the Q report

so i got back yesterday (1:15 am) from austin, texas and Q. i starting taking care of tapestry things yesterday and while i’m doing some of the same today i do at least feel like i have enough time to put down some of my thoughts concerning the conference. so here goes:

  • positive – the conference that i have thought of as being consistently the best ministry conference in the states has been youth specialties’ national youth worker convention. every time i ever went to nywc i was challenged and refreshed. heck, pam loved going to nywc’s with me. one of the things i have appreciated the most concerning nywc is its mindset of bringing together contradicting thoughts and allowing the participants to figure out what worked best for them in their context and faith. i feel like Q has done a good job of learning from what youth specialties has historically done so well. i can’t yet say that Q is as good as nywc but that’s just because i’ve only been too one Q. i have years of experience with nywc and therefore know that they are great. i’ll find out next year if Q deserves to be ranked with nywc as consistently the best.
  • positivei love conferences that focus on ideas while i am not as huge a fan conferences that focus on practice. don’t get me wrong, ideas that don’t lead to practice aren’t that much good. therefore a conference should have some practical examples of what an idea leads to. yet it is my opinion that conferences that focus primarily on practical aspects end up limiting people rather than releasing them. you just end up doing the same things that other people and groups have done. whoopee. Q was all about ideas and questions – some of which competed with each other. i was exposed to different people’s and organization’s thoughts, given a few examples of how they have lived it out, and then encouraged to branch out in directions that best fit me, tapestry, and point rather than encouraged to buy a program. one of the things i loved was that several times presentations were made by people who had been participants at previous year’s Q’s and then had gone out and done something new. celebrating how people have developed something new rather than just have had success with an already established (and probably commercialized) program shows what the real values of Q are.
  • positive – the quality of the presentations was amazing. a good half of the presenters were absolutely incredible – both in their ideas and their method of communicating those ideas. of the remaining half i would only describe two as let downs and one of those would was just because she didn’t do a good job of communicating her ideas, which were fascinating ideas.
  • positive – i got my money’s worth. Q is expensive. being a church planter i went for a reduced rate (thanks Q) and it was still pricey. yet i left austin knowing that it had been a first class event and i had received my money’s worth. from the quality of what was done, to the “freebies” that i received (6 books, two magazines, and a pound of coffee were in my registration bag – which was a real clothe book bag), to the concert from over the rhine, it was all excellent.
  • negative – it would have been nice to have heard from presenters who are not living, working, and/or ministering in “big time” environments. what about people living in cities with less than 400,000 people who are doing revolutionary things? surely there are some in the u.s.

as you can see it was a great conference. i loved it so much that i went ahead and registered for next year’s Q (which is in chicago) while i was still in austin. now i get to see if it lives up to my first experience.

still too tired to post

i have several things that i want to post about but i’m pretty tired at the moment. therefore, i’ll put a few blurbs up and see if they turn into anything longer.

  • we participated in trivia weekend this past week. stevens point hosts the world’s largest trivia competition. 54 straight hours of trivia, 417 teams, and 11,000 people. it’s kind of a big deal. it was also a blast. it was our first year and we ended up placing 174th which i have been told is not bad for newbies. we had around 15 people over at the house and 6 of us that were committed to the whole time. that’s a small trivia group considering the average group size is 26 and the top place groups average around 50. we already have plans for improving our experience next year. if any of you southerns want to come up next year for trivia you would be welcomed.
  • yesterday was our first “film & theology” meeting. we’re going to try this again in the future. basically we watched “stranger than fiction” and then discussed it’s connections with faith. it was a first time thing for us so there is a lot that we can improve upon. it was cool twittering the movie and screens beside the movie screen. thanks to some of the wonderful people of tapestry i have a growing list of ways to improve it. i sent out an email to those who went asking what they thought and how we could make it better. all of the responses thus far have been very positive while also providing some great suggestions for improving it next time. makes me all the more excited to be a part of tapestry.
  • i’ve swapped my eee pc 901 to eeebuntu. it was running xandros but i am enjoying eeebuntu so much more. it seems to be faster and is definitely better looking right out of the box. i also like the fact that eeebuntu is easier to customize than xandros.

