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Happy. Healthy. Heathen.

Traveling, training, thinking, talking, typing

Author

Gayle Jordan

Law student, massage therapist, ironman, mom, gammy, hippie liberal atheist.

TED talk, birthday, hayride

I can go 2 weeks without posting, then have a weekend like this where I want to post about EVERYTHING!

I’ll try to write in sequence, but no assurances.  The girls rolled in Friday night:  Glenda, squeeze Sam, and BF Rachel in the minivan from Knoxville, and not 5 minutes later Amy from Johnson City.  It’s lame, I know, but they take my breath away every time I see them.  They’re so happy and healthy and I just can’t wait for them to walk in the door!  I’d fixed veggie lasagna and cheese bread and birthday cake and dessert – that’s what I do when the kids are coming home – gives me something to do with my time while I check the clock every 3 and a half minutes, and it’s such a mom/nurture thing.  We talked nonstop til we collapsed around midnight.

Early Saturday Amy and I got up and headed to Nashville for the Ted talk at TPAC.  O. M. G.  When I win the lottery, I’m going to be an international Ted groupie.  (www.Ted.com).  It was a TedX event – all local presenters, from 10am to 6pm, 18 minutes each, and I could feel the smart wash over me with each subsequent speaker.  I’ve kept the program so I can remember the details of each one.  There were musicians, 2 rocket scientists, a docent from Fisk, an entreprenuer, and dancer, a neurosurgeon, an orchestra, and even Ashley Judd.  Each one was fabulous.  Amy and I both had our favorites; the day passed in a flash and I will unequivocally say that I’ve never had such a great $50 8-hour day.  Ever.

This panel was created as each speaker presented - fascinating

Then home we dashed just in time for the girls’ 22nd birthday.  They threw down with their Murfreesboro posse, with an old school hayride/treasure hunt/bonfire – it was crazy fun.

Google "Bang This" twins, Nashville, TN for the joke

Aden and buddy Alden did the honors of following the map and helping Big Jesse steer toward the treasure (one of which was suspended from the zipline over the pond).

Aden with the treasure map

There was hooping and music and food and most of all friends, and didn’t end until the wee hours, long after I had given up and fell asleep listening to them talk and laugh around the fire.

Aden singing Happy Birthday to Aunt Glenda and Aunt Amy
...on the electric guitar

I know it’s cliche, but I can’t believe it’s been 22 years since the three of us partied like rock stars in a North Carolina hospital!

Sunday morning took us to Starbucks with our secular group where Sam Miller shared his experience with Quakerism.  We had a good crowd – (forgot the camera) and stayed until it was lunchtime.  We try to meet and chat about once a month – refreshing and challenging every time.

Then, as always, the time came on Sunday afternoon for them to head back to their campuses and lives.

beautiful children

It was a fabulous 40-something hours.  I even suspended studying for the weekend (and had a 12-hour day today!) to be able to enjoy them with no distraction.  In 3 weeks, they’ll officially be college seniors.

I love you girls – thanks for bringing the party 22 years ago!!

Thanks for reading!

Out again…in a different way

I am so excited to get to publish this post.  I’ve been working on this for 3 months and it’s finally time.

I’m in law school.  Even typing that phrase excites me.  I am 3 months into a 4-year, online law degree program.  It’s based in California, and while not ABA-accredited, California allows sitting for the Bar at the conclusion of the program, with full licensure upon passing.

I wanted to give myself the time and opportunity to see if I was going to 1) like the program 2) be able to handle the course load and 3) be certain that it was a quality educational process.  I am happy to report an enthusiastic yes to all 3 questions!

But I also wanted to be able to blog about this undertaking as it is happening, so I’m going to create this post, save it as a draft, and add to it through the weeks until I publish it.

1.11.11  Conclusion of first week of school.  Overall impression:  I LOVE IT.  I love the academic challenge, I love the OCD nature of the daily schedule, I even love the endless, tedious case reading.  The pace is reasonable – the suggested commitment is about 4 hours a day, and I find that pretty close to accurate.  The program is self-paced, and includes reading, lectures, online interactive classes, and quizzes.  I experienced a pretty big learning curve this first week.

Most of my undergraduate studies (back in ye olden day) required taking in information, committing it to memory, and repeating it back in the form of a test or paper.  Law school, not so much.  The first quiz I took:  30%.  Exsqueeze me?  30%?  I don’t even know where 30% lives!  Rattled me a bit.  In this program, if you don’t receive a 70% or greater on the quiz, you must take a makeup quiz.  With a quaking finger, I clicked on Submit, and got my instant results of…100%.  I am harboring no illusion that I have this figured out, but it helped to restore my confidence.

