Life of Pi

We are behind the box office calendar, and finally viewed the critically acclaimed Life of Pi last night with our kids.

It was a fantastical story told with some pretty spectacular and beautiful cinematic images. The action and drama kept me engaged throughout the entire film. However, It did become evident in the first few scenes that the writer embraced and promoted a ‘multi-pathways to God’ worldview. I wasn’t surprised because the family in the story was from India, but I was not looking forward to cultivating an argument of why polytheism doesn’t work with the God of the Bible for the next two hours. I contemplated turning it off, but then realized this was a great teaching moment for me and my kids. I’m not a fan of the ‘stick your head in the sand’ approach to opposing world views. I would rather be knowledgeable and empower my kids with facts rather than leave them vulnerable with only pragmatic arguments to defend their faith. In our brave new world they’re exposed to all kinds of ideas, and this movie gave me the opportunity to witness how they sort out polytheism when presented with it in such a pretty and persuasive package..

Perhaps the most powerful moment is when the listener is given two possible true stories and asked which they prefer…the writer points out that neither version changes the outcome, or the underlying purpose of the story …only tells it in a different way. Sounds lovely and artistically abstract and enlightened, doesn’t it? Unless you love truth, seek truth, and believe there can only be one truth. In that case, you want to know which story is the right one. After all…they can’t both be true. Common sense negates that theory on a basic level. So here is where I fell off the writer’s polytheistic metaphor…although it was a well-versed and fantastically presented one…I found it a bit impotent in the end. I’m still monotheistic…one God and one Path.

Overall, yes, the film was beautiful and entertaining, but it is what it is… Polytheism101.

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Baby Announcement!

I want to introduce all of my ‘old’ blogchurch copy friends to my newest addition! I have a new blog called…wait for it…Breaking Baptist. Now before you run out to get the pitchforks and torches…give it a read. I think you will begin to understand the title and why the meaning is important to me. If you feel so inclined and want to follow the Breaking Baptist journey please use the subscribe box at the bottom of the new blog page. As always, I appreciate you support, and thank you for reading! Just click the link above or below to have a look at my new baby.

http://www.breakingbaptist.com

Oh Brother Where Art Thou?

Brother: 1. A male having the same parents as another or one parent in common with another. 

photo

Me and My Brother – Circa 1977

Well that’s the definition. The very basic explanation of two boys born of the same parent. Is that what comes to mind when you hear the word, brother? If you’re like me, there are many thoughts attached to a variety of emotions that race through your head when asked about brothers. Some of you may think of men who don’t even share your blood, but have shared enough of your life that they have earned the esteemed title. The following video inspired me to return to my blog and pour out a little of the love. One last thought and then grab a kleenex and watch the video. I’ve always heard the Jewish pictograph for compassion depicted two oxen pulling on the same yolk. True or not? I’m no scholar of ancient languages, but I think it’s an inspired idea. Can you really have compassion for someone if you are not willing to come along side them, strap on their hardships and burdens, and help pull them a ways through life? Sharing the weight of this world…I think that’s where God’s love abounds. The older brother in this story knows how to help pull…in more ways than one. Now watch and have a good ugly cry.

 

The First Thing I Ever Wrote…

Today is the 8th anniversary of my Dad’s passing. The day is as vivid as ever, and I feel like he was here yesterday. I knows many of you can relate. I read this at his funeral. It’s deeply personal, but not meant to be kept to myself. God revealed so much to me during that time, and when God shows up…it’s hard not to share. This is also the moment that I realized God expected me to use words to communicate all my random thoughts to friends, family, and the passing stranger on the internet highway. :)

Good Morning, the family and I want to thank you all for being here. Wes, my Dad, always said that funerals were for the living. He was right. He knew he wouldn’t be here today. He was also known for saying, “People should get their flowers while they’re alive, not just at the end.”, and that’s how he lived. Dad always made sure that we knew how much he loved us. He had special names for all of us kids. I was ‘Princess’. He liked to buy little sparkly gifts for me on special occasions. He said a princess needed jewelry, and who was I to argue?

Anyone who knew him heard about his family, certainly about his grandsons. I’ve heard it said, “No one is as crazy about their kids and grandkids as Wes.” Well, that was true. He gave everything he could to all of us.

Life without Dad will always be bittersweet. We’ll smile when we remember his funny sayings, his hilarious hissing laugh, and the colorful way his stories always got better with each re-telling. Then we’ll be sad and miss him when we’re all together and his recliner remains empty, we watch the Sooners, or enjoy playing with his grandkids.

