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Word of the Day: Conceit

For someone who is 9 credits short of her master’s degree, I remain incredibly ignorant in so many areas. I read, with a combination of great interest and great confusion, about the literary term, “conceit”. Thanks to John at Confessing Evangelical, I learn about things that either: 1) My school did not deem important or 2) I didn’t pay attention to in school.

According to Wiktionary,

Conceit: In literature and poetry, a device of analogy consisting of an extended metaphor

I’m always glad to learn something new, but I struggled to understand this aspect of the term UNTIL I read this helpful explanation at Wikipedia:

An example from popular culture is the way many cartoons feature animals that can speak to each other, and in many cases can understand human speech, but humans cannot understand the speech of animals. This conceit is seen, and sometimes exploited for plot purposes, in such films as Over The Hedge, the Balto series, and Brother Bear.

It took the example of a cartoon before I could say, “Oh, I get it now!”. That’s pretty sad, but at least I learned something.

EMHE - the big reveal

Pouring rain kept me from wanting to be at the big “reveal” at the EMHE site, but I was there in spirit!  Thanks to visitor Jessica I found these great photos and videos of the project.  Her dad works for one of the companies contributing to this project.  Also, the local news outlets have stories on the family:  StarTribune, KSTP, KARE, WCCO.  If you are not familiar with the Teri Lee story, click on the WCCO link and look at the list of related stories.  Her brutal murder in front of her children was a shocking news event in Minnesota.

Extreme Home Makeover: Minnetonka Edition

Yesterday afternoon, on a whim, my family visited the site of the 100th episode of Extreme Makeover - Home Edition, rumored to air on November 25th. It’s just a couple of miles from our house. The couple are teachers from our local high school. On the surface, they are not a very typical choice: after all, they lived in a 4 year old house in a nice, but older, Minnetonka neighborhood with their three (soon to be four) children. They also recently adopted her sister’s four children who in the past couple of years have lost their dad and then their mom. The story of this family is not new to Minnesotans. The murder of their mom by her ex-boyfriend was a huge news story.




The crowds walking to and from the job site are steady. Along the way, there are security guards and volunteers helping the neighborhood to maintain control. The path is already very well worn, but the show promises to restore the area. Several neighborhood children have lemonade stands with signs promising all proceeds going to the family. People gathered on someone’s large hillside lawn, but doesn’t mind because he knows he’s getting a new lawn out of it.

It was fun to see neighbors and others we knew with the blue volunteer shirts and white hard hats. I saw my neighbor’s daughter and granddaughter, a mom and daughter we used to know in Girl Scouts, a hockey dad and coach who is also a volunteer fireman and many others. A fellow baseball coach who helped side the house from 3am to noon on Sunday told my husband yesterday that it was a nice brand-new home…so new that the woodwork and windows were salvaged for future use.

To stand behind the barriers and watch the crews gave me a near-overwhelming sense of wanting to help. Five days into construction, trucks and vans were making continual deliveries - plumbing supplies, home theatre, furnaces. The crowd chuckled when toilet after toilet was carried into the house and cheered when a large bathtub was unboxed and carried through the front door. My husband, who was pretty busy finishing up a summer construction project last week, kept saying to me, “I can’t believe you didn’t tell me about this. I want to be a part of it.” My daughter and I just kept laughing and shaking our heads at the thought of ANYONE living in the Twin Cities and NOT hearing about this project. It’s all over the radio, television, newspapers and the surrounding area is well-marked with signs. It would have been fun, though not possible, to have enough advance warning of the project so that we all could have all taken off time from our jobs to be a part.

Another highlight of the afternoon was watching Michael Moloney carefully work his way up the long line of people watching the house being built. He was relaxed and friendly. He made sure to talk to everyone. My daughter and I quickly made our way to a spot to shake his hand and take his picture. I was able to make eye contact with him, shake his hand and thank him for doing God’s work. He stopped and looked at me and said thank you in a soft and firm tone of voice that told me he knew it was true. He wore a cross around his neck. Later, when I looked at my pictures on a larger screen, I discovered the sun shining on the house, the volunteers and on Michael in a special way. I ordered a print online last night and will try to give it to him today with this quote:

All our work in the field, in the garden, in the city, in the home, in struggle, in government–to what does it all amount before God except child’s play, by means of which God is pleased to give his gifts in the field, at home, and everywhere? These are the masks of our Lord God, behind which he wants to be hidden and to do all things. –Martin Luther, “Exposition of Psalm 147

Advice for AI 7 wannabees: don’t sing anything by a singer who sings better than you!

Words of wisdom from Chris Sligh to those aspiring to American Idol season 7:

So, auditions for season 7 of America’s favorite show have started up already. Crazy, right?! A year ago on July 28, I had my first audition in Birmingham, Alabama, singing “Sweet Home Alabama” 37 times (yes, the same song that later got me death threats…my stupid mouth). Anyway, it’s strange to think that someone’s Idol experience is starting before mine is even done…read his long post…I’d like to give you a list of songs not to do:

Anything by Aretha Franklin
Anything by Whitney Houston
Anything by Michael Bolton
Anything by BoyzIIMen
Anything by Mariah Carey
Anything by Celine Dion
Anything by any singer who sings better than you

The Great Minnesota Get-together

I don’t know if I will make it out to the state fair this year.  I love it, but my back is conspiring to keep me away…as is my checkbook.  Good news!  I can be there virtually!

