What We Know, and Why We Know It
Over at House of Eratosthenes, Morgan K. Freeberg puts forth a well-reasoned post called “So Does This Make Me a ‘Birther’?” Â In it, he examines the larger issue of the precedent set by this particular issue not being resolved for over two (nay, four) years. Â After the original post, he updated it with noticing how everything we know about the current President, we know because there is a group of people ready to ridicule us if we say we don’t know it. Â For example:
He is a Christian and not a Muslim. Â Now, I really don’t care about this one way or the other. Â But how do I know He’s a Christian? Â Because He went to Jeremiah Wright’s church, of course! Â But of course that would mean He’s also an anti-white bigot. Â But no. Â He went to Jeremiah Wright’s church for twenty years to listen to all the Christian-ish sermons…but was snoozing through all the America-bashing sermons. Â Yes to Christianity, no to America-hating, because Obama was coincidentally tuning out at all the right times. Â Again, how do I “know” this? Â Because someone’s ready to ridicule me if I believe anything different. Â I don’t have any other reason to “know” such a thing. Â None.
Read the whole thing. Â Whether you’re a birther, you think the birthers are loony, or you’ve just resigned yourself to the fact that it’s not going to be resolved (myself in that latter category), the points made in his post are important. Â Shouldn’t the CINC have to show the same proof of eligibility as those he commands?
A Year in the Word
On the suggestion of a friend, I subscribed to the Daily Audio Bible (DAB) podcast.  In this podcast, Brian Hardin reads the Bible through each year – 2010 is the fifth year.  It’s been a blessing to me to listen to God’s Word, as well as enjoy some of his comments as well.  (I’ll have to own up to skipping a good bit of the commentary, especially when I was trying to catch up a few days.)  It was great to be able to listen while I did other things; however, this was a mixed blessing.  I found that I would sometimes get distracted with the “other” thing that I was doing, and would mentally check out of the podcast.  During one of these distracted times, I felt the Lord telling me that it was time to take the next step.
For this reason, beginning 2 Jan 10, I’ll be beginning a 52-week Bible reading plan, reading it the old-fashioned way, off words printed on paper. Â My main Christmas gift this year was an ESV Study Bible, and this will help put that to good use. Â One of the aspects of DAB that I liked was the community; I knew that, although I might be the only one listening to my computer, there were thousands others that were listening to Brian. Â Although my participation in that community could be described, at best, as a lurker, it encouraged me to have it there. Â To help encourage others, I’ve created a group on Facebook called Read the Bible in 2011. Â This group will function as a community where we’ll encourage each other along this journey. Â I’d like to invite you, my reader, to join me in this journey. Â The group is closed, but if you request access, just send me a separate message so I’ll know who you are.
While the goal is to read through the Bible in a year, we don’t want to go so quickly that we don’t have time to stop and listen to what God is trying to tell us in the passage of the day. Â So, the stated goal of reading through the Bible in 2011 is not really the goal; it is merely the means to the greater goal of allowing God to speak to us. Â I’m looking forward to it – won’t you join me?
Cross-posted at Daniel’s Weekly Devotions
Merry Christmas 2010
From my family to yours – Merry Christmas! Â May the joy of Jesus’ birth surround you, and may you be blessed with His presence during this season.
Giving Thanks
As most of you know, this past two weeks have been quite an experience. Â We were supposed to leave for a trip home, visiting Dollywood, seeing family and friends, and in short, having an actual vacation. Â That’s not how it went down…
Wednesday evening, having gotten our vehicle completely loaded, we sat down to eat. Â Michelle had cream of chicken soup, and when she was through, she said that she felt a little off. Â About a half hour later, she was having abdominal pain so severe that it was making her black out if she tried to get up out of bed. Â She called a specialist who was familiar with her history, and he said that it sounded like she needed to go to the ER with a suspected a gall bladder problem. Â She also had a hernia that she’s had since our third son Jameson was born; she had been consulting with this specialist to have it fixed January/February of next year. Â At the ER, they ruled out a blockage in this hernia and gall bladder problems, and it looked like we may have been sent home. Â Michelle asked the ER doctor to talk with her specialist, and once he did, she was admitted. Â The next morning, this specialist evaluated her, and said that the hernia had become incarcerated; it wasn’t blocked, but blood flow had been cut off to it, and the intestines were starting to die. Â This hernia repair became a 4-hour, 15-minute emergency surgery, followed by a day in ICU, two days in a step-down unit, and four days in the standard post-surgical inpatient unit.
