Saturday, March 30, 2013

Staying Alive set list

You Should Be Dancing intro
Massachusetts
To Love Somebody
Jive Talking
I Just Want To Be Your Everything
Shadow Dancing
Too Much Heaven
Islands In the Stream
How Can You Mend a Broken Heart
Lonely Days
Emotion
I've Gotta Get a Message To You

Nights on Broadway
More Than a Woman
Night Fever
Wind of Change
If I Can't Have You
I Started a Joke
Fanny Be Tender With My Love
Night Fever
Grease
How Deep Is Your Love
Staying Alive
Tragedy
You Should Be Dancing

Thursday, March 28, 2013

Stuff I've been doing

I have a little time to kill before I get going to LaSalle Network for an interview this afternoon. So what's going down.

1) Made amazing pork chops on Tuesday and I have included the recipe in my previous post.

2) Just finished reading Terry Francona and Dan Shaughnessy's book abut the Boston Red Sox years from 2004-2011. Definitely recommended. Shaughnessy is an excellent sportswriter and in his book, the reader gets a very clear picture of the mindset of Terry Francona not only as he manages during baseball game, but also the physical pain he dealt with, the personalities of the players and staff he had to handle, etc. Definitely would recommend this book.

3) Watched the first two Godfather movies. Tremendous character development, very well shot, classic quotes. They're ranked among the best films ever for a reason. They deserve it.

4) Ran 3.1 miles yesterday at 6.7 and 7.1 mph. I'm training for the 5k on April 20 and it's going to be tough to make my goal, but I'm going to keep training and trying to get faster and better every week.

5) Purchased classic sermons by Donald Miller (Let Story Guide You) and John Ortberg (A Leader of Unimaginable Influence) at Willow Creek this past weekend. Can't wait to listen to them.

This week can't end soon enough. I'm so ready for Easter weekend and my travel next week.

Song pick: "Dirty Angel" Voodoo Johnson



Cuban brined pork chops

Trying something different here...again. This was my dinner Tuesday night. This is a definite go-to dish from now on. The salad really compliments the spice of the pork chops.

  • 1 cup plus 1/4 cup orange juice, divided
  • 1/2 cup plus 1/4 cup fresh lime juice, divided
  • 1/4 cup vinegar
  • 4 (1-inch-thick) bone-in pork chops
  • 4 teaspoons kosher salt
  • 2 teaspoons black pepper
  • 1 teaspoon ground cumin
  • 2 teaspoons garlic powder
  • 2 teaspoons onion powder
  • 2 teaspoons dried oregano
  • 3 tablespoons canola oil
  • 1/4 cup chopped red onion
  • 2 cloves garlic, chopped
  • 1/4 cup white wine
  • 1 cup watercress or lettuce, for garnish
  • 1 Roma tomato, chopped, for garnish
  • 1/2 avocado, sliced, for garnish
In a gallon-sized resealable plastic bag, combine 1 cup orange juice, 1/2 cup lime juice, squeezed limes, and vinegar. Add pork and let it sit and marinate for about 1 hour in refrigerator.
In a small mixing bowl, combine the six dried spices. Pat the pork chops dry with a paper towel and rub both sides with the dry spice mixture.
Heat oil in a very large saute pan over high heat. Place the pork chops in the pan and sear on 1 side until brown. Flip over and turn the heat down to medium-low. Add onion and saute for 2-3 minutes. Then add the garlic and continue to cook until garlic begins to brown. Pour in the remaining 1/4 cup orange juice, 1/4 cup lime juice, and white wine. Simmer until the liquid is slightly reduced and begins to thicken. The chops should be cooked through.
Remove the chops from pan and put on a warm plate. Continue to reduce juices in pan by half; this should take 2-3 minutes. Pour over the chops and serve immediately.
Garnish with watercress, tomatoes and avocado. 

