dogs come in packages of 10, and hot dog buns in packages of 8?
the answer: hot dogs come in packages of 10 and hot dog buns in packages of 8, because sometimes life doesn't work out the way we plan, and we've just got to work with what we've got, but at least you always have a hot dog.
2.13.2006
rock show
2.07.2006
motions
Deliver me, out of my sadness.
Deliver me, from all of the madness.
Deliver me, courage to guide me.
Deliver me, strength from inside me.
All of my life I've been in hiding.
Wishing there was someone just like you.
Now that you're here, now that I've found you,
I know that you're the one to pull me through.
Deliver me, loving and caring.
Deliver me, giving and sharing.
Deliver me, the cross that I'm bearing.
All of my life I was in hiding.
Wishing there was someone just like you.
Now that you're here, now that I've found you,
I know that you're the one to pull me through.
Deliver me,
Deliver me,
Oh deliver me.
All of my life I was in hiding.
Wishing there was someone just like you.
Now that you're here, now that I've found you,
I know that you're the one to pull me through.
Deliver me,
Oh deliver me.
Won't you deliver me.
~Sarah Brightman
2.04.2006
1.31.2006
waiting
stuff like my senior project. it's proving to a bit more daunting than i first imagined. beyond the fact that i'm basically a guinea pig for the whole thing because they've only been doing the project for a year. i asked my advisor today exactly what my end result should be, and he said, "i'm not really sure." i was thinking, great, at least i know what i need to do...not. so pretty much more toying with the problem and looking up math journals. i won't go into more details because i'll probably just bore you. well, that's about all for tonight.
1.27.2006
corporate favors
1.19.2006
the beginning of the end
1.17.2006
fishy adventure
1.13.2006
snow
1.12.2006
spring time????
totalitarian
You are a Social Conservative (35% permissive) and an... Economic Liberal (38% permissive) You are best described as a: Link: The Politics Test on OkCupid Free Online Dating Also: The OkCupid Dating Persona Test |
1.08.2006
lonely helmets and missing bikes
1.05.2006
cleaner room
goal for the coming weekend: clean apartment.
probability of goal happening: 50%
1.02.2006
swimming
epiphany
sometimes God really just smacks you in the face. i just read this about 10 minutes ago. and this is my reaction.
i'm not who i'm pretending to be. you know that. i haven't been the man you wanted me to be. i've ignored and pushed and pouted and done whatever i want. somewhere in the journey, i lost sight of the goals that had been set for me. i took a left instead of a right. not because i didn't know where i was going, but because i decided that the left was better. well here i am. at the end of that road. obviously not where i'm supposed to be. and i'm just looking around, trying to figure out how exactly it is that i got here. all these years i've been questioning and blaming everything and everyone, except the one who really screwed it all up. me. this isn't what was intended; joyless, bitter, depressing. i'm turning around now. heading back to the right. i don't think it's going to be easy, but i know that it's possible, because it's what you want. and that's always possible.