deer scare

i had a close encounter with one of our backyard deer this afternoon.

i was by our squirrel feeder loading it with more corn when out of the corner of my eye i saw a shape moving toward me fast. i turned around to see a deer about 10′ away from me running at full tilt in my direction. immediately i realized that what i was encountering was one of the rare wisconsin rabid killer deer. they’re vicious and there is only one way to rescue yourself from them. i screamed “AHHHHHHHH!” and lifted my hands up to shield by face from the impact. this had the desired response and scared the deer into changing directions, right into a tree. the killer deer slammed into the large sapling and flipped onto its back. graceful creatures my butt.

anyhow the rabid but now scared deer finally got back on its feet and dizzily ran about 30 feet off to get its head straight. it was a bit of an odd experience for both of us.

SIDE NOTE – tapestry is team #4360 in this year’s town wide trivia contest. stevens point is the home of the world’s largest trivia contest. it starts friday and last 24 hours a day until sunday at 11:59:59 pm. it should be cool. we do not stand a chance of winning but we do hope to learn what to do in future years. our goal is to be in the top 2,000 teams.

random tuesday things

not much to say today (but when has that ever kept me from saying something?). therefore, i’m posting a few random things from today.

  • great time starting the day off with coffee with perry and john from fellowship church in chippewa falls. great guys. i always learn a ton hanging with these guys. to celebrate easter this year perry and fellowship are doing what they call 40 days of easter. basically they are focusing on celebrating each day for 40 days. i think it’s a great idea. in fact, i wish i had thought of it. 40 days of purposefully living out resurrection. i told him to consider that idea stolen for next year at tapestry.
  • pam, the most wonderful wife in the world, bought me a great backpack for traveling to q 2009. this is great because i needed a backpack but felt like it was a waste when i could just use one of the boys’ old backpacks – which unfortunately look middle schoolie.
  • went fishing with andy lickel today and caught my first 2009 muskie. i’ll post a photo when andy sends me the one he took. i was pretty shocked to catch a muskie this early.
  • i started initial planning today for a touched twice united clinic in stevens point. between tapestry and woodlands church i know there will be at least two clinics in the point area.
  • i love kurt vonnegut. i can’t believe it took me this long in life to finally read any of his work. i haven’t even read his best known work yet, slaughterhouse-five, and i already think he is great.
  • yesterday a stranger heard my southern accent and asked me if i was british?!?!?! i was very surprised that someone could honestly mistake an alabama accent for an english accent. they truly odd thing is that this is the second time this has happened in my life. the other time was about 5 years ago when a couple from germnay thought i sounded british.

my run for the day

  • distance – 3.0 miles
  • time – 31:35
  • pace = 10:32/mile
  • weather – 43

mhmmmmmmmmm

besides seeing my family in alabama the best part of heading down south is the food. i prefer so much of wisconsin over the south. i would rather have a supper cold & dry winter than i terribly hot and humid summer. i would rather go fishing on rivers that require canoes than boats. i would choose wisconsin cheese over whatever southern cheese there is (probably velveeta). etc., etc. on 90% of the comparisons it is really easy to choose wisconsin over the south.

yet that changes dramatically when we start talking about food. i think i probably gained 10 lbs from all the food i ate. i know for a fact that i ate lunch at two different places on one day just because i was afraid i wouldn’t get to eat at either of them again during the week. it’s not even just the nice restaurants that i love. some of the fast food restaurants and “mom and pop” joints are my favorite places to eat. raising cane’s, dempsey’s las trace amigos, chick-fil-a, deanies, wintzel’s, etc. oh how i love these places.

she's a red squirrel

pam invented the greatest phrase today. the phrase is “she’s a red squirrel.”

it happened this way.