Well, that’s a brief glimpse of the past, and a small forecast into the future, but I need to talk about why we’re here today. Monday morning, my Mom called and said, “Come fast!” I hurried over, ran through the house to his bed, but when I looked at him, I knew he was gone. In that moment, all seemed lost. My Dad had died. There was nothing I could do. The most desperate hopeless feeling engulfed me, and through my tears all I could say was, “No. No. No.”.

Hopeless.

But then there was a whisper, louder than all the noise in my head, and the presence that until that moment had always been a steady warm glow in my heart, a beacon on the shore of a calm sea, the sweet song in my soul since my day of salvation…it swelled, it blazed, and it shouted, “No Aimee! All is not lost, your Dad is not gone, and it is not hopeless! I made certain of that.”

I fell to my knees, laid a hand on my Dad, wept, and thanked God for him, the life we had, and for the beautiful hope that we will see him again. Peter penned my experience exactly nearly two thousand years ago: “Though you have not seen Him, you love Him, and even though you do not see Him now, you believe in Him, and are filled with an inexpressible and glorious joy, for you are receiving the goal of your faith, the salvation of your souls.” (IPeter 1:9)

This past Saturday, I told a friend, “Life is good. I am blessed, and am so thankful for all God has given me.”

Well, that was Saturday, and here we are four days later, and that is why I had to speak today. The shadow of death has passed by, and because of Him I can stand here even in the midst of that darkness and stillsay, “Life is good. I am blessed, and thank you, God, for all you have given me.”

Dad…we love you, miss you, and we will see you again.

We Have a Winner!

Thank you and welcome to all of my new email subscribers and hello again to all of my old friends!  I am happy to present you with my first video blog ever.  I am really excited to communicate with you in yet another way, and look forward to many vlogs (video blogs) to come. Thank you Heather Whitsett for sharing your talent and adorable jewelry creations with us. You can find more Heather at the How to be Fancy blog. Enjoy!

http://youtu.be/aEjdYt9moFM

Hunger Games, Violence, and My Children

Cover of "The Hunger Games"

Cover of The Hunger Games

This review-lite of the Hunger Games contains NO SPOILERS.

Fabulous! The best book retelling I have ever seen. Usually I find myself walking away, saying, “The book was way better than the movie.”, but this time I was fully satisfied driving home from the theater. Of course, not all my favorite moments were captured, but all the key scenes made the cut.

ACTING: The other potential disappointment is the acting, but not so with Hunger Games. The young people who played the tributes were amazing. Katniss was incredibly believable. There was a moment before the games when she was trembling with fear and anticipation. My adrenaline was pumping out nerves vicariously despite having read the books and knowing what would happen. Gail was exactly as I pictured him, cute, strong, and capable. At first glance I thought Peeta might not be what I expected, but as they started interacting, he was perfect. I thought Woody Harrelson had an acting stumble during his first few scenes, but it all smoothed out and he was a superb Haymitch in the end.

VIOLENCE: Now on to the hot topic, the violence. If you are familiar with the story and understand what is going to take place, then I think that there are no shockers here. The IMDb Parental Review section defined the violent episodes well. The directors did a great job of minimizing the potential impact. The other tributes were kept very non-descript. The book goes into more detail about each character, and I was more affected by their death in writing than watching it on-screen. A part both Randy and I agreed on is that the violence was not in any way glorified. You realize these teens had no choice and ache for them and the part they are forced to play. There were no reactions in the theater of, “Wow! Did you see that one get speared!” as you might experience in an old Terminator film. Each death, even the more ruthless tributes, felt like a loss.

My boys enjoyed the film. It gave us much discussion on the way home and probably for the next couple of days. They definitely needed to talk about it. If you are taking kids, I encourage you to drag some dialogue out of them.

My husband has already made many modern-day political parallels. That may sound tired or reaching, but our history as humans has had its dark and torrid past. It’s much better to look ahead and detour, rather than reminisce and regret.

Overall, it was a great thought-provoking film. My boys have watched movies like Lord of the Rings and have played games such as Call of Duty, so their tolerance level to on-screen violence and action may be a bit higher than some. It’s definitely a case-by-case decision. If you have the least bit of concern about your young one, I would recommend pre-screening. Then at the very least, you get to see it twice!

GCB? Can I Plead the Fifth?

