Pete's Tweets

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Sports and Stories

I love sports, I love to play them, I love to watch them, I love to figure them out. I was never the most athletic of my friends, that role was reserved for those people who hit puberty before they were 17, but regardless I feel like I could hold my own. It wasn't until recently that I realized what sports really are, it wasn't until recently that I realized why I love sports so much, it is because they are a story within themselves. Let me explain before you get upset because you thought you were going to be reading about how awesome the Giants are and how great Peter was at Water Polo in High School but instead he has you reading about stories.

Every story has a beginning and an end, unless you are watching a little tale called, "The Never Ending Story," which by definition never ends (and if you have watched lately you know that Giant dog is nothing short of creepy, he is like a mixture of Clifford and the sadly misunderstood Boo Radley.) But all sports have character development before the actual game. Storylines that come into the game can be seen as the prologue if you wish, but this is whats going on before the actual story, the Hobbit to the Lord of the Rings, the Hide and Seek before the Wardrobe, the Peter and Sarah before the kids. It is what the characters are up to, what they have been through, their attitudes and idiosyncrasies.

This sets the stage for all things that are going to happen during the Event, (which I only watched the first 30 seconds of, and I have it figured out, they are rebooting the War of the Worlds franchise again.) Sports tell a story like few things do, and sometimes it is a great story, think about October 30, 1974 and the Rumble in the Jungle, or Rudy (and even though Joe Montana bashed Rudy a few weeks ago, I still weep every time I watch Sam Wise Gamgee get carried off the field).

Sports move us because of the stories that run through them. I am interested to tear more into this, what are your thoughts about stories and sports, how do they go together? What are some of your favorites sports stories?

Coop and Micah Pics

Yesterday Micah had has big 1 month old doctors appointment. He was a champ.



Today I just got this email from my wife of our oldest watching his show Little Einsteins.


I love my kids.

Thursday, September 16, 2010

MASH Lied to Me About My Future

I love games. I think my crush on them started when going on a long bus ride to somewhere educational in the 4th grade. I was sitting next to my BFF Jordan on the bus and across the aisle were two girls who had a binder and a piece of paper out. They were giggling and writing and laughing and pointing and smelling good, standard girl stuff. Being the manly 4th grader I was I leaned over to whisper into Jordan's ear, "Hey man, ask them what they are doing."

Turns out they were playing a magical game called "MASH." Now if you aren't familiar with the game Mash then I can say two things about you, 1. You weren't a 90's kid, and 2. You didn't plan your life around arbitrary counting and random outcomes. But none-the-less, this is when I realized that games make everything more bearable, even if I did end up marrying Mrs. Van Horn, living in a shack, driving a Gremlin, while having 13 kids and being a professional basketball player.

But games can't just be rushed into and done at the drop of a hat. A game has to have a thought behind it, planning, rules, time frames. They have to have an element of risk, excitement, fear, competition, and challenge. If a game is run poorly then no one will want to play next time, trust me, I know. I have done multiple games that in my head sound like a great idea and they have fallen flat on their face because we either played them too long, too often, or they were too easy (or too hard).

But think about what you do when you get together with friends, unless you are only having a boring dinner party with appetizers and cloth napkins, they usually revolve around a game. Whether it be Pictionary or the Superbowl, we love games, they make us laugh, they loosen us up, they give us the opportunity to be our crazy competitive selves and it's okay.

I recently shot flour out of a potato gun at Jr. Highers and High Schoolers for getting an answer wrong, and you know what, they loved every single minute of it. Games are a way that we can worship God through community, they are a way to introduce others into our community, I mean is there a better way to say Jesus loves you by shooting 100 pounds per square inch of flour at someones face? I dare you to find a better way.

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

God is Love

I ran across this little diddy today, it is pretty thought provoking, tell me what you think.

Thursday, September 9, 2010

Coop's Box

Yesterday was a big day in the Anderson household for two reasons. The first being our double stroller came and Sarah is in love with it. More importantly than the stroller was the box that the bohemith kiddy caddy came in. Cooper had his first experience with a box fort.

Now when it comes to building forts I am kind of like Mike Holmes meets a burrowing woodland creature. Need a fort, lets dig a hole, no room to dig? Let's find some scrap wood. No scrap wood? How about those old palm leaves. It is raining outside? Pillows, blankets, and a few staples will suffice. Whatever the material may have been, a fort could be made from them and essentially if I was in a Fort building contest with MacGyver, a gopher, and Wilhuff Tarkin I would win because I don't have a mullet, I am not a rodent, and I wouldn't leave a 2 meter wide exhaust port open for any rebel fighter to come and and blow up my entire Deathstar. In short, forts are my thing.