Saturday, March 23, 2013

I should be under the electric blanket now

I'm trying a different approach with this one. Typically, when I write a post, I get inspired, I write the title, and then the content. As the weekend has begun, I just feel compelled to write and whatever I called this post, well, that's the one thing that probably won't have much thought behind it.

1) I turned a job down for the first time in maybe my entire life. It was at a very reputable insurance company, I won't mention the name. The boss seemed like a very nice guy. At the end, the duties of insurance sales/education/consulting/use any word you like, they just felt too far off from what I really wanted to do. Even though Mom later felt like I should have taken it, I think I made the decision I needed to. I suppose we won't really know if it was the right decision until sometime later.

2) I wish I was a little east of Chicago tonight. Not all the way on the east coast, that's for April. Somewhere between Indiana and Philadelphia.

3) Yard House still makes the best chicken nachos I've ever had. It's so simple. They use fresh and high-quality ingredients. I love the fresh tomatoes as opposed to salsa, cilantro, and the guacamole. The chicken breast comes in nice big chunks and there's just the right amount of heat in the red and green sauces. And if that wasn't enough, today I got the full-sized portion for half off, since they have happy hour from 3-7 on Monday-Thursday. Probably cost me about $5.50. That's a complete steal. I'm glad the place is an hour drive from my house, or I might be dropping by every month.

4) It's one of the most sinking feelings I know. I walk downstairs into the basement and walk across two rugs towards my computer. As I step onto the second rug, my foot is suddenly wet. I can't help but moan a little, because I know it's time to clean up for a good hour. The basement flooded again this morning and this time, I can't figure out where the water came from. My theory is a certain pipe in the basement had gotten loose from where it should have been, and then when I ran the dishwasher, the laundry room and downstairs bathroom turned into a wading pool. What made it worse was our wet vacuum is no longer sucking anything, it's basically useless. Mops aren't much help either. So I had to dry all the water with towels and rags, then I tossed them in the dryer for an hour, then began the cycle all over again.

5) So this weekend looks pretty unusual for me. For Saturday, I have a job workshop at Willow Creek in the morning. Then, I have to go to Party City and find a costume for a party later that night. I absolutely cannot remember the last time I went out and bought a costume for any reason. The one catch is there has to be a mask. We'll see what happens, I know one thing, and anyone who truly knows me will know this to be true. I'm gonna make it as good as I possibly can. Nothing half-ass.

6) I am exactly four weeks from running the 5k at Willow Creek. I have been training for the last week, slowly increasing my distance each time. Today, I ran 2.8 miles on the treadmill in 26 minutes. I have to keep reminding myself that I am pushing and stretching my limits each and every time I run. I have a goal in mind that I will reveal in the days leading up to the race and I so very much want to accomplish it. I think in another week or so, I'm going to try running the three miles at 7.0 mph and see how my body handles it.

7) I want the Mets season to start already! I'm so excited I get to go to two games the first week of the season. And for the five tickets I have between the two games, it cost me about $30 total. I just need to find someone who can take the second ticket for the Thursday afternoon game...

8) Still looking for good deals on bobbleheads...

9) Can George Strait please perform in the Chicago area on his farewell tour?!

10) Proverbs 16:3 "Commit to the Lord whatever you do, and he will establish your plans."

Thursday, March 14, 2013

Rant time

I apologize in advance to those who think I take this stuff a little hard. It's cost me a lot in my life. But when you care like I do, it's not realistic to shrug it off like it doesn't matter. And with what I am watching tonight on ESPN, I have to say a couple of things.

1) Let's see...Amare is out for at least six weeks with a bad knee, Melo has had a chronically bad knee longer than anybody knew about, and now, top top it all off, our defensive stalwart, our All-Star center, our heart and soul, Tyson Chandler injured HIS knee tonight. And Jason Kidd is playing like he's 90 years old, 60-year-old's Kenyon Martin and Kurt Thomas are going to be playing 20 minutes a night, Steve Novak is useless against any quality team, and Raymond Felton's and JR Smith's outside shooting are more inconsistent than Stevie Wonder. And as I speak, they just lost to the Denver Nuggets by 31 points on national TV. Their defense allowed 117 points to a decent team! Not a great Denver team. they're decent. No more, no less. There is no joy or buzz watching this New York Knicks team anymore. None. And if Chandler is out more than a week or so, forget it. That is the backbone of this team. They cannot survive that loss. As they have been since 2000, the New York Knicks remain an utter disgrace.

