Monday, March 26, 2012

QUESTION OF THE WEEK


TV, Movies, and There 
Affect On our Lives
By
Thomas Brooke
Movies As Literature Student Writer
 
In the past few months, I have been struck by the amount of references my siblings and I make to the movies and TV shows we watched while growing up. It seems inconceivable to be with my family and not reference the Princess Bride, Monty Python, or The Simpson's.  My family has been molded to a degree by these shows in their entertainment and their educational value as well as their practical value in our daily lives.
 
You may think it’s not creative to copy and insert someone else’s lines into your own family conversation but the creativity is found in the timing and the repetition.  Even while thinking about my dad, who has been in Tampa for the past ten days, I felt connected to Inigo in the Princess Bride when his famous line flashed through my mind, “I want my father back you….”  Well, you know the line.   Although the Princess Bride is not a book based on sports, its thrilling fights, wit and escapes encompassed many hours of my family’s time.  But perhaps more time was spent in quoting and reminiscing then in the actual watching of the film. 
 
While these movies were entertaining to our family, they were very educational too.  From Monty Python, we learned that some systems of government are favored above others. 
 
Listen strange women, lyin' in ponds distributin' swords is no basis for a system of government. Supreme executive power derives from a mandate from the masses, not from some farcical aquatic ceremony.”
 
We learned it was possible to free climb a rope up a sheer cliff, have that rope cut and still manage to hang on and complete the climb.  You can be “some dead” but not “all dead” and miracles can be bought.  While you may have been taught to revere the legend of the Knights of the Round Table, for choosing right rather than might, you should know that Camelot is a silly place. 
 
But it’s not only about the educational and entertaining value, it also provided ideas for staple meals.  One of my favorite family dinners is fried chicken, mashed potatoes, corn on the cob and salad.  This is  Bob’s dinner from What about Bob?.  We know the whole conversation during the meal and after when Leo is saved by Bob’s quick reaction, and the family’s encouragement, “higher, with your knee more!”  (He lives; you looked worried.)
 


  As you can see there are a few movies and shows that have affected my family, from what we eat to our views on proper authority, to simple entertainment.  So the question I pose to you is this: name three movies/TV shows that have affected you growing up and how they still affect you today?

Monday, March 12, 2012

QUESTION OF THE WEEK

Of course I have this book on my shelf; it's somewhere.
 This weekend, I found myself exhausted. A look inside my house and you will see remnants of everything I've done for the past two weeks scattered around. Unpaid bills, camping equipment, cookbooks, a folder full of accompaniment tracks, and a sewing machine are all reminders of projects started and then interrupted. I've broken every organizational law and feel like I need to go back to clutter rehab. If I could implement three of my own personal rules of uncomplicating life, I would be able to see my way to the light soon.

One of easiest ways I have found to cut down on chaos is to put things away where you found them. Not only that, try not to touch it more than once. In other words, don't set it down on the way to where it belongs, put it where it belongs right away.

Another great tip is setting aside time in your busy schedule to clean-up and reorganize yourself after projects. My sister says I'm busier that a one-legged man in a butt-kicking contest. I would agree with her. Having two teenagers who don't drive yet runs me ragged. I thought this kind of thing would ease up as I became more experienced, mature, whatever you wanna call mothering with more years under my belt. I don't feel like I'm better at this yet. Maybe when I'm a grandma. WAIT! I am a grandma!!!

Me zipping through my smooth life!
The last and most important of my rules is, "Don't put off tomorrow what you can do today." Oooo, I felt that one reach out and bite someone. For those of us who do this, pressure is the very ingredient that jump-starts are creativity. Deadlines looming overhead make us face up to and finish the inevitable. The way I tap procrastination energy is to make up a fake deadline in my mind, before the task is due. It works!

How about you? What are three simple ways to make life less complicated? Please share so we can all get better at this!

Thanks for your input,
Chrissy Larson
aka cyberpsalmist