Monday, December 03, 2007

i'm done!


well folks, i'm done with grad school! tonight i gave my final presentation, turned in my research paper, and walked off campus for the last time as a student. after 21 and a half years of formal schooling, i'm finished! (at least for now.) please enjoy this photo of me pretending to graduate lo, these seven months ago. but now it's for real.

hooray!

Tuesday, October 02, 2007

library update

"You did it! After hearing from more than 20,000 of us, the Bureau of Prisons has reversed its book banning policy. As they put it in an official statement:

In response to concerns expressed by members of several religious communities, the Bureau of Prisons has decided to alter its planned course of action with respect to the Chapel Library Project. The Bureau will begin immediately to return to chapel libraries materials that were removed...

We can't thank you enough for the crucial role you played in winning this exciting victory for federal prisoners and religious freedom. It couldn't have happened without you."


thanks, guys. well done.

Tuesday, September 18, 2007

Prison Libraries

i got an email this morning from a friend of mine that was disturbing to me. here's what it said:

Dear friend,

Imagine walking into your local library, planning to read a
theologian such as Reinhold Niebuhr or Karl Barth, or a popular
inspirational work, such as Rick Warren's _Purpose-Driven Life_
or Harold Kushner's _When Bad Things Happen to Good People_.

But instead of finding such important and popular titles, you
discover that the religion section had been decimated - stripped
of any book that did not appear on a government-approved list.

That's exactly what's happening right now to inmates in federal
prisons under a Bush administration policy. As _The New York
Times_ put it, "chaplains have been quietly carrying out a
systematic purge of religious books and materials that were once
available to prisoners in chapel libraries."

I've just sent a message to the Federal Bureau of Prisons
protesting this absurd policy. Will you join me?
Just click here:
http://go.sojo.net/campaign/prisonlibraries?rk=_dSEq5E1p0BpW

Do it.

Monday, September 10, 2007

it has a head!


hey, look! i'm not sure if this is petri or dish, but it looks like a baby! hooray! they're both in there, but this is the best picture, i think. and their little hearts are beating 170 times a minute. wonderful.

in other news, stuff is going well here. i started my new job a few months ago, and i really love it. i had a full day of supervision today at grove city, and i got to visit one of the students who was in my youth group at the church last year who is a first-year student there this fall. he's doing really well, and it was good to catch up.

my mother told me this weekend that my blog is boring, so i felt convicted again to update. i'm not entirely sure what to write about though... i'll tell you one thing i've been loving lately though is my new church. these last few weeks, i've been thinking a lot about it, and i've really been understanding the song of ascent in psalm 122, where it says, "i was glad when they said to me, 'let us go to the house of the LORD.'" the church i've been going to is in my neighborhood, and it is committed to two things: being centered on Christ, and on being intentionally cross-cultural. they (we?) really believe that Christ can unite us over all kinds of barriers, and even though sunday morning is the most segregated time of the week, that's not true at my church. it's a really beautiful picture of the Kingdom, and i love it.
well, that's it for now.

Thursday, August 30, 2007

twincredible

so, great news! my older sister, sarah, is pregnant! and better news: it's twins! i'm so excited to be an aunt. and i'm going to be the best aunt ever. look at these babies! the first one is right before they were implanted, at two days after conception, and the second one was taken this week, at six weeks. look at them! if this were a video, you'd be able to see their hearts fluttering. they're about the size of raspberries right now, according to this website that tracks their progress. i'm so excited! be prepared for a lot of talk about Petri and Dish. i'll try to restrain myself from going overboard, but i can't make any promises.

Wednesday, August 01, 2007

haircut city!!

so, i let someone cut off most of my hair today. it's short. i like it today, but i am afraid i won't be able to do it myself tomorrow. but, i think it makes me look more professional, which, according to justin bratt, is my life's ambition. what do YOU think?

Thursday, July 12, 2007

committed

who's licensed to drive in the state of pennsylvania? I AM! and registered to vote to boot. i'm in it for the long haul, folks. it took me awhile (a titch longer than 60 days), but i'm officially a resident of the state of pennsylvania. it only took two hours at the dmv. (wow, is that place slow.)
i got a little nervous over the weekend, as we neared the date my license expired, since the state was locked in budget talks, laying off all "non-essential" government employees until they got it taken care of. i was picturing myself getting pulled over next week without a valid license, trying to explain that it was not MY negligence but the state's that caused me to be living (and driving) outside the law. but, no reason to worry; i am a licensed driver.
alright, gotta go. happy trails, y'all.

