Liam’s sickness and the power of social networking

Two interesting parts of my life coincided this week: illness and online social networking.

I’m notorious for trying out new internet-based services and web sites. Jott.com takes voice notes from my phone and either schedules appointments with my Google calendar or adds them to my to-do list at rememberthemilk.com. Recently, I linked my account at twitter.com with my profile on the social networking site facebook.com. When I tweet (update my current activities on Twitter in 140 characters or less), a widget on my blog updates, my account at pownce.com updates, and my facebook status updates, as well.

I used to wonder if all this interconnected geekiness held any utility. After all, most of my posts are pretty mundane, to wit:

Today I stopped wondering about the utility because of this post:

Since posting that tweet, I’ve been contacted by three different people to ask how Liam is doing. A family member wrote an e-mail because she saw the news on the blog. A friend sent a text message because he caught the news on twitter. And another friend stopped by our house because she saw my status on Facebook.

This online social network that is usually just a toy now means something; it’s extended the awareness of my friends and allowed me to share the smaller news in my life with people I care about but don’t usually get to see face-to-face. These aren’t some random online friends from a chat room somewhere; they are my real-life friends and family with whom I connect via the increasingly digital fabric of our everyday lives. I may not sit down to coffee with them every day, but we share over HTML tables instead of cafe tables and via Javascript instead of the black caffeinated stuff.

So I challenge you, Shinnfans, to live the digital life with intentionality. Take advantage of ever-easier online social tools and use the opportunity to be transparent and share from your life-stream. Whether you need to e-mail someone an encouraging note or you link with me at twitter.com and sharing your small daily news, be real, caring and Christ-like about it.

And as for Liam, I wish I could report better news. He’s a pretty sick little boy right now, and it’s hard on all of us. But I guarantee that when I have better news to report, you’ll see it in one of my data feeds!

My identity was almost stolen – again

Two phone calls today.  I answered the second one.  302 area code.  It was an automated system claiming to be the Bank of America fraud protection department.  The automated system wanted me to verify my social security number and address.  My eyebrow raised, I got the tinfoil hat out of my wallet, and I prepared to put it on.  “Not quite yet,” I told myself.  I hung up the phone.

I got my laptop out and checked my e-mail.  Two e-mails, both claiming to be from Bank of America’s fraud protection folks.  The URLs check out; not a phony URL, but a Bank of America subdomain.  Hm, wierd, I thought.   They want to verify some transactions for an account number that doesn’t look familiar to me.  There’s a phone number in the e-mail.  I called.  Big phone system, kept me on hold for like 9 minutes.  Kept reminding me that my call is important to them.  It felt like I was talking to a bank.

Nice-sounding guy answered the phone.  He asked me to verify some information.  I gave him some.  Billing address; no big deal.  I told him I was calling about an account number that didn’t look familiar to me.  He said Bank of America is merging with MBNA and I’ll be getting a new credit card number.  This was it.  I hit the Google while we talked and verified that Bank of America is, in fact, merging with MBNA.  Ok, this seemed legit.  I told him I wanted him to verify for me that he’s actually Bank of America.  He told me I could call the number on the back of my card if I was nervous.  That allayed my suspicions.  He asked for some more information.  I gave it.  Then he asked for the names of some of my closest relatives.  Alarm bells went off.  I dove for figurative cover, got my tinfoil hat out and put it on, and nervously said, “I, uh, don’t think I’ve ever given Bank of America that information.  It shouldn’t be in my account record.”  He said that Bank of America is a big organization with the capability of finding out such information.  I hung up.

When I talked with the real Bank of America people (I actually called the number on the back of the card), they said the whole thing sounded fishy.  I verified my last few transactions, with information flowing both ways.  We determined together that I hadn’t given out enough information for anyone to access my accounts, so they’re not in any direct danger.  But I was, and still am, scared.

These people are good.  They got my personal cell phone and e-mail address, crafted some very convincing-looking e-mails, web sites, and phone calls,  treated me professionally like a bank would, knew the latest in banking business news, and reminded me at all turns to keep my personal information safe.  They even had a phone tree, for goodness sakes, that contantly reminded me that my call is important to them.  If these people are setting up a fake banking operation, they’re doing a darn good job of it.

I thought I was the last person to fall victim to a scam like this.  But the scams are getting better.  Please be careful, friends.  If you have any questions, initiate contact with your bank by making a phone call to a trusted number or by going DIRECTLY to the bank’s web site.  That means not clicking on a link in an e-mail and not calling a number you’ve never seen before.

And don’t forget your tinfoil hats!

Are celebrities above the law?

I guess not.  The following link is evidence: www.thesmokinggun.com/mugshots (new window).  Why do we revere these people?  Notice the notoriety of the names on the list.  Everyone from Paris Hilton to Tom DeLay is here.  Please, never let me be famous!

