Sunday, February 6, 2005

Disneyland 2005


Disneyland 2005
Age: 30-something (Scott, 27)
Admission: 2-day Park Hopper, $106
Dates: Feb. 2, 3, & 6, 2005
Special Celebration: Happiest Homecoming on Earth--50 Years(beginning May 5)

Disneyland Park Attractions:
Main Street USA--
The Walt Disney Story, featuring "Great Moments with Mr. Lincoln"
Penny Arcade

Adventureland--
Indiana Jones Adventure
Jungle Cruise
Tarzan's Treehouse

New Orleans Square--
Haunted Mansion (twice)
Pirates of the Caribbean (twice)

Frontierland--
Big Thunder Mountain Railroad (Scott twice)
Mark Twain Riverboat
Columbia sailing ship

Mickey's Toontown--
Roger Rabbit's Car Toon Spin

Fantasyland--
"it's a small world"
Mr. Toad's Wild Ride
Alice in Wonderland
Matterhorn Bobsleds
Pinocchio's Daring Journey (Tom, twice)
Storybook Land Canal Boats
Snow White's Scary Adventures
King Arthur Carrousel (Tom)

Tomorrowland--
Astro Orbiter
Autopia (Chevron)
Innoventions
Star Tours
Disneyland Monorail

Closed--
Space Mountain
Splash Mountain
Disneyland Railroad
Enchanted Tiki Room & Tiki Juice Bar
The Disney Gallery
Mad Tea Party

Coming Soon--
Buzz Lightyear Astro Blasters

Restaurants & Snacks--
Lunch (chili in a bread bowl) at Main St. Refreshment Corner
Supper (mozzarella strips) at Stage Door Cafe
Frozen drink

Other--
The Golden Horseshoe Stage show

Disney's California Adventure Attractions:
Golden State--
Soarin' Over California (Tom, three times)

Paradise Pier--
California Screamin' (Scott, twice)
Sun Wheel
King Triton's Carousel (Tom)

Hollywood Pictures Backlot--
Jim Henson's Muppet Vision 3D
Disney Animation

Bug World--
It's Tough to Be A Bug

Other--
Golden Dreams
Mulholland Madness (multiple times)
Mission Tortilla Factory (Mission Foods)

Other--
Disney's Electrical Parade

Restaurants & Snacks--
Supper at Pacific Wharf Cafe (Tom)
Bur-r-r Bank Ice Cream (Nestle)

Closed--
Grizzly River Run

Downtown Disney (Tom only):
Restaurants & Snacks--
Lunch at Rainforest Cave
Ice Cream at Haagen-Dazs Shops

Saturday, December 25, 2004

Christmas 2004

Christmas 2004, Part I
In the bleak midwinter, frost wind made moan, Earth stood hard as iron, water like a stone; Snow had fallen, snow on snow, snow on snow, In the bleak midwinter, long ago.--Christina G. Rossetti, 1830-1894
Christmas 2004 was not a typical one. For starters, Mom and Dad decided to go to Florida for several days after Christmas, so I didn't spend anytime in Ohio over the holidays. (Mom, Dad, and Scott came to visit me at Thanksgiving, so I didn't go to Ohio then either). So Scott and I decided to drive down to North Carolina together, then spend a few days in Georgia, before returning home.


I attempted to finish my Christmas cards prior to our trip. In 2003, I came up with the idea of calling my holiday letter "TP Guide," putting it in a booklet format to resemble TV Guide. It didn't happen in 2003, but I was determined to finish an edition for 2004. There was much to cover--graduation from seminary, my commissioning as an associate in ministry, and my trip to Greece and sabbatical.


I was still working on assembling the TP Guide the week of Christmas. And to make things more complicated, I decided to also send an electronic version on compact disc to computer literate friends and family members.