Although this situation was scary at times, there is a whole lot more about which we can be thankful. Â For the balance of this post, I’d like to take some time to, as the old hymn says, “count my blessings.”
First, look at all the good things dealing with the timing of this. Â Praise the Lord we were here in Albuquerque, and not somewhere on I-40. Â It is highly unlikely that the diagnosis would have been made, and surgery performed, were we not where Michelle’s history was already known. Â Even if they had, the week-long hospital stay in some unknown town would have been difficult; as it was, we were able to use our home, and rely on our network of friends here for support (more about them next). Â Michelle’s specialist, who made the correct diagnosis, is only in Albuquerque once a month, but he was here that night; we found out later that he actually stayed over an extra day to do this surgery. Â Also, a surgeon whom he trained as a resident (and called his “star pupil”) is the director of surgery at Lovelace hospital here in town; he and she both were able to work together on the surgery. Â And, while we knew this surgery was coming, the fact that it had to be done as emergency surgery means that it’s automatically covered; no paperwork hassles and waiting for referrals! Â I had already lined up time off from work, so I wasn’t expected to be there.
Second, I’m exceedingly grateful to my friends here in Albuquerque. Â I won’t name them all publicly because I haven’t asked their permission, but there were many families that came together to help take care of our children (even offering for them to spend the night, which never did materialize). Â There were also many other families that made meals for us, bringing us so much food that we were able to get at least 2 meals out of each one. Â Phone calls, visits, and e-mails of support also helped Michelle and me during this time. Â Finally, prayer – I know that the one thing that has made the difference in this situation was the intercessory prayer on Michelle’s behalf, and prayers for me as I was working through everything else. Â During the entire time, I was never worried; I had a peace that the doctors were going to figure it out, and we were going to be OK. Â While I try not to let on too much, that mindset is pretty rare for me when facing medical situations – my mind wants to go off and worry about these worst-case scenarios, rather than trust God in the scenario in which He’s placed me. Â As I put prayer requests out via Twitter (more on that below), we often saw near-immediate change in situations. Â Both Michelle and I are very grateful for those of you who lifted us up in prayer.
Third, special thanks go to our families. Â From the time they heard about what was going on, the planning was continuous. Â Everyone worked together, and the children were able to still get to go visit them. Â Thanks to our families, they were even able to spend a few days at our vacation condo in Pigeon Forge and meet up with friends with whom we were going to be vacationing. Â Having the children safely with grandparents, I was free to focus on Michelle, and helping her during her stay in the hospital. Â It’s also helped her to be able to focus on her recover now that she’s at home. Â The children will be coming home soon (in time for Christmas), and we’re really looking forward to seeing them.
Fourth, Twitter was great. Â Sure, it may seem strange to offer thanks for a social networking site, but Twitter really helped me during this time. Â Facebook would have seemed to be the solution for keeping people informed, but Michelle has friends, and I have friends, and some of those cross, but some don’t. Â Since you have to be friends to see updates, I would have had to have double-posted. Â (I don’t even know if the Facebook client on our phones lets you easily manage dual accounts; and while I’ve boasted about Seesmic Web’s ability to dual-post to Twitter and Facebook at the same time, Seesmic for BlackBerry doesn’t support Facebook.) Â Twitter, being public by default, was what I needed. Â I didn’t need to give the same update by phone 14 times, and I didn’t need to fiddle with changing settings. Â “Pull up the box, type my 140 characters or less, and press send” was much easier for providing up-to-date information to people who wanted to know it. Â There was a little resistance from some folks, but once I reassured them that my profile page was a simple web page with no account needed, they got it. Â I’m now grateful for the micro-blogging platform I scorned for so long.
Finally, I want to praise the Lord for this outcome. Â Although it wasn’t our timing, God knew when this hernia needed to be repaired. Â It’s been hanging around (pardon the pun) for nearly six years – the fact that it’s in the past, even now, I don’t think has truly sunk in yet. Â The doctors who needed to be here were here. Â We avoided the disaster of being sent home from the ER with the problem unresolved. Â While, obviously, Michelle isn’t completely healed from surgery this extensive in two weeks, her healing progress has been in line with what the doctors have expected; this isn’t an exercise in “speed-healing.” Â Looking back, we can see how everything worked together to ensure this bad situation had a good outcome. Â Thank you, Lord.