1.17.11  Week 2.  What I have found is the operative word in studying law is the word “reasonable”.  It is part of many tests of application, so to speak.  It’s such a subjective term in an objective study, it makes me smile every time I read it.  We are such a diverse and different society, the reasonable person test is humorous.  In my household alone, the response to the “Would-a-reasonable-person-find-that…” could be different the 6 times you asked it!  Musings on week 2…

1.23.11.  Week 3.  Today’s topic is addressing the portability of this program.  It is probably the drawing feature of Concord Law.  It is so exciting to log on to the live classes, and see the other students’ locations:  Spain, Japan, Indonesia, many US states, several from Tennessee.  We have traditional reading assignments, online lectures, real-time virtual classes, quizzes, exams – and 90% of these are on our own timing.  I can do them anytime/anywhere.  What I’m finding, however, is that I’m most comfortable sitting right at my dining room table where all my notebooks and books are laid out!  I’m currently out in Colorado skiing with my sons, and I brought some of my studies with me.  I find myself reaching for my books and highlighters and supplies that I DIDN’T bring…gotta work on that one.

2.7.11  I think this is about week 5.  Today’s topic:  punishment.  Who knew?  Even as a parent and being familiar with the purpose/reasoning of punishment (current hip lingo for parents instead of punishment:  discipline.  It’s a prettier word).  Reading and studying about the theory and history of punishment – the concept, the application, the purpose (punitive?  rehabilitative?  deterrent?) – it’s just fascinating.  It requires so much more insight into the human psyche and social mores than it appears we give it in our penal system.  I tried finding a TED talk about punishment (my go-to source for think-tank material) but no luck; I hope and expect to go into it more deeply somewhere along the course of study.  So short answer for this week’s musings:  I just love this.  I love being given something new to think about, something to learn, something to question.  Oh, and another quiz…90%.  But don’t get cocky.

2.13.11  I’ve lost track of week numbers – I just know I’m on module 5.  4 subjects, one new module per each every 11 days…which bring us today’s subject.  It goes without saying (but I’ll say it) that time management HAS to be a skill you bring with you to law school.  I don’t struggle too much with this – I raised a large, busy family, I know the value of time, I’m mildly OCD about my schedule, so this challenge hasn’t been too large.  What I am finding, however, is that equally as important as time management in this endeavor is information management.  Books and books of info, cases, reading, lectures – all have to be condensed/assimilated/edited into a reasonable pile o’ crap to study and learn.  There are tricks and techniques that I’m learning, but I find myself once again barely hanging on the wheel on a huge learning curve.  I had a bit of a Helen-Keller at-the-well moment this week on figuring out how to do this – it involves colored pens, highlighters, font sizes, and Roman Numerals.  That’s enough sharing for now.

2.21.11  Studying Crimes of Omission in Criminal Law:  do you have a duty to act?  Do you have a duty to save your child from drowning in a pool?  Good answer.  What if it’s your niece?  Another good answer.  What if it’s a stranger’s child?  What if you can’t swim?  What if it’s your sworn enemy?  Where’s the line?  Is it a legal duty or a moral duty?  Every time I feel like I’m on solid footing I get thrown another curve – good thing I like curves.  I like the whole cerebral challenge, I like the discovery and argument process, and I even like the gray area where these issues inevitably reside.  What I’m learning about the law is that It Is Always The Way It Is.  Unless It’s Not.

3.5.11  Topic of the day:  In law school, which is the bigger advantage – Youth and Enthusiasm or Experience and Maturity?  I’ve been watching my fellow classmates and I see their Facebook statuses and their answers during class and their comments when we do group study and I’m going to say that right now the jury’s still out (see what I did with that?).  I can see that some of the time the younger students (<35) have ideas and vigor and I really appreciate their drive and openmindedness.  I can see that we, the older crowd, have such a broader approach to the workload and time management, and we’re more patient (mostly…a week to grade my essay??  WTF?) and less flexible in accepting new concepts.  I love watching the whole group interact, however; especially our class spread across continents and time zones and cultures.  I am saddened by the loss of a couple of classmates already – I’m not looking forward to the natural attrition that’s just a fact of life with a graduate program like this.

3.20.2011  I love my classmates!  In a program like this you have to be creative and flexible about studying because #1) we’ve all got lives and jobs and families and #2) we live thousands of miles apart!  My class is spread out over the globe so we use a variety of study tools – our go-to is Skype – an hour, two hours, three hours with briefs spread out and books open, talking about the current topic and sharing what we understand about it.  We also use Facebook, and Facebook chat, and of course email (who knew that would be kind of old-school?).