On Monday, Dec. 20, I was ill. I spent most of the day at home. I ventured out at noon to have lunch with Noah. I prepared a turkey dinner for my Mutual Ministry Committee meeting that evening, but by then I was feeling really lousy.
Tuesday I went in to work. We were working on finishing up the January 2005 newsletter. I also had a youth event at 1 p.m. Five kids came--we watched "The Best Christmas Pageant Ever," then a video of our own Sunday School Christmas program.

The snow began on Dec. 22. We assembled the newsletter. I helped assemble; we didn't have as many volunteers because of the weather. Charlene and I went to the post office before lunch. Visibility was getting bad. We made it safely back to church and had our staff Christmas lunch. Charlene went home early, and most of staff left as well. Pastor Ron and I stayed at church for the 5:30 p.m. Healing and Wholeness service, then made the treacherous journey home.
On Thursday, Dec. 23, I was unable to get to work. The main roads probably would have been okay, but the parking areas and roads in my apartment complex were not. I spent the day at home, working on the laptop computer. My family was also affected by the storm--my parents had no electricity. For dinner I walked to El Nopal up the street. The food was lousy, but it was nice to get out of the house.

I asked Ron to pick me up and take me to work on Christmas Eve day. I walked out to the tobacco outlet on the main road, so he wouldn't have to navigate the parking lot. I was officially on vacation, but I wanted to wrap up my Christmas cards. My plan was to stay at church until my brother arrived later that day.
Unfortunately, we had to cancel Christmas Eve services. We were unable to get the snow cleared from the parking lot. I think we made the decision at 2 p.m. After making numerous phone calls, Ron went home, and I stayed to man the phones. Scott eventually did arrive--he had difficulty getting to Louisville because of the weather.

We went to Jumbo Buffet for dinner, which was our original plan. Then we went to the Kull's house to visit with Matthew, Mark and John. We spent Christmas Eve at my apartment.

Our plan was to leave for North Carolina on Christmas morning. We had intended to take my car, but I was still unable to get it out of the parking lot. We packed up and got off to an early start.

Once we got to Lexington, the effects of the storm were not as evident. Rather than eating at a Waffle House (a Christmas Day tradition), we ate lunch at a gas station with a Taco Bell. We arrived in Hickory, checked in to our hotel, then went to Grandma and Grandpa's. Mom and Dad were already there. They had left early Christmas Eve morning. After the Raleigh Knauffs arrived, we went to another Chinese buffet. This one was far superior to the Jumbo Buffet. After dinner we returned to the house for gift giving.


Christmas 2004, Part II
By Sunday, the Raleigh Knauffs had left, and Mom and Dad had gone on to Florida. So Scott and I went to church with Grandma and Grandpa. Grandpa preached at a small Lutheran church shared with a UCC congregation. Grandpa used the First Sunday after Christmas lessons (rather than the Feast of Stephen lessons), but it was still an anti-climactic end to the season of Advent. Singing Christmas carols with 25 people in a carpeted worship space is not the same as singing with 200 at my home church. Still, it was nice to hear Grandpa preach, and the members of the church were all very welcoming.

We had lunch with Grandma, Grandpa, and Uncle Craig after the service. Then Scott and I did some day-after-Christmas shopping while Grandma and Grandpa napped. We came back in time for dinner, then played Trivial Pursuit with Grandpa, using the Genus IV game.

The following day we left for Georgia to visit the Georgia Knauffs. Though I'd been to Georgia several times since moving to Louisville, I don't think I'd visited the Georgia Knauffs since 1987. The photo above was taken at the Big Shanty Museum, which housed the General locomotive engine, which gained fame during the Civil War's "Great Locomotive Chase."

We arrived at the Georgia Knauff's house and met cousin Kelly. The three of us stopped at the drug store where cousin Michelle works, before going to dinner. We ate at a Buffalo Wild Wings, and tried in vain to find a particular Caedmon's Call cd and a certain Starbucks mug. We then went to see a movie. Kelly's friend Nate, Michelle, and others also joined us.

The next day, if memory serves, we went to the Dwarf House (formerly the Dwarf Grill) in Hapeville, Ga., opened by Truett Cathy in 1946. The Dwarf Grill is the predecessor of the modern-day Chic-fil-a restaurant. This was my brother's third attempt at visiting the site, which, like other Chic-fil-a restaurants, is closed on Sunday.

