Category Archives: Personal

Life before birth, according to the Bible

Life before birth, according to the Bible

Click through for what is presumably a typical defence of abortion from Christians on the “left” of this issue.

I don’t endorse it, but I’m not in a position to post a rebuttal, either. (That’s code for “I’m still figuring out what to think about this.”) Feel free to help enlighten me if this is something you’ve studied with an open mind.

For now, I remain opposed to abortion, but unconvinced that making it illegal is an effective/useful response to the various forces that make it a reality in our society.

When information is set free…

When information is set free…

From Seth Godin’s latest post:

When information is set free, does it help you or hurt you?

If it’s not helping you, this is a good time to change your model.

I’m seeing the ways free access to information is revolutionising education, photography and journalism, and in each of these areas, it seems to me that too many people are doing too little to keep up. Whether they’re oblivious or cynical, the outcome will be the same: they will know less than the people they serve, and thus become irrelevant. Unless, of course, they adapt to this brave new world–probably by offering something that can’t be googled.

What are you doing to “knowledge-proof” yourself?

Postoperative

It’s been a week since Dr Wills and her surgical team took to me with a bunch of laparoscopic implements to conduct a Heller myotomy and Dor fundoplication in a 2-hour procedure at John Hunter Hospital. The aim was to address the most problematic symptom of my achalasia (food just barely passing from my esophagus to my stomach, due to my lower esophageal sphincter being in almost constant spasm), without leaving me too vulnerable to reflux (allowing food to pass down without restriction tends to allow acid to pass up without restriction).

Recovery has been remarkably quick (externally, anyway). I was off pain relief within 24 hours of surgery, home and relatively comfortable within 48 hours. Food (of the puréed or finely chewed variety) has been going down with more ease than I’ve experienced in roughly 2.5 years — no nausea, no need to lie down to help it pass, no need for tiny helpings. Normal energy levels are starting to return. My depression is lifting even further. It’s nothing short of miraculous!

I look forward to using this new lease on life to catch up on various projects (like x100.365, which I’ve struggled to keep up with!), but mostly to become a better person.

Farewell, achalasia

For anyone who’s following along: my 2.5-year+ journey with achalasia appears to be almost over. This will mean eating/drinking normal portion sizes without nausea/vomiting/lying down, which will dramatically improve my nutrition, energy levels, usefulness at home and a bunch of other stuff. Yay!

Details: I found out this week that I’ve been scheduled for surgery on Monday week (24 June). The procedure will be a Heller myotomy and if all goes to plan, I’ll be in hospital for 2 days, off work for a few days, eating purees for a month, and then… all good! I’ll probably need to be on anti-reflux drugs for the rest of my life, but I’ve already been on them for a couple of years, so it could be worse.

I’ll keep you posted, no doubt. Will try to spare you the gory details.

Intimacy with strangers

Intimacy with strangers

Randy Murray on getting a haircut and a shave:

While being touched by random stranger may be unwelcome, there’s an entire class of intimate strangers who are trained, licensed, and given permission to touch.

And:

I think that I’ll retire my clippers for a while and make a regular trip to the barber. I no longer see it as a chore. It’s a treat, something special to help me look good and feel good.

I feel similarly “licensed” when invited/allowed/paid to photograph people. Although it doesn’t involve physical contact, there’s a certain intimacy to it. A great deal of intimacy in many cases.

And I always aim for a review like Randy’s. “It’s a treat, something special to help me look good and feel good.”

Fear and creativity for Christian educators

Fear and creativity for Christian educators

This post on The Christian School Journal is pretty inspiring. If you’re a Christian involved in education, I predict it will help you feel less worried about the road ahead, and more enthusiastic about putting your creativity to work as an innovator in your area.

Here’s an excerpt, but it’s worth reading in full:

How should we respond as Christian educators? With courage not fear, with optimism not pessimism, with excitement, not dread; with a vision for the future, not with a nostalgic longing for the past. We should respond with creativity, vigor and innovation, not with the mechanical and routinized habits that have become so comfortable but are increasingly arcane and irrelevant for our students.

Squashed, on “Credit cards and other bad ideas”

Squashed, on “Credit cards and other bad ideas”

Here’s a snippet:

I should say for full disclosure that I carry around a few credit cards, pay them in full each month, and it’s not really a problem. About 35% of credit card users do that. The rest get seriously ripped off. So if you know you’re in that 35%–no worries. But if you’re not sure whether you’re in that 35%, the odds are against you.

[I’m in the 65%, or whatever it is in Australia.]

You’d have better odds with slot machines.

[He’s right.]

Disclaimer: this is not actual financial advice, bla bla bla, etc. etc. etc.

Our Tower of Babel, a.k.a. the Unlimited Internet

Quoting Shawn Blanc, who was quoting Matthew Smith:

I think we designed the wrong Internet. We’re creating rapidly for the Internet and we’re creating things that are life-changing for people. I think that smart people with good ethics need to make hard decisions about what we’re making. For example, I think about the feed, which invites us to come, be obsessed, and compare ourselves to everyone, all the time. Who came up with the idea of endless content constantly streaming toward us? There’s this unlimitedness that concerns me because it is so unlike the rest of the human experience and I think it confuses the human mind and puts us into a space where we aren’t at our best.

It occurs to me that we’ve been here before. We couldn’t swim in Twitter’s unfiltered river of information about the entire planet’s last 5 seconds, but our heart beat as one in a different way: we had one language, and we lived in one city. We may not have been feverishly creating and collecting petabytes of data about pretty much everything, but that didn’t stop us gloating over what we were capable of at the time: baking bricks and building stuff.

I’m referring to That Famous Monument to Narcissism, the Tower of Babel, as described in Genesis chapter 11 and arguably found in one of several thrilling [or not] archaeological digs. Here’s the relevant section:

Now the whole world had one language and a common speech. As people moved eastward, they found a plain in Shinar and settled there.

They said to each other, “Come, let’s make bricks and bake them thoroughly.” They used brick instead of stone, and tar for mortar. Then they said, “Come, let us build ourselves a city, with a tower that reaches to the heavens, so that we may make a name for ourselves; otherwise we will be scattered over the face of the whole earth.”

But the Lord came down to see the city and the tower the people were building. The Lord said, “If as one people speaking the same language they have begun to do this, then nothing they plan to do will be impossible for them. Come, let us go down and confuse their language so they will not understand each other.”

So the Lord scattered them from there over all the earth, and they stopped building the city. That is why it was called Babel—because there the Lord confused the language of the whole world. From there the Lord scattered them over the face of the whole earth.

I’m not especially keen to debate the historicity of this story. Not today, anyway.

I simply find it interesting that the God of the Bible (whatever you make of him) has a problem with humanity being collectively over-empowered. Now that we’ve all but beaten our diaspora with optical fibre, jet propulsion and Google Translate, are we on the cusp of needing another intervention?

What’s it going to take to knock us off our pedestal this time?