3.29.2011  It’s time.  I’m about 2 days premature on posting this, but I’m ready.  I don’t know that it’s going to come as a surprise to anyone since I can’t keep my big mouth shut about how much I’m enjoying this, but here it is.  I am loving it, I am overwhelmed and maximized on what I’m able to learn and understand, I have no assurance I can get through this over the next 4 years, and I’m going forward anyway.  Every big undertaking involves big commitment and big risk.

Expect more entries regarding this subject, and as always,

Thanks for reading!

Family

Immediate and extended.

I’ve just come off of few days in Johnson City with daughter Amy on her spring break from ETSU, and a week at home with Glenda on her spring break from UT, and a little family picnic with extended family in Gallatin.  I’m thinking this is the electronic version of having to watch someone’s vacation slide show from back in the day.  The good news here is that you do NOT have to sit in my living room and pretend to be interested.  You can go off and Google something far more interesting and check back later for a more edgy and unsettling post, if that’s what you’re looking for (cuz you know that’s just a matter of time)!

Because this will be all flowers and butterflies.  You’ve read here before my gushing about spending time with my kids, and these past two weeks have been no exception.  First there was the visit with Amy in Johnson City and meeting her friends and seeing where she works and having coffee and beer (not together) and talking about classes and life, and then there is the week with Glenda, and seeing her friends and watching her work and having coffee and beer (ditto) and talking about classes and life.

Then came the extra bonus of having a little family get-together in Gallatin.  A precious cousin I seldom see came in from Oregon for a week visit with her mom, my aunt.  We are close in age and were close growing up, but time and space conspire to keep us apart, so we settle for an electronic presence in one another’s lives.  But every now and then the universe opens up a little space for us to have a face-to-face, and this week was that time!

Cousin Stephanie, her man Michael, Aunt Annie

We had a little get-together in a park, along with another aunt and more cousins, but Steph in this case was the centerpiece.  She’s a damn hippie living a sustainable life out in Oregon, she’s loud and confident and  opinionated and smart and I love her.  We have a lot in common, and we differ at lot, but that just means we have big enough personalities to accomplish that.  I grew up with only brothers, so in a real sense, she was the closest thing I had to a sister.  Steph and I were the oldest of the girls cousins; the younger ones we treated like dollies.  She and I wrote letters in code, and sent each other word games in the mail, and giggled under the covers at the grandparents when we were supposed to be asleep.   I’ve watched her raise her family, and evolve, and travel, and become the complex person she is today.

I really had no intention of this little post being a little love letter to Steph, but sometimes the writing kind of takes over and I just hang on.  I had intended on writing about how much all of my family means to me, not just this one special person.  But I’ll just let it go at this, and I’ll write about the others as it unfolds.

Beautiful run today, on the property.  We have new renters in the little house, the dogs and I encountered them walking around, and their dog and Uga got into a little dust-up, but no one’s the worse.  Every tree and plant and flower is having sex, which makes it hard to breathe, but what a gorgeous display they make (does that make all of us voyeurs?)

Thanks for reading!

Non-controversial

Coming to you live from Maple Street in Johnson City, TN —

This is Amy’s spring break week from ETSU, but in a effort to complete the funding for her upcoming adventure to Thailand, she is working through the week.  I took advantage of her time off from school to get in a quick visit, which includes 2 visits on the to and fro with Glenda!

Glenda in UT Print Shop

We had a great couple of days together, revolving as it usually does around food, wine, and talk.  She’s working at a sushi restaurant, so lucky me, I hung around the sushi bar while she waited tables — entertaining myself with watching her while eating miso soup, salad with ginger dressing, 2 rolls of sushi and Sapporo.  The next day we ran errands, shopped for groceries (a college tradition when a parent’s in town), and went to a great pizza place called Scratch.  High-funk, BYOB, brick-oven place that features a menu option called:  Trust.  We went with our own choice because she wanted me to taste certain things; next time we’ll put ourselves in the hands of the be-dreaded crew and go with the Trust option.  I also got to hang at the Acoustic Coffeehouse, another high-funk place one and half blocks (read:  walking distance) from Amy’s darling house apartment.  She’s got more company coming in for the weekend, so I’m grabbing a shower and hitting the road for Knoxville where Glenda is about to begin her spring break.

Amy, Phil, and Trip at Acoustic

This past weekend Aden got to spend the weekend and we did the usual:  throwing rocks in the pond for about an hour, playing 400 games of UNO (it rained a LOT), and coloring.

