Thank You, Dan

Earlier this year, I wrote about my experience in switching to Family Life Radio as my day-to-day radio station.  In that post, I mentioned befriending Dan Rosecrans, their morning show guy.  FLR has a national morning program, but in Albuquerque, we got Dan (and Nathan the Station Engineer) from 0600 to 0900.  While I’m new to FLR, and relatively new to Albuquerque considering how long others have been here, I quickly grew to enjoy the information that he would pass along during his morning program.  It had to be God working through him, as well, because my drive to work is short; how else would Dan have known not only what I needed to hear, but when I was actually in the car?

Dan has been serving faithfully in this position that for over 20 years; however, this past Monday, he announced that this will be his last week on the air doing the morning show.  He’ll still be involved with the Albuquerque FLR station, and will still have the All Praise show on Sundays (4-12 MT), but as he said this morning, “This means I don’t have to get up at 4 every morning.”   (Congratulations on that!)

So, Dan – I just wanted to take a few minutes and publicly thank you for your many years of service, and to thank you for allowing God to work through you.  I know the positive effect that your ministry has had on my life in these past 11 months, and I’m sure I’m not an exception.  Your dedication to inspire, inform, challenge, and entertain those of us out in radio land is something for which I’ll always be grateful.  I’m glad that you’re not completely stepping back from the ministry, and I’ll enjoy hearing the music you play and the encouragement you give during All Praise.  I pray that God blesses you many times over as you move into this new phase in your ministry.

Now to him who is able to keep you from stumbling and to present you blameless before the presence of his glory with great joy, to the only God, our Savior, through Jesus Christ our Lord, be glory, majesty, dominion, and authority, before all time and now and forever. Amen.
Jude 24-25 (ESV)

Happy Thanksgiving 2010

I would like to take this opportunity to wish each and every one of you a Happy Thanksgiving!  While I’m sure there will be more about the true meaning of the next major holiday, let’s not forget the original meaning of today – praise to God for His providence, and for friendships formed by people of differing national origins.  I have seen suggestions of other things to ponder today, and those aren’t necessarily bad.  But, in all of this, let’s keep the intent of the holiday.  We have been blessed (in some cases, beyond what is even believable!), but these blessings aren’t about us; they are about the grace of the God Who has chosen to bless us.  Were it not for His hand on our lives, everything else we do would be absolutely meaningless.

Every good gift and every perfect gift is from above, coming down from the Father of lights with whom there is no variation or shadow due to change.— James 1:17 (ESV)

Also, remember that the first Thanksgiving wasn’t celebrated as a family holiday – it was a celebration among people who had recently met each other.  Gratitude and thankfulness are expressions that are common among all races, nationalities, and political persuasions.  While it’s probably too late for this year, think about this in years to come when you’re planning your Thanksgiving guest list.  Why not use it as a time to get to know new friends better?

Have a great Thanksgiving Day!

From WordPress to BlogEngine

After months of on-again, off-again work in my “spare time” (heh), I have converted this WordPress blog converted to BlogEngine.NET.  I’ll have a post up at some point in the future, probably over on my tech blog, that goes over what I think are the technical advantages of this platform.

In the course of the conversion, I spruced up some of the standard-as-of-two-years-ago things on the site.

  • The ShareThis area at the bottom of each post now requires no navigation if you want to share content to Facebook, Twitter, Google Buzz, or via e-mail.
  • The theme switcher is gone, as this is the only theme I converted; the others will live fondly in our memory.  (Maybe I’ll put screenshots on the “About This Blog” page.)
  • Comments will now show your Gravatar.
  • The “History Repeats Itself” and “Verse of the Day” items will only appear on the front page.

I’ve implemented redirection on all the old posts to their new URLs, so the internal links should be good; if you click something and get a 404 (“Page Not Found”), let me know.  Also, I preserved the directory structure that WordPress used for images, so they should all be there.  Finally, all comments have been migrated from the election of our current administration forward; the others will come along, but they are single comments on older posts; it won’t hurt them to take a break from the Internet.

One interesting side note – over the course of this conversion, I ended up writing some code that was accepted into the project.  I’m not just a user, I’m a contributor!

Patriot Day 2010

Today is 9 years removed from September 11th, 2001.  There is a lot going on today – fall Saturdays are typically sports days, and today is no different.  There are lots of big match-ups in college football, and NASCAR wraps up its regular season tonight, locking in the drivers that will be competing for the championship over the following 10 races.  There was a lot going on 9 years ago as well, although as a Tuesday, that day’s scheduled entertainment was in music, not sports; Michael W. Smith’s Worship and Enya’s A Day Without Rain were both released on that date.  (It’s almost as if God knew that we were going to need them in the weeks to come.)