Friday, June 29, 2007

where i've been sleeping

after reading a scathing post on duderus about small-time bloggers' lazy posting, i have decided to update my site. due to the severe lack of comments, i had all but given up on my blogging project, but i've been assured that i have at least two people still coming to check occasionally. so, nate and sam, here you go.
i've been all over the country of late, spending a lot of time away from home. i'm going to tell you about it by explaining where i've spent my nights, sleeping in strange beds. over labor day weekend, i moved into my new house. i spent the first night on the hardwood floor, because i needed a new bed. but then the next morning, my parents bought me a new mattress for graduation! (oh, i graduated too. that was a little over a month ago.) so then i slept in my new bed, which is so amazing that i actually think about during the day. (it might sound pathetic, but if you sat on it, you'd understand.) then, after only three nights in my new place, i went to GR and spent a week at my parents' house in caledonia, listening to a chorus of bullfrogs singing from the pond behind the house. in the daytimes i enjoyed my own private resort, lounging by the pool doing crosswords and reading books, thoroughly enjoying the backyard while the rest of family was at work. i also attended my cousin's wedding and had a lovely luau party for my supporters. the next week i slept in a stateroom in the bottom of a houseboat, floating around dale hollow lake somewhere between kentucky and tennessee, getting rocked to sleep by the waves. oh, sweet bliss. while we were there, my family and i went swimming, boating, jetskiing, hot-tubbing, and star-gazing, and it was wonderful. then i drove back to the real and not imaginary place where i live, and stayed home for five nights. i started my new job and hung out with full-time. then i went to the o.c. in new jersey for four nights and visited my students at the beach project. i got to sleep in my old hammock-shaped bed in my old room with the sea breeze wafting in the through the window. it was glorious. it rained most of the time i was there, but i hung out with my students, met some new ones, visited two supporters, hung out with my staff friends, and went to the beach. on the way home, we got 83% lost in south central PA, somewhere around shippensburg. it was a good time, and a funny story. then i came home for one day, and then i went to grove city college for four days. i slept in the nicest dorm i've ever been in. every student has their own room, it has wireless internet, common lobby space, front-loading washers and dryers in EVERY APARTMENT, dishwashers, and a classroom in the basement. it was super nice. then i came home again, and i think i'm going to stay home for a bit. all that traveling was fun, but i've had about enough. so that's why i haven't been blogging.
right now i'm at the union project right by my house, which has a great little cafe with wireless internet and pretty stained glass windows. and my friend morgan works here, which is an added bonus. i'm going to finish my iced coffee now and go home.
the end.

Friday, June 15, 2007

the o.c.!

i'm in new jersey! i'm spending the weekend visiting my students at the beach project in ocean city, where i spent all last summer. i love it here. i love the students, the staff, the project, the island, the ocean... it's wonderful. i still think this is (one of) the best thing(s) we do at the cco. please pray for these students. this is a big summer. and go check out the beach project website too: http://www.ccojubilee.org/ocbp/
meanwhile, i'm in my sixth state in a week and a half, which is one reason for the lack of posting. i spent a week in grand rapids, visiting friends, family, and supporters, then a week on a houseboat on a lake between kentucky and tennessee. i was home for a minute, and now i'm here. it's been a lot of travelling, but i get to see lots of people i love. hoo-ray. well, i gotta get back to the students. peace out.

Monday, May 28, 2007

i heart pittsburgh

so i moved. fuller and i got ourselves a new apartment, and it's fabulous. i'm unpacking as we speak. well, not RIGHT now; it's getting boring, so i'm taking a break. i think i'm done in my bedroom, and so i'm about to tackle the kitchen, which is probably the biggest hassle of them all. but i want to get done before i head to g-rap to see my family, so i have motivation to keep at it. if you want my new address, email me. i'll be sending it out soon via email, if i remember, but just to be safe, if you want it, ask for it. all right. peace out.

Monday, May 14, 2007

a fond farewell

this is my last week at the church. today was my last day of my after-school program, and it was bittersweet. the kids were terrible today, but they're still great. it's weird to think it was the last one... i was so busy putting out little fires the whole time that i didn't have time to get sentimental until now. afterwards, a bunch of people from my church took me out to the japanese steakhouse and said nice things and ate good food and sang "you are my sunshine" to me and made me cry. i've been so busy i've barely had time to think about the sadness of this time. of course it's exciting to start a new life, but old things have to come to an end for new ones to start. i'll really miss these people who have been like a family to me out here. it's a good thing i didn't move to baltimore. that's too far away.
well, it's ten o'clock, and i'm still at the office. i think i better head home. but here's a picture of my kids last week, running down the hill to go to the after-school program. it's one of my favorites.

Thursday, May 03, 2007

home sweet home

last week, a report came out that listed the top ten "most livable places" in the country, based on nine categories: housing affordability (cost of living), transportation, jobs, education, climate, crime, health care, recreation, and ambience (museums, performing arts, restaurants and historical districts). they surveyed 379 places, and came out with the top ten. and the winner is.....

(drumroll.....)













(photo by Darrell Sapp, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette)
PITTSBURGH!!

just in case you think it's a fluke (or you've never been here to visit), let me just say that over the last 25 years, pittsburgh is the only city to have finished in the top 20 every time. so that settles it. it's awesome here. you should probably move here.

just in case you're curious, the other finalists (after pittsburgh, of course) are:
  1. San Francisco, California
  2. Seattle, Washington
  3. Portland, Oregone
  4. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
  5. Rochester, New York
  6. Washington, D.C.
  7. San Jose-Sunnyvale, California
  8. Boston, Massachusetts
  9. Madison, Wisconsin
so come on out and see. it's awesome. i told you.