Afterward we traveled to a "park n ride" location where we boarded the MARTA and headed to downtown Atlanta. I became pretty familiar with the MARTA system when I was in Atlanta for the 2003 ELCA Youth Gathering. We walked through Underground Atlanta, then on to some historic Martin Luther King, Jr. sites, including his tomb.

That evening we visited with cousin Lisa and her husband Cary, who live in Rex, Ga. We had dinner at a Mexican restaurant.


Christmas 2004, Part III
The following day we went to the Southern Museum of Civil War and Locomotive History, formerly the Big Shanty Museum. The Museum was, and is, Home of the General, a locomotive engine that was made famous during the Civil War, and through books and films about "The Great Locomotive Chase."

Nate, Kelly, Scott and I toured the Museum. We were led by a very enthusiastic tour guide. When he asked where we were from, Scott and I pretended to be locals, rather than admit we were born in the same city as Civil War General Willima T. Sherman.

After we finished at the Museum, we went to a KFC in Marietta, which has a giant chicken atop the restaurant. This was the second significant fast food chicken restaurant of our trip. After lunch, we said our good-byes, and headed back home via Knoxville. We ate dinner at the Melting Pot.

Christmas 2004, Part IV
The following morning we dropped our postcards off at a mailbox before heading to World's Fair Park. Scott and I each have a set of postcards--one for each of the 50 states--with matching stamps. If you visit a state, then you get to mail the postcard to yourself. If you have a layover in Las Vegas, and can find a mailbox, that would be a valid postcard; however, sending a postcard along with a friend traveling to Hawaii does not. We probably have about the same number of completed postcards at this point.

World's Fair Park is a beautiful park at the location of the 1982 World's Fair, which we attended as a family. We've stopped there in previous years, hoping that someday we'd be able to go up into the Sunsphere, the Fair's focal building. Unfortunately, Knoxville still hasn't done anything exciting with the monument.

On the way back to Louisville, we stopped in Corbin, Ky., to eat at the Colonel Harland Sanders Cafe and Museum, completing our famous fastfood chicken "trifecta." This stop was actually the most interesting of the three.

Later that night, we attended the 25th Annual Boar's Head and Yule Log Festival at St. Paul United Methodist Church in Louisville's Highlands. This is the third time I've attended, but the first time we went for the dinner (expensive, but very good). This celebration of Christ's birth, through vocal and instrumental music and medieval pageantry, was the experience I'd been waiting for since Christmas Eve, and was a fitting end to our 2004 Christmas adventure.

THE END

Christmas 2004 Post Script: The General Rides Again
At the Southern Museum of Civil War and Locomotive History, many items related to the General were on display, including memoribilia from the movies and other adaptations of the Great Locomotive Chase. One of the items was a children's book titled "The General Rides Again."

To my surprise, I found a copy of "The General Rides Again" several days after I returned to Louisville, at the J-town Mall of Vendors, a flea market type of store.
The book tells the story of the General's return to the South after its refurbishment in Louisville. The book was published by Coach and Four Publishers, which was located on Taylorsville Road, between my church and my apartment.

Sunday, October 10, 2004

Week of Oct. 10, 2004

Week of Oct. 10, 2004
I have been back in Louisville for just over a month. During the past four weeks, I have tried to catch up with members of our congregation and our staff, as well as the pastors and AIMs in our conference and in my colleague group. I have met with the Youth Ministry Committee, the Christian Education Committee, my Mutual Ministry Committee, and our H2H confirmation Guides. I met with the Spirit Group (children in grades 2-5) and their parents on Sunday, and I will meet with the youth groups and their parents on Sunday. In the coming months I will be meeting with the 2004 VBS Task Force to evaluate our Vacation Bible Schools and begin planning for 2005. I will also be meeting with the four “overseers” of our Firelight Summer Sunday School program, for evaluation and planning.