Of course, I’m not writing today to celebrate the 9th anniversary of Worship, though that album did revolutionize Christian music (not the first time Michael W. Smith had done that).  It is remembered for the actions of a rogue band of terrorists, who turned that day into a day of great loss for our nation.  It is remembered for the collapses in security that led to what is still both the worst terrorist attack on America, and the worst airline disaster in our history.

There are lots of directions that this post could go.  I could talk about the absolutely horrendous idea of building a worship center for the religion under whose auspices the attacks were carried out mere blocks from the site of the attack; but, from my description, you probably can tell how I feel about that.  I could also talk about the idiot in Florida who wanted to have the “Bonfire of the Qur’ans” today; but, again, I’ve probably communicated how I feel just now.  I am thankful to God that he has decided against this.

But, today, in between games, cookouts, and races, all I’d like for us all to do is remember.  Remember the lives of those who were simply doing their job that sunny September morning.  Remember the lives of the police and fire personnel who ran into the building when others were running out.  Remember those who were left with the choice of staying where they are and being burned to death, or jumping 100 stories to their death.  Remember how the only thing you wanted to do was hold your family tight.  Remember the over 3,000 military personnel who have lost their lives in the aftermath of this attack, in counter offenses in Iraq and Afghanistan.  Remember the pain.  That pain reminded people just how good we have it here, and for a time, united nearly all of us around the defense of our country.

When you’re through remembering, turn to praise.  Praise God that we have to go back 9 years to remember a successful large-scale terrorist attack on our soil.  Praise God for leaders who made some tough decisions that have resulted in our protection.  Praise God for the freedom we still have in this country.  And finally, praise God that you were not among those who perished on that day, and resolve to accomplish what He left you here to do.

Results – Dam to Dam Run 2010 – 1:10:12

I finished this year’s Dam to Dam Run 10K in 1:10:12, which gives me a pace of 11:18/mile.  My goal had been 11:00/mile, which would have had me finishing in 1:08:12, so I missed my goal by 2 minutes.  While I’m a little bummed, I did take over 3 minutes off last year’s time of 1:13:27, and a change to the course replaced a flat portion with an uphill/downhill portion, which increased the difficultly a bit.  At the start, I got caught up in a pack of runners that were faster than my usual pace, but because the area across the dam was so narrow, I couldn’t find a spot to drop to the side and drop back to let them get ahead.  By the time I did, about 3/4-mile in, I knew I had set myself up for a tough rest of the race.  Last year, I didn’t walk a single time; this year, I had several short walk-breaks to help a muscle stop hurting, or to try to get circulation back into my feet.  (Yes, I loosed my shoe laces; no, it didn’t help.)  Around the last mile, I also got a headache, which made pushing on tough, especially uphill.  Interestingly enough, though, once I got back to the first dam, I was able to find a nice pace that helped me finish strong.

Dam to Dam Run 2010 T-ShirtI had planned to listen to All Praise on our local Family Life Radio station as I ran; however, when I turned on my music player, the only button that would respond was “play,” which meant I had to listen to whatever was next.  It was good music, but it wasn’t what I was going for.  I think a new music player may be in the cards for me.  This isn’t the first time this one has behaved oddly.

This year’s run was once again sponsored by Great Harvest Bread and Starbucks, so I enjoyed a slice of sourdough bread and a cup of coffee at the end of the race.  You wouldn’t think that coffee is good after running, but it is.   At least I think it is! I did start with water.  Keva Juice didn’t sponsor this year’s race, and I also didn’t see any mention of Brent’s Place, the home for children with cancer that was the beneficiary of last year’s Dam to Dam Run.  I asked, and it turns out they had a race in Denver back in July that was actually named after them.  It’s good to know they’re still raising money to support their work.  This year’s Dam to Dam Run supported the iRunFit program, an after-school youth running program.

The t-shirts were black this year!  To the right is the front of the t-shirt, and my bib number, 809.

Up Next – Dam to Dam Run 2010 – 5 Sep 10/0800

I have registered for this year’s Dam to Dam Run.  This will be my first competitive 10K since I ran in it last year, and I’m excited to see how I do.  My goal is to average 11-minute miles for the run, which will be 1:08:12 – that’s 5:15 faster than I ran it last year.  It’s a challenging run; a lot of it is uphill, and a good portion of the uphill is getting back to where we started.  I’ll post my results once I’ve completed it.

Awesome Bumper Sticker VI

I spotted this one stopped at a light on base, as I was heading back to work from lunch.

God grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, to change the things I can, and the weaponry to make the difference.

Seeing this during the same week that marked the 65th anniversary of the bombing of Nagasaki, I thought it apropos.

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