Wednesday, May 02, 2007

the end of an era

today i spent the whole afternoon with stephanie, one of my students from rmu. we've been meeting together every week for the last three years, and today was our last campus minister-student outing. we went out for lunch at the spice island tea house (otherwise known as the isle of pleasure café), and then we went to the mattress factory, which is a really cool art museum on the north side. (you should come visit. we'll go.)
i drove steph back to campus, and realized that that was the last time i'll ever have occasion to go there. i may drive through whenever i want, but as all my students are gone now, with graduation this saturday, my time there is done. it was quite strange to drive through campus and back out under the cast iron gate for the last time. it's over. weird.
i'm not sure that it has hit me yet. i still have two and a half weeks left at the church, so maybe that's part of the delay. the next few weeks are going to be quite strange though. i'll try to keep you posted. that's it for now. adios.

Friday, April 20, 2007

international justice mission

did you know there are 27 million slaves in the world today? that's more than there ever were during the transatlantic slave trade. and yet most people don't even know about it. well, now you know. and you should tell somebody else.
tonight at rmu, we're having an end of the year event with a band that raises awareness for the international justice mission, an organization committed to bringing justice to people who are being oppressed in the world. i'm in my office right now, making a few copies of the speech given by the president of ijm, gary haugen, at jubilee this year, so we can give them away at the show. some of my students are starting a chapter of ijm on campus, and they're using this event as a kick-off. please pray for them as they try to raise awareness for change at rmu.

"never doubt that a group of committed citizens can change the world. indeed, it's the only thing that ever has."
--margaret mead

Sunday, April 08, 2007

Happy Easter!!

happy easter everyone! here's a poem i love that i heard at last year's tenebrae service back home. it's by luci shaw.

judas, peter

because we are all
betrayers, taking
silver and eating
body and blood and asking
(guilty) is it i
and hearing
him say yes
it would be simple for us all
to rush out
and hang ourselves

but if we find grace

to cry and wait
after the voice of morning
has crowed in our ears
clearly enough
to break our hearts
he will be there
to ask us each again
do you love me

Monday, March 26, 2007

i did it.

so, in regards to yesterday's post, i did it. i told them. and i only cried a little bit. and when i sat down, the woman i was sitting with told me that while i was talking, her seven-year-old daughter whispered to her, "mommy, can we go with miss katherine?"

way to break my heart.

i will miss you, riverdale. thanks for everything.

Sunday, March 25, 2007

making it official. and public. publically official.

so, in 20 minutes, i'm making an announcement at my church that i'm leaving. whoo. i'm pretty nervous about it. i'm not sure how they're going to react. this part is no fun.
for those of you who don't know what i'm talking about, let me fill you in! a few weeks ago, i accepted a new job with the cco! in june, i'll be starting a new hybrid position as an area director/development associate. basically, that means i'll be supervising our campus staff and raising money for the central region's general fund. i'll be moving to pittsburgh this spring, and sharing space in our main office in east liberty.
that effectively ends my employment at my current church, and so i need to tell them today. the pastor and the session know, and a few others, but this is the big "spill the beans" day to tell everyone else. it's so hard, because i've been a part of this family here for three years, and it's never been just a job to me. it's my life, and it's hard to say goodbye.
however, i am enjoying the "certainty of call," that i know beyond a shadow of a doubt that God prepared this new job for me. and so this is what i'll do. and it will be good, because it's the right thing.
(and for those of you who were helping me discern what i should do over the last few months, i went to erie last week, and i am more sure than ever about never moving there. ever. look what we saw!)
the inscription in front of it says, "i only have flies for you." well, erie, i only have flies for you too. gross.

Thursday, March 15, 2007

free coffee and good news

God is good. do you know that? this morning something good happened that i was not expecting. yesterday i got an email from starbucks that said they were hosting a "coffee break" this morning from 10-12, and if you came in, they'd give you a free tall drip coffee. i don't normally go to starbucks, but i thought, "hey, free coffee!" so i went in.
while i was doctoring my verona blend, i ripped the plastic top. so, i went back up to the counter to ask for another one, as i've spilled coffee in my car a few too many times already. there was a woman at the counter, and i was surprised to see that it was one of the mothers from my after school program. i said hello, and we started talking.
she started to tell me how much her son loves our program, and especially that he loves his small group leader, who is one of my students at rmu. every week when i pick him up from school, he asks me eagerly if sarah will be there today. the first thing he is does when he gets to the church is run to her room to greet her. this past monday when his mother picked him up, she told us that he won't be able to come anymore, because for the next few months, she's going to be travelling every monday afternoon, and she's unable to pick him up. she was talking to his small group leader about how sad her son is that he won't be able to come, and so sarah offered to drive him home herself every week. and now the little boy is thrilled because he loves sarah, and he gets to keep coming to our after school program. so his mother was thanking me for having it, because it is really making a difference in his life. the other day he said to her, "mommy, i want to give my life to Jesus." he is nine years old. i almost started crying, because it's not very often that i get to see how our work is really making a difference. and she said to me, "thank you so much for doing your program, because he wouldn't have said that if it he wasn't with you."
that little boy surrendered his life to Christ, partly because of the faithfulness of a college student, serving in the local church. through her love and influence, he has decided to live for Jesus. this is exactly what we strive for with the cco, partnering the university with a church, transforming college students to transform the world. this is a success story.
my job is not like other jobs; most days it's hard to see progress, and the work is never finished. it can go on for weeks, and even months, without visible signs of progress or improvement. God calls for faithfulness, even when we can't see the immediate fruits of our labors. but i feel so blessed lately, because God is being so faithful to show me where he is working, and that all my efforts have not been in vain. he is using me, and over the last few weeks, he has allowed me to see little glimpses of his kingdom coming on earth. and not only does he let me be part of it, he lets me see it too. so God, thanks for free coffee, and good news.