Life is good

To complete the generational bookends, between visits with Aden and the girls, I got to visit with my parents as they made a pass through Middle Tennessee on their way to a motorhome caravan to Civil War sites (my dad is the historian for the group).  This is their first trip with their new, upgraded RV (5 feet longer and one slide out more than the old one).

The new Maxwell rig
sweet mommy
crabby, grumpy old grandpa

A week in the life.

Thanks for reading!

 

The A word

First things first.

Thank you so much for your comments on my last post.  Whether they were words of encouragement and empathy, or words of challenge and disagreement, I appreciate that you took the time to read the post and share with me your thoughts.  I have come to realize that stimulating discourse is one of my primal needs, and I am grateful to have this venue to be able to engage with each of you.  I respect that not everyone felt comfortable posting publicly, and I love the creativity you employed to get through to me:  phone texting, Skype texting, Facebook inbox, phone call, email, and maybe even snail mail?

Now, on to the substance.  I got several comments through various avenues about the use of the word atheist.  I didn’t use that word in my post, but it’s a valid point, and I appreciate the curiosity of those who asked.  You wouldn’t think I could write a post about one word, but never fear — I lean toward the verbose and rise to the challenge!

If you recall in my first post, I mentioned that almost everyone in my secular bunch who blogs has a post recounting their coming out experience.  We also, almost everyone, have made an intentional, conscious decision about how to self-identify.  We have a lot to choose from:  atheist, agnostic, freethinker, secular, humanist, skeptic.  Each of those words has a specific meaning, and again, as I said before, as every non-believer I know is fiercely independent, each of us has selected our “label” with great thought.

In the book, The God Delusion, Richard Dawkins presents his approach to the spectrum of belief, so to speak, with a scale.  Here it is, direct from the book:

  1. Strong theist. 100 per cent probability of God. In the words of C. G. Jung: “I do not believe, I know.”
  2. Very high probability but short of 100 per cent. De Facto theist.   “I cannot know for certain, but I strongly believe in God and live my life on the assumption that he is there.”
  3. Higher than 50 per cent but not very high. Technically agnostic but leaning towards theism. “I am very uncertain, but I am inclined to believe in God.”
  4. Exactly 50 per cent. Completely impartial agnostic. “God’s existence and non-existence are exactly equiprobable.”
  5. Lower than 50 per cent but not very low. Technically agnostic but leaning towards atheism. “I do not know whether God exists but I’m inclined to be skeptical.”
  6. Very low probability, but short of zero. De facto atheist. “I cannot know for certain but I think God is very improbable, and I live my life on the assumption that he is not there.”
  7. Strong atheist. “I know there is no God, with the same conviction as Jung ‘knows’ there is one.”

Dawkins goes on to point out that although category #1 is quite crowded, there are very few people populating category #7.  I haven’t met anyone who is a 7, but I’ve met many 1’s.  I am a 6.7-ish, because of the improbability of proving the NON-existence of something (Bertrand Russell’s celestial teapot – Google it.)

I know the power of the word atheist, and I vividly remember the pity it engendered in me when I was a believer.  Pity for the poor soul who hadn’t heard the message, hadn’t understood the message, hadn’t accepted the message.  It is appalling to me now, but except for a few radicals in college, I didn’t know any atheists for most of my adult life; I certainly didn’t have relationships with any.  The word was synonymous with evil, and I almost audibly added “angry” as the default adjective every time I heard it.

I use the word now quite freely, and can interchangeably use any of the words in the above list.  My least favorite is the word Agnostic, because it implies some kind of nonchalance or carelessness or apathy toward knowledge of the existence of god, and I do not own that (by definition, agnosticism means that nothing is or can be known about the existence of god; professing neither a belief, nor disbelief, in the existence of god).  I use the word Secular quite often, because it seems to be less anger-inducing to believers.  I won’t get into the etymology of all the words – you can research that if you are interested, though, and a quick search will probably bring up even more descriptors.

The Freethought movement of today has been compared to the LGBT movement of the 1970’s and 80’s.  Back then we used to say, “I don’t know anyone who is gay or lesbian!”  We found out that we were wrong; that we indeed did know people who were gay or lesbian, we just didn’t KNOW we knew.  I think the same applies here:  You may think you don’t know any atheists…you are wrong.  You just don’t KNOW you know.  And now you do.

Thanks for reading!

The Out Post (not the outpost)

There are not many downsides to finding joy in writing.  Most of the time (fully 99.9%) writing, for me, is a delight.  It is a refuge and a tool and a gift.  However, when you do find this pleasure in the written expression of your thoughts, feelings, and experiences, you accept with that the 2:30 am visits from your mythical muse.  She calls, with a whisper, and like another myth, the siren, she pulls you toward her, irresistibly beckoning you to the screen, the page, the keyboard.  You attempt to placate her with mental bargaining, promising her you will respond with the light of day, assuring her of the solidity of your memory.  But in the end, her beauty always wins.