I have worked between 50 and 60 hours each week. I’ve also taken a full day off each week, though this week will be two half-days off. I don’t have a specific day off each week, but I am trying to plan time off in advance, so I can be more consistent.

This is the first fall since I arrived in 1996 that I haven’t been “in school.” However, I continue to participate in First Call Theological Education. One aspect of this program is a monthly meeting with a colleague/mentor group comprised of pastors and AIMs in their first three years of call and a veteran pastor/mentor. The majority of our group attended the synod’s FCTE retreat this past weekend. I was nominated to serve on a task force to plan the spring retreat, which will focus on spiritual direction.

At the retreat we were asked to reflect on the joys, challenges, and hopes we’re experiencing in our ministries. Since I’ve been back, I’ve found joy in preparing for and teaching my Sunday School class. I have found getting back into the swing of things more physically and emotionally challenging than I had anticipated, and it seems difficult to believe it’s mid-October already. I hope that our “Youth Create...” program, which kicks off tomorrow night, and our Faith Stepping Stones programs, which began in September, will be meaningful programs that help our children, youth, and parents grow in their faith.

Sunday, September 12, 2004

Week of Sept. 12, 2004

Week of Sept. 12, 2004
Friday, Sept. 24, 2004
Tomorrow will complete my second week of work since sabbatical. Today is my day off. I went to Jazzercise this morning, then headed downtown to eat lunch and see the IMAX Space Station film at the Science Center. I am at a pizza place on Main Street. The first restaurant I tried had a $10 minimum for credit/debit cards. (I have no cash with me). This place has a $5.50 minimum.

My first week back I worked just under 60 hours, and it was a physically exhausting week, more so than I ever expected. This week has been tiring emotionally… Somehow all three of my committee meetings landed on the same week, which I would never intentionally do. I ended up postponing the Christian Education Committee meeting. Next week will seem short, as Ron and I will be at a professional leaders event Sunday night, Monday and Tuesday. I need to try to finish the newsletter tomorrow, so Charlene can work on it while we’re gone.

Sunday, September 5, 2004

Week of Sept. 5, 2004


Week of Sept. 5, 2004
Tuesday, Sept. 7, 2004—Day 80
I’m back in Louisville, and I’m feeling horribly disoriented… Scott and I drove down this afternoon. We arrived during rush hour/dinner time. I had trouble remembering how to get to Blankenbaker (we were going to eat at Ruby Tuesdays.) We ended up eating at the new El Nopal, near my apartment. I had forgotten what it looked like when I left. We attempted to get my TV, VCR and DVD player from the White House (our youth building) and unload my desk at church… I tried to time this mission so we’d be there while ALPHA people were in small groups, but we were caught. John P. and Michael T. were on the playground. I also bumped in to Christine and Mitch Noah. I didn’t spend much time in the building, but it seemed very brightly lit to me.

I brought the majority of my mail home and went through it while we watched a movie. I threw at least half of it away. I am going to try to start getting up at 8 a.m., so I can get back in the swing of things.

Wednesday, Sept. 8, 2004—Day 81
This morning Scott and I went to Mall St. Matthews for lunch, then we went to Locust Grove. Locust Grove is a house built in 1790, owned by the brother-in-law of George Rogers Clark, founder of Louisville. The house has been restored to resemble the way it looked in the late 1700s, which is when we date the beginning of our congregation—we’re celebrating our 215th anniversary this fall. Scott had to leave before the tour was over to go back to Columbus.

I spent several hours at church this afternoon. I saw all of the staff except Doris and the preschool teachers. I got my computer set up—after using AOL dial up all summer, the DSL seems very fast. I gave myself a tour of the building, surveying what needs to be done before Sunday. Most of the evening VBS wound up in the Sunday School office, so I started to sort through that.

I bumped into a handful of church friends today—at the mall and at church. I’m sure I will see more in the next few days. I think it is good… If I were to see 200 people on Sunday for the first time in 12 weeks, I know I would feel overwhelmed.
Schlotzsky’s is still closed (it appears it is closed for good, and not for remodeling), so I ate at Tumbleweed. I didn’t feel ready to go back to aerobics at church.