Tuesday, March 13, 2007

it's a beautiful day!

it's over 70 degrees here today. and there's not a cloud in the sky. so i'm out of here... i'm not going to sit in my office like some sort of chump. and caledonia... how's that flood warning workin' out for ya? maybe at least the warm rain will melt the rest of your snowdrifts. ha ha ha.
(p.s. i'm never coming back.)


(p.p.s. okay maybe someday. :) i do miss you. just not your weather.)

Friday, March 09, 2007

ugh. assessment.

i know, i know. three posts in one day. is it obvious that i'm having trouble concentrating on my assessment and retention paper? this, at least, came to my attention while i was reading the articles for the paper (if that averts any blame) from my course reader. i think it's funny. and it matches my current sentiments about the assessment process.
"Michael Patton relates a curious but notable extra-biblical account of the origin of assessment as follows:
In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth. And God saw everything that He made. "Behold," God said, "It is very good."
And the evening and the morning were the sixth day.
And on the seventh day God rested from all His work. His archangel came then unto Him asking, "God, how do you know that what you have created is 'very good?' What are your criteria? On what data do you base your judgment? Aren't you a little close to the situation to make a fair and unbiased evaluation?" God thought about these questions all that day and His rest was greatly disturbed. On the eighth day God said, "Lucifer, go to hell."
Thus was evaluation born in a blaze of glory (Patton 1986, 9)."

my thoughts exactly.

i'm an ENFJ. what are you?

yesterday i found the results of the myers-briggs personality test i took in college in a file in my desk drawer. i had forgotten how accurate they were, and i've been thinking about it all day. here's a description of my personality type from http://www.geocities.com/lifexplore/enfj.htm. if you know me at all, you've probably seen some of this. it's a creepily accurate in a lot of ways! it even warns about some of the things my mother warns me about!
i'm interested to know what types you are... if you know, leave a comment!

ENFJ - The Sage


Profile by Sandra Krebs Hirsch and Jean Kummerow.

ENFJs are lively and enthusiastic facilitators who apply warmth and vision to helping people and meeting their needs. They are aware of people's aspirations and develop plans of action to make those aspirations into reality. They like organization and closure. They are at their best facilitating situations that require interpersonal sensitivity. ENFJs are tolerant and appreciative of others, seeking involvement with them in life's tasks. They are able communicators who are liberal in showing appreciation for others.

Living

ENFJ children want life to be friendly, harmonious, and lively. They are responsible children because they like to please others and meet their needs. In doing for others, they usually find satisfaction for themselves. They are upset by conflict or disharmony. They are pleasant, exuberant and talkative.

ENFJ teenagers are constantly on the go, participating in many, many things. They enjoy a wide variety of activities, not only for that variety but also for the action and opportunity to be with others. They love being involved with friends, clubs, and any activities that let them be with others. ENFJs are often voted most congenial or nicest person in their class. Additionally, they may serve as leaders in their school activities. As students, they are able to focus on the interpersonal spirit or nature of the school and to speak eloquently to others about the school's best values. ENFJs are likable because they notice what is good about people.

As young adults, ENFJs set goals early on, both in the personal and professional realms. They follow through diligently and usually attain what they seek. Often the goals they set have to do with making society a better place for people. ENFJs may sometimes feel pulled between financial gain and spiritual gain.

Many ENFJs take their religious and community values seriously and want others to do the same. Loyalty, commitment, and responsibility are important values to ENFJs, even as children. They often settle into organizations that have a values orientation, or they will find a spot in an organization that is centered on values or people's need. ENFJs make responsible spouses, employees, and community members. Because most ENFJs enjoy public speaking and seem to have a way with words, they are often asked to present the position of the groups to which they belong.

Some ENFJs report that at mid-life they seek situations for themselves where it is possible for them to turn inward. This often takes a structured form such as meditation, journaling, or in some cases even career changes.

In retirement, they are likely to want to settle geographically in an area where they have close personal relationships and/or close personal ties to a specific organization. The relationships and values that are imprtant to the ENFJ become even more so in their retirement. Many ENFJs participate in voluntary service work in retirement.