This post is long overdue.  Personal reasons, none of which include a fear of its writing or reading, have dictated its timing.  A series of events over the recent past have convinced me that now is the time to publish this.

If you stick with me through the end of what is sure to be a lengthy, intimate narrative, I thank you in advance.  What started out as a simple training blog has turned into a vehicle of self-expression whose importance I could not have begun to realize.  So to those who read this through to the end, I extend my appreciation for completing the circle of the dual purpose of the blog.

Many of the blogs I choose to follow have a posting of this topic.  The cleverness of the title is my own, but it is only a variation on a theme.  This is the story of my journey out of faith and into reason.  It is highly personal, at times painful, and ultimately joyful.  I commit to be as honest as I can in reconstructing the sequence, and in recapturing the emotion of the moment.  Along with the gratitude I’ve already expressed, I ask for your forbearance; by its very nature this post may be offensive.

I was born a Southern Baptist.  That’s a bit of a play on words – Baptists do not believe you are born into the faith.  That is an event of your own choosing, and in this case, I use the phrase to mean I was born into a family of Southern Baptists by several generations.  I was fully integrated into the faith from birth, experienced personal salvation at age 6, and participated in every aspect of Baptist education, from Sunday School (now Bible Study Fellowship) on Sunday mornings, Training Union (now Discipleship Training) on Sunday nights, first Sunbeams (now Mission Friends), then GA’s then Acteens on Wednesdays, and Worship every Sunday morning and Sunday evening.  Then came the Baptist Student Union (now Baptist Campus Ministries) in college, then on to teaching all of those on my own as a young adult, wife, and mother.  I served on every committee my churches have had, even the Committee on Committees, a concept that still makes me chuckle.  I have served as Sunday School Director, Mission Education Director, Youth Leader, Vacation Bible School Teacher, and Sunday School Teacher.  Lest you think my church experience was all busywork and no personal calling, allow me now to assure you that I took every one of those responsibilities very seriously.  I do not believe anyone with whom I served, or anyone I taught would dispute that.  My faith was the driving force behind my work at church; my highest street cred of a genuine faith was that I committed to rearing my beloved children in that same faith.  That is my Baptist pedigree.

When those same precious children entered their teenage years, they began asking me the questions that relentlessly smart, thinking, driven children ask when they are asserting their independence.  Those questions were about the contradiction of the faith with science:

“6 million species, mom?  On one boat?”

“6000-year-old earth?”

“Creationism?”

There were also the questions of the scholarship:

“Where are the original manuscripts?”

“3 sets of Ten Commandments?  And they’re not the same?”

“Divinely inspired writers didn’t know the earth moved around the sun?”

Then the questions of morality:

“God did THAT with children who teased Elijah?”

“Lot gave his daughters up for rape?”

“God had them kill the women, children, livestock, and keep the young women as bounty?”

I set about finding answers for my children, and for myself.  A point of irony here is that even as a believer I was considered a liberal, a radical, because I was reluctant to accept the Baptist party line for all the above questions.  I had had to repress my own critical thinking skills to accept those party line answers my whole life, and I was not about to allow my children to go without information they asked me for.

I sought information from every avenue.  This was the early era of the internet, and I capitalized on the new gift of the information age with vigor.  I sought answers from old reliable sources – the institution of religion in general, and my church and its convention in particular.  My prayers to my god were fervent, focused, and constant, and were breathed with confidence and patience.  I also looked outside the faith, to be absolutely certain I had covered every possible angle, and to strengthen what I already knew with conviction:  that despite those difficult questions, my faith would emerge right, and victorious, and applicable.

I can’t tell the story without including this personal branch of the journey.  Simultaneous to my spiritual journey, I had embarked on a physical journey.  Upon the celebration of my 40th birthday, I experienced an epiphany about the state of my health:  that the first 40 years of one’s life, one’s body would respond pretty effectively to the demands placed on it – the second 40 required giving a lot back.  I was overweight, out of shape, and clueless about how to alter that.  I began researching nutrition and anatomy and physiology and our biological heritage, and our political heritage and how they both affected our collective national health.  (My website for my professional life recounts this story in greater detail:  http://www.epiphanyhealth.name/The-Epiphany-Health-Story.html

I found that both quests took me in a direction heavily weighted toward science.  I became a critic of experiment and application and hypothesis, and refused to accept dogma, conventional wisdom, and common practice, without evidence.  I was comfortable in this territory – I had trod a similar road in exploring conventionally accepted practices in the 1980’s of living a credit lifestyle, and refused to go along with that too, to my family’s better financial health.  I refined my ability to spot an untested theory or unquestioned principle or faulty premise.

