Tuesday, April 26, 2005

Not that I'm bitter...

That's my new motto: "Not that I'm bitter." It's becoming very useful. For example:

It's spring, the flowers are blooming, and all of my friends are falling in love and/or getting engaged, while I spend my weekends reading Old Testament Pseudepigrapha and watching movies on video from the library. Not that I'm bitter.

Or,

Four and a half months after I sent in my application (the day it was due), and three weeks after they flew me to Nashville for an interview, I had to call the HR office of a large churchwide agency myself to find out that I didn't get my dream job. Not that I'm bitter.

I'm sure this handy little phrase is employable in a plethora of fields as diverse as politics (In spite of mass voter registration efforts by progressive groups, Bush was reelected. Not that I'm bitter.), and religion (Although American Catholics on average diverge from official teaching on many social issues, the Roman Catholic Church's new pontiff is known for his archconservative defense of traditional doctrine - not that I'm bitter.). Feel free to try it out for yourself, and let me know of any exciting new uses you find.

Sunday, April 10, 2005

Snow Day!

It's April 10 and snowing up a blizzard all over the tulips in our yard, but I'm happy. Why, you ask? Because church was canceled today!

Now, for someone who's getting ready to graduate from seminary in less than 7 weeks (yikes!), this may not be a particularly good sign... but in the midst of classes and multiple jobs and a job search for after graduation and trying to stay sane, one morning where I don't have to scramble to be at church on time to warm up my choir and try to re-teach what we learned at the last rehearsal... that's okay with me.

Two of my roommates made snow angels and a snowperson, but then it snowed some more (I'm working on getting some photos up). It's let up enough at the moment that the birds have come out to dig for birdseed, but it's a long way from nice enough to want to drive anywhere. So I'm enjoying a nice relaxing day inside (Swedish pancakes for breakfast... watching The West Wing again... reading Anne Lamott... at some point I'll get around to homework for this week).

Now, if only school and work could be closed tomorrow too, I could really start to feel rested!

Photo: snowman


i think the snowman was completed a little too early in the storm... Posted by Hello

Photo: snow angels


making snow angels in the yard Posted by Hello

Photo: tulips


it snowed all over our tulips! Posted by Hello

Saturday, April 09, 2005

The West Wing - Season Finale

Wow.

If you saw The West Wing this week (I watched the tape last night after being out of town on Wednesday), you know what I mean.

Seriously, did anyone know that politics could be so exciting?

Of course, I realize it's all fictional and specifically designed to draw us in, so that we make personal and ideological connections with certain characters and not others, and the filming, editing, and musical score all contribute to building the drama. Speechwriters have more freedom to be purely idealistic when they do not actually have to win the hearts of people on both sides of every issue. I know this. But still...

Wow.

I had been a faithful fan the first few seasons, but lost interest after the big crisis of Zoe's abduction and the Republican Speaker of the House taking over as President in Season 4. With the loss of Rob Lowe and the resolution of the major personal crises, the show seemed to lose steam, where one political tension after another began to be less exciting a storyline. But the past year's arc of the presidential campaign (WW-world is a year behind real-world) has brought back some of the energy and passion that made disaffected Democrats and left-leaning independents fall in love with the show in the first place. It hasn't hurt to have the very attractive Jimmy Smits as the idealistic Democratic underdog-but-gotta-win-because-Josh-picked-him heir-apparent to the outgoing Bartlet administration.

I have to say too that the timing of the WW-world campaign, and the improbable win after improbable win of the Matt Santos run, seems more strategic than a happy coincidence, bolstering Democratic belief in the party after the lamentable results of last year's real-world election. It's enough to give a person hope to get through the next 3 1/2 years.

SPOILER ALERT

DO NOT CONTINUE READING IF YOU DID NOT SEE THE WEST WING THIS WEEK AND WANT TO FULLY ENJOY THE SUSPENSE OF THE APRIL 6 EPISODE.

YOU HAVE BEEN WARNED!

The turning-point speeches delivered by Santos, especially that final address to the DNC, are not only politically inspiring, but ethically and theologically sound. "We are all broken" - a profound statement and fundamental to Christian belief. Perhaps an indication that Santos also has the religious convictions that have brought moral depth to the Bartlet administration.

(Yes, I know I'm analyzing fiction as though it were reality. I was an English major. That's what we do.)

The problem is that I am seriously concerned that Arnie Vinnick, played by Alan Alda, the Republican candidate for the general election campaign we'll see played out in the fall, is obviously a much stronger national candidate than the Santos-McGarry ticket. To bring a Democratic win out of this will have to stretch the credulity of even devoted WW-watchers and yellow-dog Democrats. But to go with the "realistic" option, a Republican win, I think will make thousands of loyal viewers switch off their sets - or begin watching Alias instead (see entry below for the Wednesday-night quandary). Even if Vinnick is portrayed as the best-possible Republican, there are fundamental differences in the beliefs of Dems and Reps, and it will be a sad day in donkey-town if we no longer have fantasy liberal-run world to escape to.



But hasn't it been a glorious ride?