Learning

ENFJs learn best in structured situations in which they are able to talk bout the lesson and interact with their peers. Because they want their teachers to be pleased with them, they attempt to be model students. They are willing to do what is required in order to become personally recognized by their teachers. Because they take criticism personally, they can either be wounded by it or be willing to redouble their efforts in order to change the criticism. ENFJs enjoy classes that have subject matter relating to people, their needs, their aspirations, and their characterizations. Many ENFJs choose the liberal arts because it gives them an opportunity to more fully explore humanity.

ENFJs are good students when the subject matter relates to their strong relationship values and people orientation, and when the teacher is warm and personal. They apply the necessary effort and energy to complete the tasks that they start. ENFJs also like some independent learning and projects.

Working

ENFJs focused on the organization's ideals and operate within those ideals. They focus on how organizations should treat people and communicate these values to others. They enjoy leading and facilitating teams, and like to bring matters to mutually beneficial conclusions.

ENFJs prefer a work setting that contains individuals focused on changing things for the betterment of others. They like an environment that is people oriented, supportive, and organized. They do their best when there is a spirit of harmony, with encouragement given for self-expression. And they like their work to be settled and orderly, but not so much so that it is dull, quiet, unchanging, or unchallenging.

The ENFJ organizing style is to plan around the particular value or ideal and to supply the necessary energy toward its achievement or implementation. In the accomplishment of the goal, ENFJs will look at the people available and will assign tasks based on who needs the experience, the exposure, or the development. To a lesser degree, they will assign the task based on who needs the experience, the exposure, or the development. To a lesser degree, they will assign the task based purely on competency, because ENFJs feel it is more important to help others grow and develop new skills. If others have a particular deadline that needs to be met, the ENFJ will work to meet that deadline so that the other person will be happy.

ENFJs prefer occupations that reflect their ideals and that promote harmonious relationships with others. They tend to be attracted to occupation with a service orientation. They generally follow policies and procedures as long as those procedures are compatible with people's needs. They prefer things to be organized and decided rather than haphazard.

Some occupations seem to be more attractive to ENFJs: actor, clergy, consultant, counselor and therapist, designer, home economist, musician, religious worker, teacher, writer, and other occupations that allow them to be of service to others.

Leading

The ENFJ puts relationships and responsibilities before personal leisure. Their time can be imposed upon easily; however, they need to guard against excessive responsiveness to avoid reaching overload.

They particularly enjoy reading novels and seeing movies in order to see how the characters play out the life issues and questions presented in the story; it gives them an opportunity to see how others live and get along. They enjoy discussing their reading and may join book groups in order to do that. They like going to movies and plays with others and like to comment on the plot characterization. They are close observers of others' behavior.

Many ENFJs join religious or community-oriented groups whose focus is to work for better understanding between people. ENFJs like discussion and an opportunity to talk about values and philosophical topics. Many do not like activities in which there is a great deal of competition or in which someone or something could be hurt.

Loving

For the ENFJ, love means flowers, poetry, candlelight dinners --- in other words, romance with a capital R. When they first fall in love, they fall in love with an ideal perspective of what the relationship will be, and they fall deeply, head over heels. ENFJs value commitment and loyalty, and look for it from their partner. They typically enjoy activities with their partners that allow them to discuss the relationship and focus on what each person truly believes. When commitments are broken, ENFJs become upset because they see the breakup as a personal reflection on them and because they have idealized the relationship. Since they are willing to put the time and effort into the relationship, they expect it will continue on as it was from the very start. Relationships have their ups and downs; the downs, however, are particularly hard on the ENFJ, who does not manage disharmony well.

When scorned, ENFJs may be resentful, spiteful, and deeply hurt. Because they are acutely aware of emotional matters they take the breakup of a relationship especially hard. They are willing to discuss the ending of the relationship with only a few others because they feel a sense of blame and shame for the relationship not working out.


Profile by David Keirsey

ENFJ's are outstanding leaders of groups, both task groups and growth groups. They have the charming characteristic of seeming to take for granted that they will be followed, never doubting that people will want to do what they suggest. And, more often than not, people do, because this type has unusual charisma. ENFJ's place a high value on cooperation from others and are most willing to cooperate themselves.

Found in only 5 percent of the general population, ENFJ's place people as being of highest importance and priority. As a result, ENFJ's may find themselves feeling responsible for the feelings of others to an extent which places a burden on the relationship. An ENFJ communicates caring, concern, and a willingness to become involved. Thus people turn to ENFJ's for nurture and support, which an ENFJ is usually able to deliver. At times, however, these kinds of demands can overwhelm ENFJ's, who find at this point that they lack the skills to dissociate. ENFJ's do not seem able to turn away from these demands even when they become unreasonable. Or, if forced to let go of the burden through sheer unavailability of time or energy, ENFJ's experience a guilt all out of proportion to the realities of the commitment made to the relationship.

ENFJ's are especially vulnerable to idealizing interpersonal relationships, raising these relationships to a plane which seldom can sustain the realities of human nature. Because of this tendency to raise interpersonal relations to the ideal, ENFJ's may unwittingly overpower their friends, who believe that they cannot possibly live up to an ENFJ's perception of them. The fact is, ENFJ's are extraordinarily tolerant of others, seldom critical, and always trustworthy.