I found my church and its larger organization to be of little help in theory or application.  I found earnestness and routine explanations, but no answers.  I did, however, find tremendous amounts of information outside the walls of the church and greater institution.  I found sound science.  I found ration and reason.  I had moments of utter astonishment, seething anger, and sublime joy.  I have this passage written by Robert G. Ingersoll committed to memory:

“When I became convinced that the universe is natural, that all the ghosts and gods are myths, there entered into my brain, into my soul, into every drop of my blood the sense, the feeling, the joy of freedom. The walls of my prison crumbled and fell. The dungeon was flooded with light and all the bolts and bars and manacles became dust. I was no longer a servant, a serf, or a slave. There was for me no master in all the wide world, not even in infinite space. I was free–free to think, to express my thoughts–free to live my own ideal, free to live for myself and those I loved, free to use all my faculties, all my senses, free to spread imagination’s wings, free to investigate, to guess and dream and hope, free to judge and determine for myself . . . I was free! I stood erect and fearlessly, joyously faced all worlds.”

My children, whose stories are their own, served as both pupil and teacher in my own process.  They leave me speechless with their courage and conviction, they challenge me with their intellect, and they amaze me with their insight and generosity.  They are bright and driven and happy and kind and compassionate and moral, and I learn from them almost daily, now, in their young adulthood.

I know this post has been interminably long, and I am aiming toward a conclusion, but I have to make a few more points before my story is complete.  In my relationships with believers, as I share my position, there arises without fail a certain sequence of statements that I feel compelled to address preemptively, as it were.  I know a number of my readers are of the faith, and it accelerates the process for me to answer them.  I will do so as briefly as possible; each topic deserves a post of its own, but for the sake of brevity, I will summarize:

What about an afterlife?

There is no evidence that any part of us survives our death.  No amount of wishful thinking or hoping can change that.  I will be as I was before I was born; I will not exist.  With the loss of the joy of heaven comes the relief of the loss of hell.  Because of the reality of this premise, each morning when I open my eyes, I think:  “I get to be here for one more day.  I get to hear my children’s voices for one more day.  I get to see the sky and hear the birds and smell the air and taste the life of one more day.”  Only artists can convey the bliss that thought brings to me EVERY DAY.

How can you believe everything just banged into life?

I don’t.  I believe that cosmology will give us the answers to the beginning of life, abiogenesis, in time.  I accept the theory of natural selection as the simple, easily explained, completely verified, blind, organic process that it is.  Evolution is not random chance, it is not apes evolving into people; we can follow the fossil record that undisputedly reveals to us the shared ancestors we have.  This information is easily accessed, and quite easily understood by 4th graders across the world.

How can you be moral without the bible?

Easily.  Being the master of my own morality is at once a profound responsibility,  a humbling privilege, and an exquisite joy.  It is messy and complicated and troubling, and in research requires thought and patience, and in application requires time and effort and money and energy.  I have no directive to judge others, and I am free to apply my ethics as I am convicted.  I can very generally say that my philosophy is this:

Decrease suffering.  Increase joy.

Why not just believe?  If you have so much to lose, and everything to gain, why not just believe?

This is called Pascal’s wager, and although I have explained it numerous times to well-meaning believers, I choose to add this link to another blogger’s post about it, because she is a great deal more gifted than I, and her view is identical to mine.

http://gretachristina.typepad.com/greta_christinas_weblog/2011/02/why-pascals-wager-sucks.html

My muse is smiling.  I can now sleep.  I cannot close without this, however.

I am as happy a person as I have ever been.  I am comfortable in my skin, I take great pride in my belief system, and I look forward to every moment of every day.  I love moments with my family and friends and I am exceedingly grateful for the life I have had.  I have faults and failings and frailties, and I make mistakes and act rashly.  I forgive and am forgiven, I give and I receive, I learn and I grow.  I am imperfect, but I am not evil or sinful.  I embrace the journey that this life is, I seek adventure and new experiences with robust passion, and I am endlessly delighted at discovering science’s secrets.

This post, more than any other, thank you for reading.

One of those moments

I don’t know where to begin.

It’s so important to me, and I’m afraid I’m not going to be able to convey it.

For regular readers of my blog, and to my personal friends, you know my passions run high.  I’m a carpe-diem-live-the-hell-out-of-your-life kind of a gal.  You’ve read my blogs about my kids, about my racing, about my training/traveling/adventure experiences.