Meta note: This reminds me of the good old days when you used to come to andrewandlisa.org for weird links to web sites you never would have found on your own.  Now you come for compelling content and cute baby pictures.  Remember the good old days?

What Harry Potter taught me about the Bible

I have a confession to make, though it’s not a very dirty or juicy one:  I read the 7th Harry Potter book within 48 hours of its public release.  Furthermore, I confess that I enjoyed it.  And no, I’m not about to run out and join a Satanic cult, wear black eyeliner, or start casting silly spells.  (I know at least one of you wondered about that!)  In fact, I learned several lessons about the Bible while reading Harry Potter.  Raised your eyebrows, have I?  Well, follow along as I share the lessons:

1. How to read in context

In ‘Harry Potter and Deathly Hallows,’ the characters talk about a book that’s been written regarding their friend, Albus Dumbledore.  The book is largely lies, and it’s excerpted for a few pages of the larger work, the Harry Potter book.  If you would pick up the book and read those few pages, you’d get a totally inaccurate picture of the overall plot.  Similarly, if you read the Bible carelessly enough, you’ll find that it says there is no God.  A glance at the context, though, will tell you that this message isn’t the intent of the author.  What he really said looks more like, “The fool says in his heart, ‘There is no God.’ (Psalm 14:1)”.  I wonder how many people are savvy enough to pick up the context clues in the Harry Potter book but still insist on cherry-picking the Bible to make it match their pre-conceived notions?

2. The power of narrative

I read the Harry Potter book on the first weekend it came out.  That means I read all 784 pages in two days.  I wanted to finish the story before I went back to work on Monday, so I read it all day Saturday and Sunday.  This left me in the interesting position of going to church Sunday morning, right in the middle of my Harry Potter weekend.  The worship and the story of Christ and his sacrifice for me were so much more meaningful, and it’s because I was tuned into another deeply-felt narrative.  The themes of sacrifice, struggle, quest and the search for truth were close at hand, since I’d been treading those paths with J.K. Rowling’s novel all weekend.  It was easy for me to turn those thoughts to the cross and the ultimate struggle of good and evil.

It’s true that these themes are more read into the text than read out of it.  But such is the result of reading with a redeemed mind.  It’s not what Harry Potter brings to me, but what I bring to Harry Potter that shapes my conclusions.  That’s why I’m not scared to read Harry Potter or any other controversial material: because I read it with a redeemed and, hopefully, informed mind.

Friday Funnies

This guy could probably be me.  I’m sure I’m responsible for more than my share of tube-clogging content or traffic jams on the information superhighway.  Look, I’m doing it again!  Right now!  Posting a video to my blog!

Happy Friday,

Andrew

[coolplayer width=”500″ height=”380″ autoplay=”0″ loop=”0″ charset=”GBK” download=”0″ mediatype=””]
Funny video about the internet crashing
[/coolplayer]

Utah, part 3

Ok, so here’s the whole rundown on our trip to Utah so far:

Mountain View Community Church in Clovis sent three teams to the Salt Lake City area to support Mennonite Brethren church plants. One team was mostly youth, one team is ours, and I’m not sure who comprises the third team. Here’s our team:

  • Dave and Connie Thiessen – Dave is one of the pastors at Mountain View. Their kids are with family while they’re on this trip.
  • Milo – Single adult. Milo installs granite countertops and he’s a 4-year old Christian with a hearty laugh and a good heart. This is his second mission trip. His previous was a trip to Kenya last summer with Mountain View. Milo rode to Utah with us.
  • Rob and Sarah Jackson + Noah, Grace and Josh – These are our good friends. Their older daughter Gabrielle is on the youth team and their oldest daughter stayed home to work.
  • Andrew and Lisa Shinn + Liam – This is us! Liam is a lot of work, crawled during the trip for the first time, and is an absolute joy to have around.

Our team is working with the Daybreak campus of Shadow mountain church. The campus pastor is Michael Trostrud, who moved here from Reedley about two years ago. Lisa, Liam and I are staying with him, his wife Rachel, and their two lovely kids.

Yesterday, today and tomorrow our team is running carnivals in local parks. These are free to the kids and lots of fun. There’s no obligation, and the only church presence is a booth with a few flyers on it for the parents of the kids. We’ve been doing face painting, sack races, water gun games, bubble-blowing, and football-kicking. To let people know about these carnivals we’ve passed out flyers to the neighborhoods surrounding the parks. The irony of pairs of Christians going to the front doors of Mormon people was not lost on me.