ENFJ's take communication for granted and believe that they are understood and that their communications are accepted. Just as they themselves are accepting, so do they assume that others are the same. When ENFJ's find that their position or beliefs were not comprehended or accepted, they are surprised, puzzled, and sometimes hurt. Fortunately, this does not happen with high frequency, as ENFJ's have a remarkable fluency with language, especially in speech; they are particularly adept when communicating face-to-face as opposed to communicating in writing. They are influential, therefore, in groups, having no hesitation about speaking out, no matter how large or small the group may be.

ENFJ's have an unusual ability to relate to others with empathy, taking into themselves the characteristics, emotions, and beliefs of others. This can pose a danger for ENFJ's because they can unconsciously over-identify with others and pick up their burdens as if they were their own. In the process, ENFJ's may risk their own sense of identity. They have a natural ability to mimic because of this highly developed ability to empathize by introjection. They are likely to be very concerned about the problems of those close to them, but they also may get as deeply involved in the problems of those not so close and may find themselves over-extended emotionally.

ENFJ's would do well to follow their hunches, for their intuition tends to be well developed. Decisions made purely on the basis of logic may not be so sound, and checking with a person who has a strong T preference might be at times advisable for the ENFJ. In the framework of values, however, the ENFJ is on certain ground. Generally, they know what they prefer and can read other people with outstanding accuracy. Seldom is an ENFJ wrong about the motivations or intent of another, hidden or not.

Career

This longing for the perfect carries over into the careers of ENFJ's, who experience some degree of restlessness whatever their jobs. And, as with ENFP's, ENFJ's have a wide range of occupations which offer success. Being verbally adept, ENFJ's contribute to an unusual level when dealing with people, particularly face-to-face; the media, the ministry, and the stage and screen are populated with successful ENFJ's. They make superior therapists, charismatic teachers, excellent executives, and personalized salespersons. Areas that would not permit utilization of the interactional talents of ENFJ's for example, accounting, should be avoided; otherwise, almost any people-to-people occupation where personal, sustained contact is involved capitalizes on the personality of an ENFJ.

ENFJ'S like to have things settled and organized. They prefer to plan both work and social engagements ahead and tend to be absolutely reliable in honoring these commitments. ENFJ's are very much at home in complex situations which require the juggling of much data. At the same time, they can handle people with charm and concern. ENFJ's are usually popular wherever they are. Their ability to be comfortable either leading or following makes them easy to have around, whatever the situation. A well-developed ENFJ group leader can provide, almost endlessly, activities for groups to engage in with almost no preplanning and can find adequate roles for members of the group to play. In some, this can amount to genius which other types find hard to emulate. In this ability to organize without planning there is a certain similarity to an ESFJ, but the latter acts more as a master of ceremonies than as a leader of groups. The ESFJ is more of a recreational leader, who insures that each member has fun at a party and that the right things are expressed at social occasions, especially institutional social occasions such as weddings, funerals parties, and the like. ENFJ's, just like the ESFJ's, value harmonious human relations above all else; but ENFJ's are not so easily crushed by indifference as are ESFJ's and are more independent of other's valuations.

Home

ENFJ's are socially adept and make excellent companions and mates. They also are deeply devoted to their children, yet tend not to be domineering to either the children or mate. In fact, the ENFJ is so even-tempered that he or she can be victimized by a mate who might have become more and more demanding.

ENFJ mates always try to please and feel personally responsible when home life does not go smoothly. They are tireless in their efforts to see that it does, providing generously from available income, time, and energy. This dedication often exists, however, side by side with an ENFJ's dream of the perfect relationship-a characteristic of all NF's, but one which is particularly strong in an ENFJ. Thus an ENFJ has that longing for the ideal that results in a vague dissatisfaction with whatever is in the way of relationships, mating as well as friendships.

Midlife

At midlife, ENFJ's might want to expand their capabilities toward introverted activities such as reading, gardening, painting. They also may want to increase their sensitivity to classical music, subtleties of fine foods and beverages, beginning to develop ever-increasing discriminations of fineness among fine things. Already likely to be a gourmet, an ENFJ might become a connoisseur art collector, for example, or an expert of medieval tapestries. Also, the development further of intellectual capabilities might interest ENFJ's at midlife, perhaps taking the direction of formal study. ENFJ's have the ability to appreciate both people and nature, and more time spent in travel might be gratifying, particularly if this was used as an opportunity to collect works of art.

Mates

Who can complement this growth-catalyst? The opposite on the S side is ISTP, the "artisan." It is not difficult to see how the teacher inherent in the ENFJ would want to "bring out" the craftsman in the ISTP. The artisan, however, has another side to his nature that pops up occasionally and in some cases is a life theme: adventure and exploration. The ISTP can, so to speak, be wayward, take off for parts unknown. It is difficult to imagine a similar desire on the part of the ENFJ to bring out adventuresomeness.

The ENFJ, on the intuitive side, finds the INTP attractive. Now here is a splendid target for our catalyst, for beneath the cool, collected, detached, and doubting exterior lies an architect of buildings, machines, tools, operations, tactics, languages, mathematics, or whatever can be designed. If, that is, this latently capable designer can be "activated" or "brought out".