You know I see an opportunity and get all over it.  You know I open up and embrace it and then try to express what it felt/looked/smelled/tasted like.  It’s an ego stroke to believe that sometimes I accomplish that.  When you share with me that you understood or sympathized or felt the same way, I know I’ve been able to piece together the right words to convey this.

I have absolutely no illusion about this one.  I will not be able to tell you what this night was like.  Too deep, too personal, too profound.  But I’m going to do what passes for that on this blog.

I don’t crush on pop culture.  I love my music, Heidi Klum and Tim Gunn are adorable, I’d love to shake Obama’s hand, but I don’t fangirl it up.   My heroes are not celebrities or rock stars or sports stars.  My heroes are academics.

Last week I got word that one of my favorite authors was going to speak at the MTSU campus.  Bart Ehrman has written several books, mostly related to Christian scripture and how it came to be what it is and the story behind it.  When my children were teenagers, and were asking those very typical teenager questions about the faith in which they had been brought up, I was stumped.  I told them I would research and Find Answers.  I would resolve, for them and me, the problem of suffering, the contradictions in the bible, the obvious errors.

My dad had given me my first Ehrman book.  Peter, Paul, and Mary Magdelene.  I read it.  I read another one.  I read all of them.  Every book he had written.  And, oh, did I find answers.  My kids and I discussed and argued and discussed again.  They grew and we talked.  They went away to college and we talked.  They lived in New Zealand, Paris, California, Colorado, and we talked.

We read Ehrman, Dawkins, Harris, Dennet, and, of course, Hitch.  Even now, as they have become young adults, we eagerly attack the topic when we get together.  For little Southern Baptist Sunday School children, they are outrageously confident.  Confident in their beliefs, themselves, and their place in the multiverse; with a confidence and strength that comes with knowledge.  Their mom is too.

All of that to get here.  Tonight, I met Bart Ehrman.  I listened to his lecture in the amphitheatre at MTSU.  He was wonderful – warm and funny and articulate and so smart it burned.  THEN I got my books signed.  At the table where he was signing, I stood, not speaking.  He had to ask me my name; it was all I could do to spell it, and then I got out three more syllables – my dad’s name:  J-A-Y.  I was euphoric.

It Got Better.

A terribly gracious man, a professor in the philosophy department, offered his home for a reception following the lecture.  I couldn’t believe it was being made public, but I was not going to turn this down.  I GPSed my ass over to the house, and there he was.  Chatting, like a human being, with other human beings.  Somehow, and I don’t really remember how, I was sitting on the couch next to him talking about triathlons and running and agnoticism and life and OH MY GOD I was talking to Bart Ehrman.  My internal emotion pendulum swung between pleasantly chatting with an interesting person, and a full-on, full-body freakout.

It is almost 2 am.  I have not come down yet.  I am so sleepy I can’t keep my eyes open, but I don’t want to let this night pass without writing this down.  This is on the list.  The 10 list.  You know, the 10 most significant days in your life.  I don’t want to overdramatize, but this was a big deal.  Colossal.  Stupendous.  Unforgettable.

Give me another chance.  Call and ask me about it.  Let’s discuss it over coffee and I’ll do a better job of describing what this was like.  This blog is my second-favorite medium of communicating, and I know I can do better.

Exhilaration is giving way to exhaustion.  Maybe I’ll revisit and edit this rambly, crushy, stalker/creepy post.  Or not.

Have your idols.  Conventional wisdom says they’re only images, larger than life, will only disappoint, can’t live up to your expectations.  Keep it.  This time, this night, one of mine came through.

Thanks for reading.

Love letter to my boys

Here it is again.  Gayle’s writing another post about the kids.  We, your readers, get it:   your kids are great, gifted, talented, open-minded, smart, funny, blahblahblah.  Too bad, says I, you gotta read it again!

My kids are grown and out of the house.  They are in various stages of their educations, in different regions of the world and country, and I occasionally get the opportunity to go visit them in their worlds.  This weekend was one of those times.

Sons Ben and Sam are in Beaver Creek, Colorado.  Ben has been in Colorado for 7 years, and in Beaver Creek for 4.  He’s a server at a restaurant in the Village, a backcountry powder skier, and student at Colorado Mountain College.  Sam graduated from UT in December and immediately came out to work for the resort for the season.  They both have, one each, a hand-me-down camper van from their Grandpa, although Ben also has an apartment.  Ben’s is a 1985 VW Vanagon, and Sam’s is a 1990 Airstream B-van.  They are named, respectively, Gertie and Aunt Bea.

gear-prep ritual
pre-ski music

My little trip out here started with a 2:30am alarm on Friday, for a 5:30 flight to Atlanta, and another leg to Eagle/Vail airport.  The boys, and Ben’s girl Kirsten, architecture graduate student at UC Denver and in town for the weekend as well, picked me up at the airport in Aunt Bea.  After a delayed Christmas gift exchange, we headed out for an evening of food and fun.