GCB (TV series)

Image via Wikipedia

Well, you all are probably waiting for me to say GCB was either fabulously funny or horribly heretical. Well, it had elements of both. I don’t really feel the need to tell you if I will or won’t watch again, or if I approve or disapprove of the show. The sad thing was that I could absolutely relate with many of the actions and attitudes portrayed. No, not word for word and deed for deed, but haven’t we all experienced women like that? Haven’t we all on occasion been guilty of acting in ways unbecoming of who we really are? Of course, this doesn’t give reason to glamorize or make fun of failed attempts at Christian living, but it does draw attention to the fact that we all have been a little two-faced and given the entertainment industry great content to pull from. Unfortunately.I am hoping that the Christian community doesn’t get out the poster board and markers to start making
Anti-GCB posters.  Not because I am for the show, but because I am tired of our cause being about things we are against instead of the wonderful things we are for. I’ve never heard of someone’s life being changed by being beat over the head with a picket sign.  But I have seen people’s lives become more than they could ever imagine because someone shared a little time, compassion, acceptance, and a lot of God’s love.

It’s not our place to draw lines in the sand for each other on things that aren’t black and white.  Those lines are drawn on our individual hearts by an invisible hand.  For a seasoned Christian to stand around pointing and critiquing where they are and where everyone else should be doesn’t really make the GC life seem to appealing does it?  I would like to see the focus be more about the things we are doing instead of being proud about the things we aren’t doing.

There are times you have to stand your ground, but we also have to trust that the same work God has done in us, He can do in someone else’s life too…without our picket sign.

I hope the next time a friend asks me if I saw the latest tv show, that I could honestly reply, “I have been SO busy(loving on those around me) that I haven’t had much time for extras lately, but tell me about it.”

Look there. No judgement. No picket signs. Just an honest answer and an invitation for deeper conversation. Who knows? It might be the start of a beautiful friendship that lasts an eternity.

His banner is love, I hope I can make that mine too. But if you catch me in a moment of failure, feel free to remind me that I’m being a GCB. I give you permission and I promise to not be mad…for more than a day or two.

Aimee Jones is a small town columnist, blogger, and aspiring novelist writing about surviving and thriving on the Great Plains of Oklahoma. You can receive The Plain Wife posts by email. Simply click the follow button at the bottom of the screen. Thank you for reading! 

Kiss my Bliss Goodbye

My first Bliss event and my first Bliss friends! One thing I realized is that most bloggers...are short.;)

Yes! It’s another Bliss post. In true Aimee Jones fashion, I am one of the stragglers just getting around to putting my fabulous weekend into words.

I could go on and on about the great new friendships, celebrity performances, and the incredible swag, but I will try to focus on the one thing that actually drove me to take action. Okay, two things.

The first was in the video interview with Jim Collins. He said, “Having enough creativity will never be your problem. The difficulty lies in having the discipline to focus the creativity.” This is so true for me. My current works in progress include a weekly question/answer newspaper column, an online serial romantic comedy, a speculative fiction novel, a romantic suspense novel, blog, Facebook posts, tweets, and I am dying to redecorate my home. These are all fabulous ideas, and respectable pursuits. I have much passion and enthusiasm for them all. The problem is that currently there is only one of me, and my creative right brain is stretched to its max. Jim proposed the cannonball vs. bullets metaphor. I am a sucker for a great word picture. He said that you wait for your small ideas, the bullets, to “hit” before throwing your big ammunition, the cannonballs, into battle. Meaning, look for where your creative projects are having the desired effect and focus your attention there, while tabling a few of the shot in the dark ideas for a rainy day. Seems like a very common sense kind of thing, but his speech was the nudge towards a more focused writing career that I needed.

The other revelation was the closing address by Catherine Connors. I have never been one to banner the phrase “Girl Power” or “Viva Womanhood”. I am very fond of being a woman, but I am also a fan of femininity. In the sense of allowing men to get the doors, kill spiders, and open pickle jars. As a stay at home mother, I haven’t had to fight for position in a corporation or struggle for equal opportunities in the work place. So when Catherine began speaking about the rising role of women in the blogging industry, I thought her speech might be going in a direction that I couldn’t exactly relate to. Oh how wrong I was. My realization was that I am part of an industry, and I am struggling for my voice to be heard. The amazing thing is that people are listening, and we are living in such an exciting time as women. We are putting ourselves out there, not in a tailored version of a man’s suit, stifling our emotion, and hiding behind a tough facade, but we are getting noticed by simply living out loud just as we are. The feelings, thoughts, and emotions attached to the very core of our feminine being, is the one thing drawing people to our words day in and day out. That and really great coupon deals apparently. We as women have found a way to personalize the incredible technology of today and turn it into a community. As with most things, it was simply lacking a woman’s touch.