2) NFL free agency is two days old. Let's track how my wonderful New York Jets are doing so far...

Losses: Bart Scott, Calvin Pace, Eric Smith (good riddance to him), Sione Pouha, Mike DeVito, Yeremiah Bell, LaRon Landry. And that's just the defense. Let's also throw in Shonn Greene and very soon, Dustin Keller and both their starting guards, Matt Slauson and Brandon Moore.

Restructured contracts: Antonio Cromartie and Santonio Holmes.

Gains: David Garrard.

That's freaking it...Not to mention the best CB in football, Darrelle Revis, will likely be traded to Tampa within 48 hours. So where is this new general manager?! Oh that's right, getting ready to fire the best head coach this franchise has had in the last 40 years, because he'll be a convenient scapegoat for the absolute dearth of talent on this roster. Same old Jets.

3) The Mets. Well, it's mid-March so I'm taking the wait and see approach. David Wright looks great in the WBC, I'm happy to see that. But can we lay off the Captain American nickname please? Can they get to the Finals before we anoint him? Johan Santana will hopefully return to the starting rotation by mid-April. The outfield still looks horrific, but I would bring in Brennan Boesch, who was just released by Detroit. I will say this though. If Jordany Valdespin and Colin Cowgill could emerge as a platoon leadoff/center field combination, that would go a long way towards making this lineup deeper and formidable. That way, Ruben Tejada can hit second, where's he's more suited to bat anyway. Follow him with Wright, Ike Davis, Marlon Byrd, Daniel Murphy, Lucas Duda, and John Buck, until Travis d'Arnaud comes up from AAA. Then on the bench, you can have the backup catcher, Omar Quintanilla, Justin Turner, Mike Baxter, and the other center fielder. I would be content with that lineup for this season.

4) The Rangers. Currently in ninth place in the East. Last season, I think they took one or two games off at the most. This season, they are taking stretches of games off. On Tuesday, they absolutely no-showed against a Buffalo team that had not won in 10 days and playing against a goalie who had not won a game since November 2011. They are right now just an average team, no more, no less.

5) The final real Big East basketball tournament is happening this week. I don't care anymore. I really don't. With so many teams leaving next year in the name of the Almighty dollar, I just have no excitement for it anymore. I'm washing my hands of the Syracuse Orange.

Thursday, March 07, 2013

Soul Engagement

I was fortunate enough to attend the Compassion and Justice rally at Willow Creek church this past Saturday. I would say about 300 or so people assembled in the Lakeside Auditorium at 8 a.m for the event. Following 20 minutes of worship, we heard a talk from Harvey Carey, a pastor in Detroit. He's simply one of the most dynamic speakers I've ever heard and I think I went to the really just to hear him! I remember when he talked about how we as volunteers and we as Christ-followers are supposed to be the salt of the earth. But the salt is worthless if it stays in the salt shaker. In other words, we have to go out where we can make an impact. Because in the safeness of the shaker, almost no impact can be made.

That talk would have been worth my time alone. But then we had two breakout sessions to go to. There were six different choices about issues such as church diversity and immigration. I chose to go to the Soul Care session. The speaker was Judy Peterson, who is the campus pastor at North Park University. I knew nothing of this woman, never met, never heard her speak. She is known as the walking pastor because she once spent over a year walking across the United States from Seattle to Miami. I guess she took the phrase "walk the walk" very literally. And she didn't hesitate sharing the personal details of her own life. She didn't become a Christ-follower until she turned 26 and I would guess she's in her 40's now. I was amazed when she told us she's had close to a dozen miscarraiges too.