SPRING BREAK!!! sort of.

hey, calvin friends! remember when we were in college and we used to drive through campus, honking the horn, hanging out the windows, and yelling, "SPRING BREAK!" at the top of our lungs? remember how it was usually november when we did that? good times.
well, it is spring break around these parts this week, and it's nothing to drive around honking and yelling about. see, it's only spring break for two of the schools i'm associated with, and not for the kids at church. thus, i'm not on spring break. i am enjoying a slower week, and being able to participate in a few activities that i normally don't have as much time for, like having coffee with people from church, helping with beach project interviews, writing a handbook for student ministries here, and going to pittsburgh youth network west quadrant meetings. i'm also supposed to have time to do things like write papers for my assessment and retention class. or, blog! yay!
really though, i oughta get to that paper. if you have any input on the following topic, please send it my way:
"A senior offical at your institution has asked you to develop a "white paper" for discussion at next month's faculty meeting that explores a compelling rationale for assessment, including comment about first steps for an assessmenet program at the institutional, departmental, and general education levels."

no, nobody can help? i didn't think so. alright, back to work!

Wednesday, February 28, 2007

so speedy!

penny was a due for an oil change, so i just took her in to the valvoline place by my work. i walked in at 2:35, sat down to read my book, and was interrupted moments later because they were finished. FINISHED! i drove out of the lot at 2:40! and they apologized that i didn't get to read more of my book. incredible. i realize i could learn how to change the oil myself, but i guarantee you it would take longer than five minutes. those guys are good. and they refilled my windshield wiper fluid. that's worth $33 to me anyday.
i appreciate good customer service, and i'll pay for it too. thank you, valvoline. thank you.

Tuesday, February 27, 2007

true or false

1. I am interested in a career in research.
___ True
_X_ FALSE

2. I know how to write a good survey.
___ True
_X_ FALSE

so, it turns out that creating a survey for my higher ed research class is a lot harder than i imagined. it's difficult to ask the right questions to find out what i want to know. i guess part of my problem is that i'm not exactly sure what i want to know. meanwhile, my survey is twice as long as it's supposed to be, and i'm not sure it would even get me the results i want! and so, naturally, i've chosen the ever-popular technique of distraction. unfortunately, i've gotta get back to it... it's due in a few short hours. wish me luck.

Monday, February 12, 2007

a morning resolve

so i went to this church once, and at the end of the service, they read this prayer. i really liked it, and i took a copy of it when i left. i'm going to post it. maybe you'll like it too.

i will try this day to live a simple, sincere life, repelling promptly every thought of discontent, anxiety, discouragement, impurity, and self-seeking;
cultivating cheerfulness, magnanimity, charity, and the habit of holy silence;
excercising economy in expenditure, generosity in giving, carefulness in conversation, diligence in appointed service, fidelity to every trust, and a childlike faith in God.
in particular i will try to be faithful in those habits of prayer, work, study, physical excercise, eating, and sleep that i believe the Holy Spirit has shown me to be right.
and as i cannot in my own strength do this, nor even with a hope of success attempt it, i look to thee, O Lord God my Father, in Jesus my Savior, and ask for the gift of the Holy Spirit.
amen.

Sunday, February 11, 2007

new look!

so, what do you think of my new template? i like the new color scheme. i've finally mastered blogger. i own it. or at least, i've succeeded in navigating the new model, and i've added some things i've been trying to add for ages. (becky, thanks for offering to help! i like this new way... it's easier than messing with the template!) and the picture is from the summer, and no, i'm not that tan anymore. or that blonde. but it's the arctic winter these days, and nothing can be done about it.
anyhow, i'm finishing up here at the office for the day. i'll be heading home to relax and catch up on some sleep i missed last night. but, it was time well spent, celebrating ms. gormley's birthday, eating cake made from scratch (?!who does that?!?!) and playing settlers. which i won. also, i spent some time with some beach students this weekend, which was wonderful and particularly helpful for clarifying some things in my life. so, thanks, y'all.
check back later this week for further updates. see ya.

Sunday, February 04, 2007

superbowl XLI

i hope the colts win.

Sunday, January 21, 2007

regina... you're so good to me

so last night, i traveled across the state to see regina spektor at messiah college. it was beautiful. and denison witmer was the opener. and we got back to washington, pa at five in the morning. i'm pretty sleepy, as i had to drive back up to my house after too brief a nap at andrew's to be ready to speak in church at ten. but it was worth it. i might write more later, but if we're honest with ourselves, i think we both know that won't happen. i'm a terrible blogger. but fyi, that's what i did last night.

Tuesday, January 16, 2007

here's a blog more interesting than mine


this is me and my friend jonathan. this is his blog: www.jryskamp.wordpress.com. it's better than mine. he's in nigeria right now, and then he's going to uganda. go read about it. it's good. i'm so excited for him... it sounds amazing, and he is doing good work. go look. go.