I was home by 5:30. I continued to unpack, and did some cleaning as well. I watched A Wrinkle in Time, a movie based on the novel by Madeleine L’Engle, which aired on The Wonderful World of Disney in the spring. I thought it was pretty good, and a more faithful adaptation than A Ring of Endless Light, which aired on the Disney Channel. I’m glad I reread the book this summer before I watched the movie.

Saturday, Sept. 8, 2004—Day 84
Today is the last day of my sabbatical. The past 12 weeks have been wonderful, and I won’t forget this summer, though the details are beginning to fade already.

I have spent a few hours at church each day since Wednesday. Yesterday my carpet was cleaned at my apartment, so I had to go somewhere else. I went to the Seneca High School football game last night, and saw Matt, Shelley, Chris and Mitch… and presumably Zach.

Today I was at church from 9 to 5, then I went back later to set some things up after the Prayer-a-Trooper event. I feel fairly prepared for tomorrow, though I wish my first official day back was not a 12-hour day.

I am tired… This week has worn my out—saying good-bye to my parents and brother, loading the cars, unpacking, trying to get organized at church.

It will take weeks for me to process the summer—I tend to process slowly. So I will continue to write in this journal a while longer.

Sunday, August 29, 2004

Week of Aug. 29, 2004


Week of Aug. 29, 2004
Monday, Aug. 30, 1 a.m.
The images above are originally from the "Coleslaw" comic strip I drew for the Messenger jr. newsletter in the late 1990s. The image depicts the Cole's family sitting down to dinner. In the strip this panel is taken from, Galatia and John announce Galatia's pregnancy. (We find out in the last strip of the series that she has twin boys).

I reworked this panel for the National Council of Christian Churches' "Peacemaking Begins at Home" nonviolence curriculum, which can be found in its entirety through my links page. This drawing was used to illustrate the "To Respect Self and Others" aspect of the Family Pledge of Nonviolence, in which family members strive to "respect self, to affirm others and to avoid uncaring criticism, hateful words, physical attacks and self-destructive behavior."

I submitted the drawing on the left, which was probably the best panel in the entire "Coleslaw" series. I was asked to make some changes, to make the drawing more "inclusive." I very reluctantly turned Philip's chair into a wheelchair to include a handicapped person and added a baby to the scene, to expand the age range of those depicted.

With the changes, the artwork was deemed inclusive. But one detail always bothered me... In the revised version, the baby's high chair replaces one of the two empty chairs for John and Galatia. There is no room for them at the table...

And that doesn't seem very inclusive to me.


Wednesday, Sept. 1, 2004—Day 74
Tonight I went to the 58th Annual Millersport Lions Sweet Corn Festival, a big to-do in the small village of Millersport. This is the first time I’ve been able to attend since 1996(?), as we’ve had our synod youth gathering Labor Day weekend since 1997. Mom, Dad, Scott and I ate at the Festival around 5 p.m., before the big crowds came and the lines got long. I had a shredded chicken sandwich and French fries (and later cotton candy and fried cheese). The grand parade began at 6 p.m., leaving from school, heading down Lancaster Street, then turning down Chautauqua Boulevard. We watched the parade from Marlowe’s house. It was pretty enjoyable. Several of the bands were very good. There are lots of band, a queen candidate from each area school, and the like. There didn’t seem to be any Shriners… I think 90% of the Jeffersontown Gaslight Parade is Shriners. The Sweet Corn Festival parade organizers put the horses at the end of the parade so no one would have to step in horse poo. Then after the parade, Scott and I enjoyed more of the Festival.