So for the first time in my life, and with thanks to Catherine Connors…Viva Womanhood!

And with that, I will finally click publish and kiss this year’s Bliss goodbye…see ya next year!

My Bliss 2012

I’m stepping out.  Calling myself a blogger and going to a real bona fide blogging conference with hundreds of other women who rock the virtual community.  This is the first of my Bliss conference series of posts. Hope you have fun following along!

Leaving my western Oklahoma skies behind and heading east to catch a plane to Nashville.  These things always seem like a grand idea until it’s time to pry yourself away from the kids and the DH.  I just miss them when they’re not with me. :o (  Oh well, it makes me all the more determined to squeeze out every last bit of useful information and networking that I can from this experience.   Of course within twenty minutes of leaving I get a call the little E has thrown up six times.  The big boys bathed her and made her a pallet of towels, and she was fine.  They said something about her eating dirt. :0/  All was well, and now they know how to care for a puking toddler. (win-win)  They will make great dads and husbands someday…

When people would ask me where I was going I kept saying, “Well, I’m going to a social media conference all by myself and meeting up with a bunch of people at a hotel that I met on the internet.” Sounds like a Lifetime mystery in the making, huh?  See the woman in the above photo? Well, via twitter we arranged to meet at the airport and share a taxi.  Just thought I would provide a pic of the last known person to know of my whereabouts. ;) I thought her pic looked harmless enough…(actually she’s super nice and has a great blog called Not Enough Patience and Never Enough Jewelry.  Love that title.)

Wow!  A room all to myself at the beautiful Opryland Hotel, this is a first for me.  I think I should be able to get many words typed this weekend.  Hmmm…maybe one bed for lounging by day, and one for sleeping at night???

Lastly, a shout out to my youngest son Nate the Great.  He asked before I left if I wanted him to pack a snack for me.  I said, “Sure.” and he packaged up my favorite salty-sweet mixture.  He sent two, and I could not have been more grateful for this little bag upon arrival…famished! Thanks buddy!

Now it’s time to register and get this BlissDom 2012 party started!  I think the first four hours is shopping at the special Handmade Marketplace! Yep…lots of learning getting done here this weekend!  Later.

Words for Sale!

This whole blogging, writing, and column business has been such a plunge into social media marketing 101. I thought I was a savvy woman because of an active Facebook page, but I now know that I am just touching the hem of the exquisiteness that is the fabric of social media.  The fabulous thing is that other more experienced bloggers will use their knowledge on the subject to attract traffic to their pages by sharing all they have learned. This has been the most helpful source of information. Everything from how to drive views, attract followers, and blogging do’s and don’t's.  I’m learning and it is transforming my business.  Now comes the hard part…my business is me. I’m selling my words. I have always said that I am no salesperson. I have passed on many stay-at-home opportunities, and self start businesses such as Arbonne, Mary Kay, and Scentsy. Love their products and use them regularly, but I am just an awful salesman.  So it’s ironic (actually I think it’s a law) that the one thing you despise the most becomes the only driving force towards your dreams.  Not only am I having to constantly peddle my wares on Facebook and Twitter, but I am polishing up, talking up, and presenting my own words for sale, which takes me severely out of my comfort zone! I share all of this for one reason, and that is to simply say, “I know.”  I know that when I write a post and say “Read Me!” that it seems pretentious, presumptuous, and arrogant.  That has always been my hang up with sales.  I hated presuming that someone needed, could afford, or wanted what I had to offer them. The handy thing about blogs is that they are free. They are only worth the time someone is willing to sit down and read them.  So my dear friend and reader, I may hock my wares on every street corner these days, but please know that it truly comes from a humble and grateful heart. God has created a passion in my being for communicating and I am actually finding out that when you truly believe in a product, that selling it isn’t that difficult. I promise to always try to make it worth your time. Thank you for following the blog.  Thank you for following on Twitter.  Thank you for being my dear sweet Facebook friend, and thank you always for reading my wares!  (In my new-found entrepreneurial spirit…click the link to hear my recent interview on KCLI Newstalk Radio.  It really explains my heart for starting the column and how it all began. Enjoy!)