Friday, December 28, 2007

finally

I'm done with grad school apps!

(now the silent months of waiting)

FYI, I applied to
University of Missouri-Columbia
Oklahoma State University
Oklahoma University
University of Tennessee-Knoxville
Florida State University
Purdue University (West Lafayette)

Thursday, December 27, 2007

IM

Elphaba1452 (4:59:33 PM): i lost
Elphaba1452 (4:59:34 PM): again
CATapultNate (5:00:36 PM): why did you lose?
Elphaba1452 (5:01:03 PM): i don't knonw
Elphaba1452 (5:01:05 PM): know*
Elphaba1452 (5:01:12 PM): spontaneous loseation?

oh, joanna and my ramblings are now up under the blog under my links called "Philosophy with Joanna". Gadflies welcome.

Tuesday, December 25, 2007

Merry Christmas

Merry Christmas to all you poets, artists, comic-fans, robert-fans, sherwood-fans, Macy's wrappers, gerbil-story writers, Randians, Woolfians, and sesquipedalians. (I think that covers everyone who reads this blog . . .)

I had my first flying dream last night.

Nathan fugit.

Sunday, December 23, 2007

Returned

15 hours each way to Colorado
5 days at Pagosa Springs
4 days of skiing
2 days of altitude sickness
1 terrifying nightmare since childhood
& lots of fun

Saturday, December 15, 2007

Christmas Break

I'm going skiing this week. No facebook or gmail for seven days.
Can you human beings conceive of such a thing?
~Beowulfish

Saturday, November 24, 2007

Tolstoy and God's Love

I was reading Leo Tolstoy's Anna Karenina on the way back to school today (listening to it on CD, actually), and (oh, it's amazing, btw) as Tolstoy was elaborating on some of the character's intricate feelings for each other (think of A K as Pride & Prejudice with better insights and a more complex plot, for Russians), I started thinking about God's love for us. I agree that God loves us. Yes. Good. Now that we all agree on that -- what does God's love for us look like? Clearly, it can not be direectly compared to any kind of love that we experience from each other, since we are imperfect and God is perfect. From the one side I hear that God did not need to make man. He was self-sufficient without man. . . and yet he did make us. . . out of love. God's overabundance poured out into the outlet of creation and made something as an expression of that love. But still, God doesn't need us, is fine without us. Does it even affect him if he doesn't have us? If so, how does that follow his not needing us?
On the other side, the church is the New Testament's bride of Christ. A metaphor, but one with some striking implications (to me). If God loves us like a man loves his bride, that's a passionate, (can I say) dependent love. Much of the happiness of the groom depends on the happiness of the bride. Is God's happiness contingent on ours? On the church as a whole's?
If God's love is perfect (vs any we know as men), then how do these two sides reconcile? Thoughts? Criticisms? Answers?

Friday, November 23, 2007

a first blog

Whoa, I have a new blog.

The name is kinda postmodern in that it makes me think of Beowulf, fish, and the "ish" suffix that our generation is so fond of . . . since I can't be Beowulf, I'll be Beowulfish. This is Grendel's Lair, home of random, philosophical, and linguistic ADD posts. Hrothgars beware! . . .this is no mead hall.