Showing posts with label 7 Quick Takes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 7 Quick Takes. Show all posts

Thursday, June 27, 2013

7 Quick Takes — Episode III: Trying Times



For numerous reasons, this week has been difficult for me.  On a basic level, I'm still adjusting to my new job, and training on so many new concepts and tasks can be draining.


Second, one of my close relatives has been hospitalized since Saturday.  Please pray for her.


Third, due especially to the second reason, I haven't been resting much this week, and I've sometimes been staying up later than planned to take care of various household tasks.  In short, I'm just exhausted.


I finished Brideshead Revisited during this week, and I ended up liking it, most especially for the ending.  The book was structured different than I expected, but the ending is what really makes it such an excellent Catholic work of literature, as it is usually known.  After finishing that, I began reading a pretty dark fantasy novel that is well-written and somewhat engaging (which is leagues beyond a lot of the other fantasy novels I've looked into recently).  I'm not certain yet what I'll think of it: I'm less than a third of the way through.

I've really been so tired this week that I'm not sure what else to write.  I recently bought some old long-term strategy games, but I haven't been able to play them much yet, so I don't know whether they're actually any good.

Rhubarb pie is an excellent dish (especially in an oat-nut crust), even if it's not made well.

In general, prayers for my family and for me are much appreciated.  I'm not really sure what else to say right now. 

For more Quick Takes, visit Conversion Diary!

Thursday, June 20, 2013

7 Quick Takes — Episode II: Lords, Labors, and Liquidations



I finished that somewhat depressing book on rabbits (which—gasp!—I ended up liking in the end, though I can't explain why), and now I have begun reading Evelyn Waugh's magnum opus, Brideshead Revisited, a touching tale about hardened agnostic serviceman and a soft-bodied Catholic Teddy-bear.  Well, there might be a bit more than that.  So far the title doesn't seem accurate (I'm closing in on half-way finished with the novel, and the eponymous revisiting of Brideshead has yet to really occur), but it's well written, and Catholicism is blatantly present, though not always truly followed.

 My gift to you for the day: Scar from The Lion King posing with a Teddy-bear.


My new employment has been a roaring success so far: my manager wishes she could clone me for learning the concepts and processes involved so well.  The work is also oddly satisfying for being done almost entirely in a cubicle (though, really, I expected I'd like such work).


In conjunction with my new work, I am learning more about bankruptcies and the legal system than I think I ever would...unless I was personally involved in a suit, in which case I'd probably obsessively absorb the information.


Just a helpful tip I've learned the past week: if you want a phone service with low prices and fantastic plans, check out T-Mobile.  Hopefully, that will be the only advertisement I have for a long time, but, I must say, their plans seem too good to be true...yet they've been working so far for me!


Did you know that, according to a recent scientific study, there is empirical evidence that performing some sort of ritual before eating actually makes food taste better to you?  As if praying wasn't a good enough reason, now you have a merely natural reason to bless your meals.


Thanks to my new phone, I was able to get a free app of the entire Agpeya, the Coptic version of the Liturgy of the Hours.  I used to not like praying it, due to its length and (literally, from what I can tell) complete lack of variation between days.  However, lately I've been praying a reduced version of Prime/First Hour, and I am growing to like it more and more.  Some parts of Prime fit very well into the theme of this blog too.  Here's a sample from the post-Gospel prayers (troparia?):

"As the daylight shines upon us, O Christ Our God, the true Light, let the luminous senses and the bright thoughts shine within us, and do not let the darkness of passions hover over us, that mindfully we may praise You with David saying, 'My eyes have awakened before the morning watch, that I might meditate on Your sayings.'  Hear our voices according to Your great mercy, and deliver us, O Lord our God, through Your compassion."


A hint to anyone making a large soup for only one person: know that you'll be eating it for weeks.  You might want to try eating it for both lunch and dinner to finish it quicker.  If not, it just sits there every day, staring at you, seemingly filling up at night, laughing at you behind its non-existent, aqueous eyes, mocking its capacity to be a Zeno's paradox, ever being reduced yet never being finished, always and forever and unto the ages of ages...  A full pot of soup for one person is the task of a lord, a Herculean labour of liquid liquidation.  And those are my 7 quick takes for the week.

For more Quick Takes, visit Conversion Diary!

Thursday, June 13, 2013

7 Quick Takes — Episode I: A New Beginning


--- 1 ---

I have restarted this blog!  I originally started it as a companion blog to Treasures of the Church, and the goal was for it to be a more personal blog.  I never ended up doing much with the blog.  I attempted restarting it with some book reviews a few months ago, but I petered out on that as well.  So, I am trying this again as a mix of a personal blog and a "whatever I want to write" blog.  Be warned, there may be book reviews, as I've returned to my old haunts of reading addiction.

--- 2 ---

This blog has been truly enlightened.  I realized a dark blog featuring red and black may be fitting for Hot Topic or the flags of angry men, but not for a blog whose name includes the word luminous.  So, I did a background and colour makeover, and I think it's much better (though I may still tweak the colors a bit).

--- 3 ---

I'm beginning a new job on Monday, so I pray that it goes well and that I do not despise it.

--- 4 ---

I'm praying that my fiance's job possibilities where I live pan out: at the moment, we live twenty hours apart, and we'd really like to fix that.

--- 5 ---

I've relapsed into reading addiction, as I mentioned in section 1, and one of the books I've started reading is a fairly depressing one about rabbits.  You may have heard of it...

--- 6 ---

Another book I read recently was even more depressing (since there were many named character deaths), yet it was still good.  The thing that I thought was odd was its lack of reserves at the library.  The best-selling author's other two books had well over a hundred reserves each (and the county I live in is not too large), yet this one?  0.  I walked into the library and picked it right up.  Why is that?  It could be that it is not as good as his other works (which I have yet to read)...or (if conspiracy theorists are right) it could be because it is written from a female point of view.  I take these sorts of vast conspiracy theories (people don't read literature with a female point of view because everyone is a misogynist!) with a lick of salt (what good would a grain do me?), but I just find it strange that this book seems, at least at my local library, so abandoned when the author is so famous.

--- 7 ---

I am settling in nicely into the Byzantine parish I am attending: the five children of one family have already taken a liking to me, calling me "St. Patrick" or "Patrick Man" due to the tints of red in my hair and the fact that I wore Pentecost green to my first Liturgy there this summer.

I have no idea if I'll write more this upcoming week or not, but either way, I should hopefully be keeping up with these Quick Takes. Until next time, thank you for reading, and God Bless. And, please pray for me, a sinner.
For more Quick Takes, visit Conversion Diary!