we love the squirrels in wisconsin. we have HUGE gray squirrels, which almost ever place has, but in addition to the grays we also have blacks squirrels and red squirrels. the black ones are a color variation of the typical gray squirrel. pam and i think they look like russian relatives of the gray squirrel. the red squirrels are about 1/3 the size of your typical gray squirrel. they are just a little bigger than a chipmunk. the red squirrels also are about the fastest things you have ever seen. they bounce all over the place. we all love watching them in the back yard. they run from one spot to the next and then back to their original spot. adam once described them as squirrels with attention deficit disorder junked up on speed. it’s a pretty accurate description.

anyhow pam was describing someone today that is a friend of hers. i’ve never met this lady so pam was giving me a brief run down of her personality. somewhere during her attempt she finally said “she’s a red squirrel.”

i instantly knew what pam’s friend was like. i can’t wait to get back to wisconsin and use this phrase.

march snow

heck of a snow storm that came upon point tonight. the roads were so bad that i was surprised that we had anyone at tapestry tonight. friday i was walking around in a sweatshirt on bare grass fishing and tonight i had to blow around 5” of snow out of my driveway. wisconsin late winter weather is freaky.

two photos to give you a little feel for the change in weather.

friday

sunday

washington

 

SIDE NOTE – today matthew c introduced me and my boys to the michael gungor band. pretty good music. it’s kind of fun when my pre-teen and teenage boys hear music coming from my computer and say “that’s pretty good stuff dad. can you add that to my ipod?” of course, i responded by laughing in their faces and saying no. 😉

SIDE SIDE NOTE – found stripgenerator on lifehacker today and while i’m not yet sure how i will use it within a tapestry worship gathering i do know that i will most definitely use it.

stripgenerator

SIDE SIDE SIDE NOTE – we arrived at washington elementary school this afternoon to be surprised with 15 stationary bikes on the stage. we don’t use the stage (everything is done on the floor) but we do keep our stuff on it and place our projector there for rear projection. this meant we had to move all the stationary bikes. no big deal. talked to gary, the janitor, and the bikes will be there for the next month. this of course means that i am going to have to work in a way to do one whole message while riding on one of the stationary bikes. i’ll be finishing amos in the next 3 weeks. anybody have any ideas for a stationary bike connecting with amos 6-9?

just posting down because i should

 

i’m a little tired from the past two days but i thought i would post of a few photos of some of the reasons i love central wisconsin. the above is from fishing with andy lickel friday in richland county. we weren’t doing any serious fishing but merely trying to scope out some new locations. we found several good spots that i will be returning to. i hesitated posting the above photo because i was informed by debbie that the fish was too small. 😉

the photos below are from one of the many reasons i love point. they are from thursday with people camping out in front of belt’s ice cream. belt’s closes for the winter and then opens up on the first weekend of march. every year people camp in front of belt’s just to be there first when it opens up. everyone at tapestry loves it when people are passionate about something (we can kind of relate) so mike p and i thought it would be fun to bring everyone emy j’s coffee to keep them warm.

0305091750a 0305091745

SIDE NOTE – i’m pretty pumped about the two people who are speaking at tapestry over then next two weeks. mike p is speaking this week and perry polnaszek is speaking next week. both of them are great passionate guys. mike is one of out own and perry is a friend (and also the founder of touched twice united). the only thing i am sad about is that i won’t get to hear perry.

i'm an enabler

i think i may have developed co-dependent deer. thanks to the corn that i place in the back yard all the time we now have deer that come to our backyard and are not the least bit concerned about our dogs barking at the sliding glass doors. that has to be against the normal deer instincts, right?

i actually think that montana and roux are a little offended that the deer seem to have no fear of their barking. i keep telling them that they really are terrifying bassets but i don’t think my words have convinced them.

yesterday on church street

drove by this yesterday and since i am now a stevens point police chaplain i decided to stop and ask if there was anything i could do. everyone was out and the office said it was just a matter of waiting the fire department to get there and take care of business. they arrived in another minute and got to work. not sure why the lady in the photo was yelling but at that moment she was letting a guy just outside the right side of the photo have it.

here’s the stevens point journal article on the fire.