We usually had Thursday and Friday of Festival week off when we were in school. This year, Millersport also had today off. A good percentage of income for the Millersport Athletic Boosters, Music Boosters, and Sophomore, Junior and Senior classes comes from booths at the Festival, so some of my memories of the Festival are of working. My first job experience was probably at the Cub Scouts’ Mouse Roulette booth. There was an oversized roulette table in the center of the booth. A live mouse was dropped on the center of the wheel. Customers placed quarters on a number. If the mouse went in that hole, then that person would win a prize. Unfortunately, Mouse Roulette is no longer there, probably due to protests from PETA.

Another booth was the CRAZY ball booth, which was operated by the Band Boosters, and later the Music Boosters. I think the gambling aspect was similar, except the winning number was determined by rolling the CRAZY ball, a polyhedron-ish die. The slogan was “Come one, come all, come play a little CRAZY ball.

The sophomore class traditionally had game booths (duck pond, sucker tree, etc.) When we were juniors, we sold roast beef sandwiches. And when we were seniors, we sold steak sandwiches (aka hamburgers). Most of the funds raised went toward our junior/senior program and our senior class trip to Walt Disney World.

When I was growing up, we lived within walking distance of the Festival. When we went to bed at night, with the windows open, we could hear the sounds of the Festival.

As far as actual sweet corn goes, we never ate much…. We tend to be sweet corn snobs. The sweet corn my grandpas and Dad grew was/is much better than the corn served at the Festival. And sweet corn on the cob is the only sweet corn served at the Festival—it’s not one of those festivals where all the food is derived from the title food.

But my favorite part growing up was the midway rides. We usually rode rides on Saturday, when one could ride all day for $5 or so… I think it's $12 now.

Friday, Sept. 3, 2004—Day 76
John Kerry was speaking today in Newark, Ohio. I went with Mom and Dad, though I was a bit misinformed about the event. I was under the impression that because we had special red tickets we would have seats, and that he would begin speaking at noon. Neither turned out to be true. We went through several “security” points. At the first point, Kerry supporters were checking the shirts some Newark football players were wearing under their jerseys, possibly to make sure no Bush/Cheney propaganda got in. They also made some people take off their “flip-flops” off and throw them away, apparently because some Republicans have accused Kerry of “flip-flopping” on the issues. Then we went through the metal detectors. I was asked by one security person to turn on my digital camera, then I was yelled at by another for not going through the detector. Local Democrats spoke prior to Kerry, including John Glenn. We only stayed for part of Kerry’s speech, in part because my back was getting sore from standing up, and in part because we wanted to avoid the rush after the event concluded.

After the event, we went to Columbus to visit my great-aunt Martha (my Mom’s aunt). We had a nice visit. Aunt Martha was born on July 4, and her middle name is Liberty.

Sunday, August 22, 2004

Week of Aug. 22, 2004


Week of Aug. 22, 2004
Friday, Aug. 27, 2004
It is finished!

Today I completed the artwork for my comic book. There is a possibility I will decide to do one more tiny panel, but if I do, it will be an easy one. There are 12 pages of art in the story; adding special effects slides, commentary, behind the scenes, etc. brings he total number of PowerPoint slides to 77. In the next few days I will review each slide, check hyperlinks, etc. There are some issues that will affect distribution—namely, getting the fonts to look right on different computers. I probably won’t be able to fix this until I get back to Louisville, as I seem to have not brought the proper software.

I did, however, manage to bring most of what I needed, and I did not need to make a midsummer trip to pick up additional things at church or my apartment. (Many thanks to Charlene for mailing me some items, and e-mailing me some files). I am beginning to pack up here at Scott’s apartment. I shipped a box of books via Media Mail this week, anticipating that space in the vehicles on my return trip will be at a premium.

The week seems to have gone quickly… Scott and I were able to go to Bible study together on Tuesday. Attendance seemed good to me. Eric was there… He’s hilarious. During a time for sharing praises and prayer requests, several of the group members said that they were thankful for the young adult group, and though I didn’t say anything, I too am thankful for the group, and being able to hang out with people my own age this summer.

I exercised three times this week, and I plan to go tomorrow morning. I am hoping to reach one of my weight goals on Monday (losing 10% of my highest weight).