Wednesday, January 10, 2007

um, i'm sorry

so, it's been awhile. things have been pretty okay lately. i went home to michigan and saw a lot of you, which was lovely and just what i needed. then i went to wild wonderful west virginia for school for a week, where i stayed in a cabin and saw lots of deer and christmas lights. and now i'm back to work, trying to get back in the swing of things around here. there's really a lot going on in my life and in my head. i'm responding to the unknown by praying and blowing bubbles in my office. it's pretty effective so far. if you'd like a more personal relation of my current events, call me. this is not the time or the place for it. in the meantime, i'd like to share this with you:
The World According to Student Bloopers
compiled by Richard Lederer at St. Paul's School
(courtesy of my little sister)
One of the fringe benefits of being an English or History teacher is receiving the occasional jewel of a student blooper in an essay. I have pasted together the following "history" of the world from certifiably genuine student bloopers collected by teachers throughout the United States, from eighth grade through college level. Read carefully, and you will learn a lot.
The inhabitants of ancient Egypt were called mummies. They lived in the Sarah Dessert and traveled by Camelot. The climate of the Sarah is such that the inhabitants have to live elsewhere, so certain areas of the dessert are cultivated by irritation. The Pramids are a range of mountains between France and Spain.
The Bible is full of interesting caricatures. In the first book of the Bible, Guinesses, Adam and Eve were created from an apple tree. One of their children, Cain, once asked, "Am I my brother's son?" God asked Abraham to sacrifice Isaac on Mount Montezuma. Jacob, son of Isaac, stole his brother's birthmark. Jacob was a patriarch who brought up his twelve sons to be patriarchs, but they did not take to it. One of Jacob's sons, Joseph, gave refuse to the Israelites.
Pharoah forced the Hebrew slaves to make bread without straw. Moses led them to the Red Sea, where they made unleavened bread, which is bread made without any ingredients. Afterwards, Moses went up on Mount Cyanide to get the ten commandments. David was a Hebrew king skilled at playing the liar. He fought with the Philatelists, a race of people who lived in Biblical times. Solomon, one of David's sons, had 500 wives and 500 porcupines.
Without the Greeks we wouldn't have history. The Greeks invented three kinds of columns--Corinithian, Doric, and Ironic. They also had myths. A myth is a female moth. One myth says that the mother of Achilles dipped him in the River Stynx until he became intolerable. Achilles appears in the Iliad, by Homer. Homer also wrote The Oddity, in which Penelope was the last hardship that Ulysses endured on his journey. Actually, Homer was not written by Homer but by another man of that name.
Socrates was a famous Greek teacher who went around giving people advice. They killed him. Socrates died from an overdose of wedlock.
The Renaissance was an age in which more individuals felt the value of their human being. Martin Luther was nailed to the church door at Wittenberg for selling papal indulgences. He died a horrible death, being excommunicated by a bull. It was the painter Donatello's interest in the female nude that made him the father of the Renaissance. It was an age of great inventions and discoveries. Gutenberg invented the Bible. Sir Walter Raleigh is a historical figure because he invented cigarettes. Another important invention was the circulation of blood. Sir Francis Drake circumcised the world with a 100-foot clipper.
Then came the Middle Ages. King Alfred conquered the Danes, King Arthur lived in the Age of Shivery, King Harold mustarded his troups before the Battle of Hastings, Joan of Arc was cannonized by Bernard Shaw, and victims of the Black Death grew boobs on their necks. Finally, Magna Carta provided that no free man should be hanged twice for the same offense.
During the Renaissance America began. Christopher Columbus was a great navigator who discovered America by cursing about the Atlantic. His ships were called the Nina, the Pinta, and the Santa Fe. Later, the Pilgrims crossed the Ocean, and this was known as Pilgrim's Progress.
George Washington married Martha Curtis and in due time became the Father of Our Country. Then the Constitution of the United States was adopted to secure domestic hostility. Under the Constitution, the people enjoyed the right to keep bare arms.
Abraham Lincoln became America's greatest Precedent. Lincoln's mother died in infancy, and he was born in a log cabin which he built with his own hands. When Lincoln was President, he wore only a tall silk hat. He said, "In onion there is strength." Abraham Lincoln wrote the Gettysburg Address while traveling from Washington to Gettysburg on the back of an envelope. On the night of April 14, 1865, Lincoln went to the theater and got shot in his seat by one of the actors in a moving picture show. The believed assassinator was John Wilkes Booth, a supposingly insane actor. This ruined Booth's career.
The sun never set on the British empire because the British empire is in the East and the sun sets in the West. Queen Victoria was the longest queen. She sat on a thorn for 63 years. Her reclining years and finally the end of her life were exemplatory of a great personality. Her death was the final event which ended her reign.
The nineteenth century was a time of many great inventions and thoughts. The invention of the steam boat caused a network of rivers to spring up. Cyrus McCormick invented the McCormick raper, which did the work of a hundred men. Samuel Morse invented a code of telepathy. Louis Pasteur invented a cure for rabbis. Charles Darwin was a naturalist who wrote the Organ of Species. Madman Curie discovered radium. And Karl Marx became one of the Marx brothers.
The First World War, caused by the assassination of the Arch-Duck by a surf, ushered in a new error in the anals of human history.

brilliant.