When I was growing up I remember a time when we were 7 or 8 and for some reason we had 4 or 5 massive boxes just sitting by our garbage can outside. We quickly turned them into our headquarters, command center, barracks, and mess hall all in one. We painted the outside of them, we painted the inside of them, we made tunnels from one box to another box by crawling through a box. I am pretty sure that these structures could have withstood a nuclear holocaust if it came down to that, or at least a strong gust of wind. Eventually the sprinklers came on a our impenetrable fortress collapsed faster than the 2010 Dodgers.

But never mind how awesome we were/are/is the thing that blows me away about Coop's box is that there are no buttons, there is no speaker, no lights, no talking tools, or creepy clowns. The box was simply that, a box. But to Coop it was a new world not yet explored, a fortress of solitude, a darkened lair, a place for his imagination to run as far as it could possibly run.

I wish that as adults we could recapture that sense of awe. The amazingness of a box to a 17 month old is paralleled to how awe-inspired I am when I see snow sitting quietly on top of Half Dome, or how excited I am to see the bright green outfield at AT&T park. The times I am blown away by what God has done in my life and for my life is what my oldest son finds in a simple box, and thats awesome.

What about you? What things make you stop and remember the amazing intricacies around you? What about when you were a kid, what things made you stop and stare in wonderment?

Wednesday, September 8, 2010

I'm a Sick Dad

No really, I am sick and I am a Dad. Actually the two go hand in hand for me right now, it's not so much that if I wasn't sick I wouldn't be a Dad but more of if I wasn't a Dad I probably wouldn't be sick. A week ago I got blindsided by a head cold, sore throat, runny-nose, a bit of a cough, standard. Now normally I can shake a cold like a champ, my medicine is lots of caffeine and denial, it seems to work pretty well for me, but not this time.

You see nowadays we have a second little tiny person living at our house, and no, we haven't adopted the prepubescent version of the 90's phenomenon known as Kris Kross, we just have a second baby and he's really cute. Now Micah is very different than Coop was, you see to say Cooper at all of his meals would be an understatement, he devoured them and he could rarely be satisfied, which lead to him not sleeping very well because he was always hungry. Micah on the other hand doesn't eat all that well, he is still get food and growing like a healthy boy but because he never "cleans his plate" he wakes up wanting more.

And you know what the crazy thing is, he tends to wake up wanting more at 2 in the morning. I have seen 3 am more in the past week than I did in my whole college career, including when I was the captain of Astronomy Club and we were studying the Ant planetary nebula while it was ejecting gas from the dying central star showing symmetrical patterns unlike the chaotic patterns of ordinary explosions, but thats neither here nor there.

Because I get to see the sites and sounds of the middle of the night on a regular basis my body doesn't have the time to kick this cold and because my body is acting very selfishly and all it wants is sleep I feel like I have been in a state of hypnosis, wandering around the halls of work and home not really knowing what is going on but doing what I can regardless of consciousness. Being a dad is awesome, being sick is not. Live long and prosper others.

Also, here's Kris Kross

Thursday, September 2, 2010

Can we use electric cymbals so we can turn them down?

The Fall season of ministry is a hard season, it is when we are trying to boost our numbers, we are trying new things, doing our competition series, games are fed steroids to make them more exciting, I tend to spend more time in preparation to ensure that excellence is a descriptive word that we are buddies with. And so far this Fall has been a blast, we are doing Mac v. PC for High School and Man v. Machine for Jr. High and bth are going well. We shot bean burritos out of water balloon launchers into a crowd of High Schoolers who had to catch them. It's fun stuff, but too often the meat of ministry is overlooked.

Here's what I mean, Youth Ministry is fun, we launch bean burritos, we play games on slip 'n slides and with shaving cream, the music is too loud, the students have too much energy and the hormones are all raging. Sometimes they don't pay for sodas, sometimes students are caught kissing, sometimes I want to kick them out because of the annoying self explanatory repetitive questions they ask, but all the time we put up with the baggage of ministry to show these students the love of Christ.

If we do all of these things, these crazy, fun, sometimes stupid things, and have not love, not for each other and not for Christ then we are a mere clanging cymbal. There are days when I have zero desire to go to the office, there are days when I don't want to be a creepy older guy on students campuses when I go to visit, there are times when I don't want to sacrifice another Friday Night to go to a football game, but I do it not because I am awesome but because God first loved me and I need to do my best to reflect that mirror at the people, and specifically the students around me.

Cheers.