Inbox Zero with Gmail
Here a while back, I had tried to get to Inbox Zero, and succeeded for a while.  However, things happen, and with multiple inboxes, Inbox Zero was a memory.  While I’ve been at the hospital with Michelle, while she rests, I’ve used tools provided as part of Gmail to integrate my personal and two business e-mail accounts, as well as my Gmail account, which I started using a few months ago as my primary e-mail address.
Before we dig in, let’s talk about Inbox Zero. Â It’s basically Getting Things Done applied to e-mail. Â In GTD, you collect everything that’s on your mind (which an e-mail inbox does by default). Â Once you have all these loose ends collected, you “process” them – you either deal with it (if 2 minutes or less will do it), defer it (which can involve prioritizing), or delegate it. Â E-mail “processing” is different from what we usually do when we sit down to an inbox with 400 message, 285 unread, looking for subject lines with things to which we can respond in the short time we have. Â Processing’s goal is an empty inbox; to look at every thing and make some decision with it. Â This brings clarity, because a good bit of the noise will be quieted. Â Then, when you have time to “do” e-mail, you start with your highest priority, and work your way down. Â (Of course, there’s a little more to it – I just summarized an entire book in a few sentences.)
Here’s a screenshot, to prove that I got there. Â Â It also illustrates how Gmail can help you get there and stay there – labels, conversations, filters, and search.

The first is labels. Â Within Gmail, messages can have one or more labels; in fact, “Inbox” is a label as well. Â This allows messages to be identified with the topics addressed, as well as a priority. Â “1 | Pending”, “2 | Follow-Up”, and “Scouting” are labels in the image above. Â There is an experimental feature (that seems to work well) that shows or hides the labels in that list based on whether there are any unread conversations in that label. Â Labels are displayed in alphabetical order, so starting the priority labels with a number sends them to the top of the list. Â With an e-mail folder (or a file folder), you can’t file something in more than one place at a time. Â However, with labels, you can have a single message labeled with several labels; in fact, one of the messages in “1 | Pending” is also the unread message in “Scouting”. Â Using read/unread as a status is a help, too; of course I’ve read the e-mail, but by marking it as new after I had applied the labels to it, it increments the number beside the label in the list (and makes the label show). Â I can then “archive” it (remove it from the inbox), and I have a reminder of what I need to do.
The second is conversations. Â Gmail groups all e-mail communications into conversations, and sent and received messages are stored together. Â This means that you don’t have to go plowing through your “Sent” folder to find the message; assuming you labeled it, the entire back-and-forth e-mail exchange is right there in that label’s list of messages. Â It works great for mailing lists, personal e-mails, etc. Â The only thing I haven’t found it working well for is Facebook e-mail notifications; it groups them by subject line, so all the “this-person commented on your status” messages get grouped, and they’re not in the order that they are on Facebook. Â However, that hasn’t really bothered me too much.
The third is filters. Â This is where Gmail would earn its price, if it weren’t free. Â Filters are run against messages as they are received. Â The most common options I’ve used in filters is “Skip the Inbox” and “Apply this label” – using those two options, you can make a filter that automatically delivers e-mails to your labels, without you even having to take action to process them! Â All my daily/weekly e-mails and newsletters are now delivered to “3 | To Review” – the only time I see them is when I say “OK, now I have time to check up on news” and click on the label. Â I’ve also created filters for all the ads I’ve started getting for the sites where I bought that one thing some time ago, and now I get all their ads; I decided against completely deleting them (in case I’m looking to buy something and want to see these e-mail specials), but it’s easy to click a label, click “select all”, then click “Delete”. Â Additionally, if I find myself dealing with the same type of e-mail more than once, I take the do-it-in-two-minutes-or-less route and create a filter for that message; instead of working to get one e-mail done, it’s work that will enable future e-mails to be done more quickly.
The fourth is search. Â How many times have you wanted to “Google” within your e-mail? Â In Gmail, messages can have any number of labels (or none at all), can be read or unread, starred, etc. Â In fact, archived with no label is the equivalent of out-of-sight, out-of-mind. However, with their search (you can see the box near the top of the screen shot), you can search all of your messages, including archived message, very quickly. Â You can also use it to search for e-mails from or to a specific contact. Â Knowing that search is there can help relieve you of the stress of making sure you apply lots of labels; you can find what you need, when you need it. Â Want to keep an e-mail? Â Archive it. Â You’ll never see it until it comes up in a search result and you think “Man, I’m glad I saved that!” Â Also, searches return conversations, so you have your results in their context.