She told us a lot of stories from her walk across America. One of them was when she was learning to milk a cow. The farmer asked her how she tended to squeeze her fingers. Like most of us, she said "Pinky first." But when we're milking a cow, we have to squeeze the other way, or index fingers first. So it takes time to get milking right, because the proper technique is not in our instinct. The point of the story is we have a tendency to revert to natural tendencies. This is why cultivating spiritual disciplines is so important. Most of them are not activities we would tend to do naturally. Fasting, solitude, confession, I admit they don't sound like the most fun things to do. But Judy reminded us that Jesus had to work to be Jesus. Even though there was no sin in him, he took the time to engage himself in spiritual disciplines. He withdrew. He fasted for 40 days. He prayed. He worshipped. He served. That's what I loved about Judy, she took deep truths and made them digestable and practical. Soon after that, she said something that she felt God says to people and I remember it well.

"If you don't know how to be with me, you have no business doing for me."

When I first heard that quote, I thought it sounded harsh. But the more I think about it, the more it resonates in me. How can I serve a God who I only spend a few minutes with at a time? If I want the character of Christ in my life and I want to be a reflection of his love and truth, I have to spend time getting to know him. And then she said something that I will never forget. God doesn't just want me to do Christian things, he wants me to know Christ. And through these disciplines and activities, I can do that. These are the disciplines she emphasized.

Disciplines of abstinence
Solitude: The practice of spending time without any others or any distractions.
Silence: No noise or conversation. Just you and God.
Fasting: Abstain from food, media, entertainment, or anything else that occupies your time.
Frugality: Use your money for purposes outside your needs for a time.
Chastity: 1 Corinthians 7:8
Secrecy: Do not allow anyone to know of the deeds you do or the money you give in order to avoid doing them for the wrong motivations. Only God needs to know.
Sacrifice: Stretch your sense of what you can do without for the sake of those who have less.

Disciplines of engagement
Study: Memorize Scripture and expand your universe of biblical study helps
Worship: Engage in corporate worship and include worship in your own prayer time.
Celebration: Practice being grateful and thankful in your own relationship with Christ and with other believers. Express encouragement and thankfulness to others.
Service: Give your time to the church and/or to others. Ponder tithing your time.
Prayer: Take deliberate steps to pray regularly and with purpose. Praying through the Psalms is a good way to increase "prayer vocabulary."
Fellowship: Hebrews 10:25
Confession: Practice confessing your sins to trusted people who will pray for you and be spiritual allies.
Submission: Submit to the proper people in the proper ways-fight against the sin of pride.

She spent a lot of time talking about solitude; maybe 15 of her 45-minute talk. I think in America that is one of the most counter-cultural spirtitual disciplines of all. I know it in my own life, I can barely drive my car without my radio or Ipod playing. The silence is so uncomfortable and unsettling. But I am starting to think I thrive on distractions, especially in those moments when life feels difficult. Those distractions, like food, music, sports, and social media, can be good things, when placed in their proper perspective. It's not good for me to escape into them. And through solitude, I can escape being bound by these distractions. What freedom that would be! IT's okay to step away, exhale, and recharge.

I'm not sure if I'll get to hear Judy speak again, but I feel really fortunate that I had 45 minutes of her time. She's an excellent communicator and North Park is lucky to have her. I only wish I had a guiding light like her when I was at Gordon.


Tuesday, March 05, 2013

Just that kind of man

Thankful for the God, music, friends, and family that I need to get through the hard times. This week has been harder than most...

I'm not who I was before.
Why do you blame me?
Do you not want to understand?

I can't help but remember the happy days.
There's nothing you can do to change me.
I'm just that kind of man.

Was I easy to deceive?
You had me starting to believe.
All along, I was sinking in the sand.

The best days were coming.
I still think that they will.
I'm just that kind of man.