Saturday, Sunday and Monday we’re going to be running family vacation bible school. It’s a new take on an old concept, and it should be pretty fun. The basic idea is this: in a church with so many new Christians, lots of parents don’t know how to teach their kids about the Bible because it’s often new material for the parents. So if we can study the Bible together as a family, hopefully the parents can take away some methods and means for teaching their kids about the bible in the future. This idea seems particularly relevant here in Utah, where family is everything and time spent together is golden.

That’s at least a thumbnail sketch of what’s going on. I’ll share more if you have questions. Leave them in the comments and enjoy the photos to follow!

Searching for our nation’s soul

Why is it that my thoughts are so oft drawn to the intersection between religion and politics? I’ve been reading (more accurately listening to) Joseph J. Ellis’s book on the post-revolutionary founding of the United States: Founding Brothers. As I scan the historic countenances of our national forefathers, I’m always watching for evidence in their writing to indicate their true religious convictions. Truly, men of such deep and far-reaching thought must occasionally turn their minds to their personal destinies beyond death. And I’m not disappointed:

John Adams was known to his contemporaries for his strong Christian convictions. Most of his peers appear, in the sheen of history, silently annoyed by the professions of faith and morality that sounded so much like the New England puritan that, in fact, he was.

George Washington hasn’t fully emerged from the mists of time to tell me of his deepest inclinations. Known to be a Mason, he displayed firm character in battle, reservation in politics, and a vexing willingness to hold his tongue in the 1790 debates on slavery. His faith appears to be deep. So deep, in fact, that remaining evidences of it emerge mostly from speculation, it seems.

Thomas Jefferson had a quirky, murky inner life. He seemed to hold very true to the deistic Masonic belief in a god. He was known to have edited the gospels (with scissors!) to bring them more into line with his own beliefs. He once said, “I tremble for my country when I consider that god is a just god, and that his justice cannot sleep forever.” He was referring to the coming blight of slavery, which he seemingly abhorred just slightly less than the idea of a rift in the Union, and it’s not clear whether he was referring to Virginia or the United States of America when he referred to his country. His approach to religion seems best summed up by the following quote from the 1995 movie, “The Usual Suspects“: “I don’t believe in God, but I fear him.”

Benjamin Franklin, though born in Boston to puritan parents, started his life as a committed Atheist. He seems to have lost his faith in Atheism as he matured and saw more of the world than most in his generation. But that doesn’t mean he actually converted wholesale to bible-believing Christianity. He, too, seems to line up more with Jeffersonian deism. At one point, he actually edited the Lord’s Prayer for grammar, brevity, and better adherence to his own views. Later in life, he would attend and listen to the preaching of George Whitefield. He appreciated the preacher’s effects on him to such an extent that his later visits to the man’s meetings saw him carrying only that sum of money he was willing to part with in the collection. But he stopped just short of a wholesale conversion, probably thinking himself too tempered and measured to let his emotions decide such matters for him.

When I admiringly examine these men, who have become heroes to me for various reasons, I am sometimes tempted to despair. Taken collectively, their views seem to merge into the sort of ‘publick religion’ argued for by John Meacham in his fascinating book, “American Gospel“. They don’t seem at all the sort of Christian men I’ve heard described in debates on school prayer and abortion law. Some have told me that linguistic differences account for this phenomenon. They say that when these men use words like ‘Providence’, they were obliquely referencing such concepts as ‘a saving knowledge of and personal relationship with Jesus Christ’. I’m willing to partially concede this point, as linguistics have changed. But not fully.

My reasoning stems from the words and example of another man, their contemporary. He was a little-known Quaker who never signed the declaration of independence or graced the world’s stage in any meaningful way. But he did keep a journal, his version of a blog, if you will.

John Woolman died in 1774, before the American States earned their independence with blood, cleverness, and some darn good diplomacy. He started his working life as a shop clerk and eventually became a traveling speaker amongst the Society of the Friends, or the Quakers. His message was that of emancipation of slaves, and his appeal (like his journal) was entirely spiritual. He refers directly to Christ as his saviour and God as his heavenly Father. His understanding of his own sin is very personal, unlike Jefferson’s references to god’s wrath against his nation’s injustices. A man of such humility that he seems to intentionally play down his own importance in world events around him, he stands in this regard in direct comparison with Franklin, who, for all his wisdom, seldom denied his ego or his libido. Woolman’s faith seems to resonate through the pages of history with the mystical faith of Paul of Tarsus (who wrote several letters with which you may be familiar).

The Quakers were pacifists who largely sat out the American revolution. It’s worth noting that they brought the issue of slavery to the forefront of the national consciousness in 1790, three years after the U.S. Constitution was signed, by petitioning congress for the end of the detestable practice. Congress’s first reaction? In so many words, “What credibility have these pacifists who refused to shed their own blood to the secure the freedom with which they now speak?” That’s a refrain that echoes still today, even in my neighborhood. But their message against slavery was a clarion call that emanated from their own consciences, and in the back of their minds they surely heard the unadulterated voice of John Woolman urging them to obey their God.