MyProntoPup.com

James Lileks - blogging live from the fair each day

When will God call on you?

When you wake up each day, you never really know what the day will bring? My brother-in-law, Jay, learned today that sometimes you don’t even get to wake up on your own to find out how God could use you.

First, watch this video clip.

Jay woke up at 5 am to flashing red lights. The Mississippi River, which is usually 1/2 mile away from his house, was at the door. The sheriff told him to evacuate the house. Jay went next door and woke up his 73 year old neighbor and her six grandchildren who were sleeping in her basement. Jay helped them climb a ladder to her roof where they were supposed to wait for help. Jay then rescued two dogs. While he and the woman, the six children and the two dogs waited on a roof, the woman’s basement collapsed…the same basement the six children had just been sleeping in. When they were rescued, they were taken by ambulance to the Red Cross shelter. Jay said that all he owns in his basement apartment he rents is under 9 feet of water. I told him that it was all replaceable, but that he wasn’t! He is staying tonight at a friend’s house high up in the city. I’m pretty proud of him tonight. God obviously used him in a very special way this morning.

A grand view, indeed…


We have temporarily relocated to this beautiful spot in Nisswa on Gull Lake. I will check in once in a while…the lodge has wi-fi!. There will be three bingo nights this year and our family is excited about that. For three years running, my nephew has won some pretty big sums. The jackpot is usually around $100, but gets split by the number of winners. We also have a family movie night planned, ala Chevy Chase in Christmas Vacation…except that no one will be locked in the attic.

It really was a beautiful bridge…

On a beautiful day last fall, Norman of Norman’s Demense took this stunning photo of the underside of the 35W bridge over the Mississippi River. It’s sheer size fools the eye. You are looking at the underside of a 6-lane freeway which stands seven stories above the river.

As bridge failed, so did phone network

For the past couple of weeks, my husband has been talking about dropping our land line phone.  It costs over $300.00 a year for basic phone service.   Our home phone rarely rings.  We each have our our phone and direct most calls to those phones.  So why pay for a land line?  For the past two weeks, we literally have been keeping track of incoming phone calls and any reason to keep the land line.  This past Wednesday night brought a pretty good reason to keep our land line: in the midst of the bridge disaster, our cell phones failed.  They worked here and there, but calls dropped frequently.  Also, contact with our out-state relatives (who were just sure they saw my car on that bridge) was impossible for a few hours.  Radio and television announcers begged people to stay off their cell phones and use their land lines instead so that emergency workers could communicate with each other.

I’ve been waited to see this story covered by local reporters, but they are too busy covering other important aspects of this disaster.  The Chicago Tribune, however, featured an excellent story on the Minneapolis cell phone failure of 8-1-2007.   Jon Van writes, in As Bridge Failed, So Did Phone Network:

Cell phone networks have technology that enables them to give priority to people dialing 911 and to authorized emergency personnel, but no network can handle every call when traffic spikes at levels two or three times beyond normal, said David Chamberlain, principal wireless analyst for In-Stat, a market research firm.

“The public should just expect” cell phone calls to be blocked, he said. “It’s going to happen. If I’m ever in a situation where my calls don’t go through, I’ll just send a text message. That will get through.”

Because text messages require little network capacity and travel on separate channels from voice calls, they are always the preferred mode to assure a loved one that someone near a disaster is unharmed, said Sprint’s DeVries.

While virtually all cell phones support text messaging and young people typically use it more than voice calling, it is utterly foreign to many older customers, he said.

“After the Virginia Tech tragedy, we suggested that it would be wise for parents with youngsters in college to learn to text message in case they needed to communicate in some kind of situation like that,” DeVries said.

All cell carriers said that calling volumes declined enough to support normal service within a few hours after the bridge collapse occurred. The task now is to monitor changes in calling patterns in the Twin Cities due to a major thoroughfare being closed. 

Is this Minnesota’s worst disaster?

Is the collapse of the 35W bridge the worst disaster in the history of Minnesota? I feels like it now, but what does history tell us? Ian Punnett posed that question this morning and here are some listener responses:

1918 Cloquet fire
Armistice Day blizzard

St. Peter tornado

Washburn Mill explosion

Reno plane crash

Hibbing plane crash

Wellstone death

Duluth lynchings

As bad as the bridge collapse is, the Anoka tornadoes of May 1965 have it beat. Growing up here, I heard stories over and over of the terrible tornadoes in 1965. Once in a while, my parents would point out something that had been damaged by those tornadoes, which affected more than just Anoka apparently. I think those tornadoes still hold the “record” for death and destruction. Here’s a little info:

The May 6, 1965 Tornadoes

The worst tornadoes in Twin Cities history occurred forty-two years ago, with five tornadoes sweeping across the western and northern portions of the 7-county region, and a sixth tornado just outside the metropolitan area. Four tornadoes were rated F4, one was an F3, and the other produced F2 damage. Thirteen people were killed and 683 injured. Many more would have been killed had it not been for the warnings of the U.S. Weather Bureau, local officials, and the
outstanding communications by local radio and television stations. Many credit the announcers of WCCO-AM with saving countless lives. It was also the first time in Twin Cities history that civil defense sirens were used for severe weather.

There were two photographs of tornadoes - the Deephaven tornado and the second Fridley tornado were both published in the Minneapolis Tribune. It is unknown whether anybody else took pictures of any of the tornadoes that day.