Ben and Kirsten
obligatory food porn

Sam’s resort job is being a sleigh host for Beano’s restaurant on the slope.  The only way to reach the restaurant is by skis or CAT.  After the lifts close at 4, the CAT/sleigh combo begins taking customers up from the village to the restaurant, a 15-minute outdoor ride.  Sam, in his duster and cowboy hat, loads visitors on the sleigh, tucks warm blankets around them, and entertains them on the short, cold ride up the hill.  Last night I got to be one of the guests.  I also got to see first-hand why Sam is the Employee of the Month, first rookie to ever be selected to that title, according to the restaurant manager.

Very very cold ride up the slope
cowboy sleigh host

Sam started playing banjo in October.  2010.  His sisters and I gave him a guitar for his birthday in September, and he immediately added the banjo to his repertoire.  Being the recent UT alum, as I mentioned, the first song he picked up?  Absolutely.  Rocky Top.  He has an affinity for bluegrass, and he is really enjoying his new pasttime.

On the sled on the way up he played 8 More Miles to Louisville and Rocky Top.  He also introduced Ben and me to his load of about 20 sled guests, and told them my turning-50-Ironman milestone.  As we waited in the restaurant in front of the beautiful stone fireplace, I spoke with what felt like was every one of those 20 guests as they told me how enjoyable Sam made that very cold ride up the mountain.

Beano's restaurant (you have to ride the sleigh up to know why that name)

The next day both boys were off work and the 4 of us spent the day on the slopes at Beaver Creek.  As much as I enjoy skiing, I have never really taken to it like the rest of my family has.  Maybe it’s because I only ski about 4 days a year, maybe it’s because I don’t push myself to get better since I do so much of that in my other training.  Whatever the reason, each year my resident instructor, Ben, has to give me remedial lessons in the fundamentals.  Each year he does it with such patience and good humor and makes me so proud he’s my son.  He and Sam and Kirsten also had to give up a day in the backcountry skiing in the out-of-bounds area in the deep powder.

Kirsten and Ben and me
Kirsten and me, post-slope

So, here it is Sunday night and I have 2 more days with my boys.  Ben’s working tomorrow, but Sam and I will go out and do something.  I cooked a giant mom meal tonight of pork roast, scalloped potatoes, baked sweet potatoes, steamed broccoli and cauliflower, yeast rolls, and apple crisp.  (That’s after last night’s banana pudding).  I love taking care of the guys and just marinating in their boyness.  I am so proud of the men they are becoming, and I love their aggressive spirit of adventure.  I know I say that each time I blog about one of the kids, but it’s always at the forefront of what I love about them!

Thanks for reading, and especially thanks for letting me ramble on about my kids!

Three parties

I am not a social animal, but I’ve gotten to go to three parties in the last 5 days.

First, on Saturday afternoon, with both my college girls home, we went to a get-together at friends Amy and Cary’s house.  They are the parents of Sarge, a Wiemaraner, and Barley, a standard poodle puppy.  Amy and Cary are homebrewers, and I will tell you they had the absolute BEST homebrew I’ve ever tasted.  It’s their winter blend and I was so impressed!  The company was terrific and the food was delicious.

host Cary, and friends Joey and Karissa (and baby Judah)
feast and friends
twins

We hated to leave early, but we had the opportunity to go to B.B. King’s Jazz Club in Nashville with the Moss family to celebrate Robert’s 21st birthday.  The whole family was there, plus some, AND the future Baby Boy Moss!

Lee and Suzy
Khaki and Laura
The girls trying the "fishbowl"

A good time was had by all – the girls even got Big Jesse out on the dance floor!  Happy Day Bobby – we miss you and love you.

Then tonight, I got to go to John Potts’ birthday celebration at Maple Street Grill.  He hit the big 27, and Emily pulled together a little group of besties for food, drink, and laughs.  My girl Steen was my date (and the other token oldie) and we had such a good time!

Send me the pic from your phone, Suzie, and I'll switch it with this one - it's the only one I took with you in it!
Beautiful children
Em and Mere

So three parties in five days.  Good friends and good times, and I am so grateful for everyone.  I love my eclectic bunch of funny, warm, sweet friends!

Thanks for reading!

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