References:

Founding Brothers by Joseph J. Ellis

The First American, The Life and Times of Benjamin Franklin by H.W. Brands

The Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin by Benjamin Franklin (unfinished work)

1776 by David McCullough

John Adams by David McCullough

American Gospel: God, the Founding Fathers, and the Making of a Nation by John Meacham

The Journal of John Woolman taken from the Harvard Classics (my copy published 1909)

The Depths of My Own Murky Mind by Andrew Shinn

[Angry Rant] Keep Your Appointments!

It’s 7:45 p.m., and I just got home from the studio. No, I wasn’t working late. I went to the studio to meet with a potential client (Julie) after she got off of work. Lisa wasn’t happy that I went to the studio after hours, but she understands that I need every client I can get right now.

When I got to the studio, I prepared for Julie’s arrival. I set up a special slide show of senior guy photos (her son is the potential subject). I turned on the television and prepared the slide show for presentation. I ran the air conditioner. I cleaned the table and chair we were to use for the meeting. I made sure to get out a bottle of fresh, cold water for her and carefully centered it on a napkin. I turned on some smooth, soothing music so she would feel comfortable when she walked into the studio. I took notes from our previous phone conversation and started a special file for information about her son. I prepared questions about her son, his personality, his interests, and his unique personhood. Then I grabbed the latest issue of Photoshop Magazine and waited. I’d look up every 30 seconds from the article I was reading (about how to implant baseball stiches onto a bald-headed guy). But all I saw was condensation from Julie’s cold, unopened water dripping down past the napkin I’d laid out and re-soiling my clean glass table. After waiting for 35 minutes (that’s 70 glances at her bottle of comfort-turned bottle of offense) I locked the studio and walked to Julie’s place of work. She was gone. She’d either forgotten me or blown off our meeting. I was crushed. When I walked back into the studio, the soft piano music had turned to a doleful swing number. The combination of the music and my mood was dangerous. I felt like chaining my camera around my neck (with a 70-200mm lens!) and jumping off the nearest bridge.

My mood volatility has a little more behind it than just one missed appointment. This happens probably 40% of the times I agree to meet with a potential client. I carefully set up and eagerly await their arrival, thinking about little else than how well I’ll serve them. Then they don’t show up, and I usually don’t even get the courtesy of a call to re-schedule or apologize. I’m not a hard guy to get ahold of. I get all of my e-mail on my cell phone, and promptly return calls and e-mails, especially to potential clients. I give out my business card wantonly, spreading it like kids on a playgroud spread germs.

When you agree to meet with someone, keep your word. I lose so much respect for people when they show themselves unreliable or discourteous.

[Rant over]

New Windows on the World

Hello, Shinnfans. I’m here today to share with you a fascinating new window to the world that I’ve been enjoying. It comes in the form of a British Accent emanating from my iPod earphones.

BBC Radio News-pod is a collection of highlighted stories from across BBC radio. It’s a half-hour program I receive daily. Things I’ve found fascinating so far:

  • The international flavor of the news coverage. Clearly, the Brits are far ahead of us Yanks in the whole ‘paying-attention-to-the-rest-of-the-world’ area.
  • The British accents.
  • The differing relationship between media and government on their side of the pond and our side of the pond. I’d just like to say that having worked in media relations for the U.S. Government, I had it really easy. British reporters not only ask the hard questions, but they can sometimes be actually combative. I haven’t heard any interviews turn to fisticuffs, but that’s probably because interviewees are very used to aggressive reporting.
  • The British accents.
  • Things Britons care about. Britain is far behind the U.S. in legislating child protection from convicted pedophiles, for instance. That’s been made clear by a rash of stories about horrible offenses and an immature state of the national debate over what to do about them.
  • Have I mentioned the British accents yet?

In all, it’s been a fascinating experience. I have a much-expanded view of several issues, including the U.S. Immigration Debates. More on that in future blog posts. Until then, here are some blog posts that are on the horizon from me:

  • In Which I Equivocate (a reaction to extended exposure to The DaVinci Code)
  • Immigration: Not Just a U.S. Problem (what I’ve been learning about the effects of migration around the world)
  • National, Personal Duty (tentative, an exploration of current-day applications of principles from Abraham Lincoln)
  • Mexifornia (a book report, even though I’ve just started the book)

Please let me know in the comments below if any of these sound interesting to you. If I get enough reaction on them, I’ll know how to priortize them. Until then, I remain,

Truly Yours,

Andrew