As a side note, you can also see that, even with one of my accounts that collects zipped database archives every day, I’m only using 4% of my allotted space (near the bottom of the screen shot). Â This is all my processed e-mail from the past three years, complete with messages I’ve kept for historical reasons.
The one thing I have yet to do is connect my BlackBerry with this account (Gmail supports IMAP), but that’s only because I can’t remember my login from a year ago. Â Â And, because of the Facebook issue I mentioned earlier, I have Facebook e-mails still going in the inbox; once I do connect this account, it will let the BB Facebook app use its integration with the BB inbox. Â However, these messages are labeled automatically so that I can search that label, then delete my search results.
So, there it is – from chaos with 4 different inboxes to a unified, automatically-filtered organization system in less than two days. Â The filter and label system are a system I can trust to tell me what the next thing is that I need to do. Â I even found a feature request for one of my websites while I was processing the imported e-mail, and got it implemented in about 10 minutes. Â Now I’m ready to GTD!
Better Than the BCS?
This post has grown out of a discussion I had with a friend over on Facebook, regarding the BCS vs. deciding the championship on the field. Â I said that it wouldn’t be too hard to come up with something better, and below is an expansion of the remainder of that comment.
All bowls must occur by January 1st.  I’m still undecided about whether playoff contenders still play in a bowl, but I’m leaning toward yes, as this leaves the “season” as close to its current incarnation as possible.  Once these final rankings come out, the AP top 16 qualify for the playoffs.
Beginning the weekend after New Year’s Day, there will be regional playoffs for the rounds of 16 and 8, then a final four that rotates from year to year; the higher seeds (1-8) go to the regional closest to them that has a spot open. Â All playoff venues will be NFL facilities, to avoid any team playing on their home field. Â This would also have to take into consideration teams who make the NFL playoffs, so they won’t lose the use of their home field to use for practice. Â For the South/East, some venues would be the Georgia Dome (Atlanta) or Raymond James Stadium (Tampa); the West could play at Qualcomm Field (San Diego) or Candlestick Park (San Francisco); the Midwest could play at Cowboys Stadium (Dallas), Soldier Field (Chicago), Reliant Stadium (Houston), or Invesco Field (Denver). Â For the championship, I foresee NFL stadiums bidding for a chance to host the Final 4, similar to the way cities bid on the NCAA basketball Final 4.
The round of 16 would feature the lower seeds on Friday night, and the higher seeds on Saturday; the following week, the winners would play (staggered Friday/Saturday among regions, to maximize TV time). Â The round of 4 would play lower seeds on Friday, higher seeds on Saturday, with the championship the following Saturday. Â This will wrap up the college champion by the end of January, in plenty of time for the Super Bowl, which is usually the first or second weekend in February.
So, how would this play out this year? Â As of this writing, we would have:
- West Regional – Qualcomm Stadium, San Diego, CA
- Friday – #12 Virginia Tech vs. #5 Stanford
- Saturday – #16 Oklahoma State vs. #1 Oregon
- South/East Regional – Raymond James Stadium, Tampa, FL
- Friday – #9 Boise State vs. #8 Arkansas
- Saturday – #15 Missouri vs. #2 Auburn
- Midwest Regional 1 – Invesco Field, Denver, CO
- Friday – #11 LSU vs #6 Ohio State
- Saturday – #13 Nebraska vs. #4 Wisconsin
- Midwest Regional 2 – Cowboys Stadium, Dallas, TX
- Friday – #16 Oklahoma vs. #7 Michigan State
- Saturday – #14 Nevada vs. #3 TCU
I don’t really see a whole lot wrong with any of these pairings. Â Nevada/TCU? Â LSU/Ohio State? Â Boise/Arkansas? Â I don’t even follow those schools, but those would be some sweet games. Â And, throw in a few upsets, and there are some really good college football games in the month of January. Â Boise State and TCU still get to play for the championship;Â failing to win your conference championship doesn’t necessarily keep you from getting a shot at the national championship. Â Any of these 16 teams could win the championship, by winning 4 games in a row.
I don’t know if we’re ready for college teams with records like 18-0 (what Auburn’s record would be if they won out – 12 regular season games, 1 conference championship, 1 bowl, and 4 playoff games). Â But, as a college football fan, I’d sure love to stop hearing about “BCS Busters” year after year. Â (It would also make Tim Brando and Rece Davis find something else to talk about.)




