Archive for November, 2007

Steelers 3, Miami 0

November 27, 2007

Good God, what an apocalyptic game. I think this was the football gods’ wrath on me for loving defensive struggles too much. (Please note that there are many football gods, this is a polytheistic sports conceit). That said, did we learn anything here? Well, first Ben remains quite accurate in all conditions. His decision making was sound given the limited passing outlets made available to him. The offensive line continues to be a major problem (and one of two real Achilles heels on the season). I realize Jason Taylor is a talented football player, but the penetration was overwhelming. Perhaps poor traction plays into it (linemen are holding possession so they may be more prone to sliding than an advancing defender).

The more serious concern is the defense. Yes, we shut the Dolphins out, but that stat is not as useful as noting that Beck was able to make drives in a fairly tight game. Large openings in the secondary allowed for Beck to penetrate farther than he should have gone. A few breaks here and there and this game goes in as a loss.

If the secondary plays to potential along with the o-line, we beat New England. If not, this team is out of the playoffs and may not even win the AFC North.

Overall, we’ll call this an N/A and await the Bungles with bated breath.

“We do what we do best, not what is best to do…” – Martin Amis, roughly

November 27, 2007

For state of mind, I recently read an essay by Paul Graham on learning how to do what you love. Graham’s primary conclusions appear to be: 1) doing what you really love will become a relentless search for some and often painful, 2) understanding the difference between what you love and what seems prestigious is difficult (Stumbling Upon Happiness, perhaps?), 3) if you are pursuing it, it may very well pay off. But perhaps we have no choice.

This has been a steady preoccupation of mine for the past few years, that question of what we do and why we do it. Despite being remarkably intelligent, we humans rarely seem to consider that our actions have meaningful alternatives. We push inexorably down a narrow hallway to a life that is based on what has been accomplished, not what we wish to see accomplished. And then, when there, we make choices to preserve status or keep our futures on target. We do this with often tragic consequences. The oddest thing about it is that our best spiritual leaders, supposedly the stewards of our morals, all cautioned about this trend.

That’s pretty esoteric, so let me make it clear: you grow up, you usually fall in love early, you usually have children, you usually buy a house. Like socially acceptable crack, your life now revolves around this construct. I’m not down on marriage (though I’m less upbeat than some on the topic), but if you hold back on any one of those decisions, the game changes. Once children enter the mix, everything falls apart.

In the excellent film “Thank You for Not Smoking“, Nick Naylor (Aaron Eckhart) puts this perfectly when he hollowly justifies his role as a tobacco lobbyist with, “everyone’s got to pay the mortgage” immediately followed by his admission that that claim is a “Yuppie Nuremburg Defense.” And moreover, since people justify their behavior through their dependents and possessions, could we be a better society if we all rented?

The thing that occupies my mind is that these issues seem academic, but they have profound and perverse ramifications. Since we’ve entered Pontius Pilate-mode on Iraq, we aren’t considering why we were such suckers in the first place. I’ll submit that we allowed it to happen merely because of this mold of thinking. If you’re afraid of loss, you can justify your behavior with any action. Lacking sound economic trade-off analysis , conscience irrationally fights fear and fear’s fires can be be better stoked. And so bitterness, fear of starvation, and economic hardship become war, genocide, and any number of other brutalities.

It may be that worrying about goodness is just a terrible idea. Carol Shields might have been saying that very thing in “Unless.” But as Paul Graham cautioned, I probably am not going to get around it, so I best put my shoulder to the wheel…

The name says it all…

November 27, 2007

About the title: first of all, I love wordplay and messages with multiple meanings. So, the name “greater awakening” applies loosely to my relentless theological bent (and a mockery of the current state of religious thought in the US), my hope for unleashing some greater and stronger potential in myself, and last but not least, a key line in Jackson Browne’s “The Pretender“. And that roughly informs what this blog is about: learning to do what I love, opening my eyes spiritually, and avoiding the destiny of the Pretender. Yes, I probably pay too much attention to pop music lyrics.

(That last bit also connects this blog to my brother’s blog, “Fitful Dreams“. Our common love for Jackson Browne is one of many similarities. That we disagree with the meaning of the song so much underscores the difference. )

New beginnings…

November 17, 2007

A prologue of sorts: Even though I’ve been writing heavily over the past two years, this is my first stab at long term blogging. Why write now? My life is changing in many interesting ways and I feel obligated to put it down, for posterity if nothing else.

My life is changing. My life has changed. Some of the changes I’ve experienced were thrust upon me, some I imposed. And change is an interesting theme that I’ll probably address repeatedly. Serious change takes energy, freedom, and determination. In my mind, I’ve been quite slow to change. And yet, in four years I will be able to say I finally had reconstructed my life and my pursuits based on the passions that I hold most dear. I’m just glad that I am genuinely stepping out on that path. Stay tuned. I think the writing will get better.