Saturday, September 22, 2007

The Rise of the Provincial

I (Youssef) haven't graced the blog for a while because I somehow garner fewer comments when I say more words. I'm going to try to include random pictures of Lily and maybe a few videos. That, I hope, will get people through this observation of mine.

I have a statement. I believe we, the observers of society, are noticing a significant change in American society.

The old ways of doing things are starting to fade--and I'm wondering who else notices. Watch. I'll take you through all of my observations before I fully state my point in the conclusion.

First of all, I just had "alternative medicine" advice from a state practitioner of medicine. Get this staight: I went to a normal doctor. White-coat, stethescope, expensive glasses from which to look down at me -- the whole thing. And she told me "Throw away that Visine stuff. Here, just put a hot washcloth on your eye. Wait 5 to 10 minutes. Then, rub your eyeball with your eyelids closed (from the outside to the in) for a couple of minutes. Do that every two hours, okay?"
There was a time when, if you had PINK-EYE (yes, Conjunctivitis!), the doctors issued you and your five closest human relations anti-biotic eyedrops. Is that shocking?

"So what?" I can hear most of you say.
Watch.
Alternative medicine has long been in the fringe areas, something whispered about at knitting circles or dismissed as "wives' tales." Pharmaceutical companies have long dominated the medicine industry with regular Western medicine, as mentioned in some of my previous entries. The overdosage of headache medicine, Zoloft, and rampant diagnoses... Has anyone else noticed that period only a while ago? (This is some time when I was in high school in Texas... so late 1990s, particularly after 1997.) The pharmaceutical dominance of medicine has always seemed suspicious to me: are these people making money off of TRYING to make me better. Isn't it in their best interest for me to continue to be sick?
So -- NOW,
has anyone found it odd now that a state practitioner (a doctor hired by the stodgiest of stodgy institutions) gave me "alternative" medical advice?
I hope so... because now I'm going to point to something even odder.

Has anyone else gone to a Farmer's Market? (just by the by)

The proportion of doctors who are promulgating "alternative medicine" is related to the proportion of average citizens who are peddling nostrums--that's a word from the medieval period that hasn't changed in meaning here, as in a mock medicine that has no normal likelihood of working. Herbal medicines are from the different manufacturers who are certainly no longer the same pharmaceutical giants we're familiar with, like Gerber and other brands. Ever notice how every pack of Airborne or box of Emergen-C has this statement printed on the side: "These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease."
What does that make it? Candy?
NOTE: I love Emergen-C, by the way. I'm just using it to catch more attentions than if I referenced a real nostrum that I saw advertised the other day. That, I believe, would be libel -- this is simply shock literature. ;)

These "nostrums" (whether questionable or legitimate) are meeting a level of success! Why? Friends of the traditional western medicine would say that, "Because our doctors have opened the door by lending legitimacy to these questionable prescriptions, people are following their lead."

What I'd say instead was the cause was that the public, who don't appreciate doctors even when they can afford them, have learned to trust people who seem like experts. Hasn't the pharmaceutical industry had to convince people to purchase their product in the same way that salesmen do? Now a portion of the society know the same arguments and sales-tactics that the pharmaceutical companies (and the FDA for that matter) have used -- and they are using these tactics on the public who have been trained to accept these arguments?
(Anti-oxidants, anyone?) The next person who knows how many cells, genomes, or the proper spelling deoxyribonucleic acid can make as many sales as the doctor who has spent years studying Gray's Anatomy (the book, not the show.)


Now, the FDA's stamp doesn't mean everything--we all say--because for centuries, people have gotten well on their own, right? (Hence the popularity of "organic foods." We're ASSUMING that these are the fruits and vegetables and meats in their original form--and we're assuming that original is healthier. If the populace was making that argument in a university, rhetoricians would be pulling their hair out.
{Who would be surprised to know that bird poo was the primary ingredient in the fertilizer used in medieval home gardens? For the Zionistic effect, this fertilizer recipe originated in Israel! That ought to lend it the same legitimacy as the FDA, right?}

[ Now, I should point out here, that there is a chance that the conspiracy theorists can be right: Emergen-C and Airborne are brought to us by the same folk who prescribed every 5th-grade boy Ridalin. The pharmaceutical companies, since the Mendel made his discovery of the cell, have been in the position to gather fortunes off of the diagnosis and subsequent release of prescriptions. Now that the FDA no longer performs the duty of legitimizing drugs to the public, these companies are trying to avoid FDA certification. However, I don't think so elaborate a ruse could be accomplished. ]

Now that I've confused you all as far as what to believe about medicine, let's briefly touch on the slip-shod square dance that is education.
I would have you all read Douglas Wilsons "Recovering the Lost Tools of Learning" or at least his text, Dorothy Sayers's "The Lost Tools of Learning."

The fiasco surrounding the prohibitive cost of schools is going to have a lasting effect on our economy right? That's why some state organizations have instituted 401(k)s that are designed for college savings.
What about the average education of our citizens?
Then, what about the lowering of educational standards?

Those are the questions raised once by people worried about elementary and middle and high school educations. Money for them wasn't a catalysing factor... but those same arguments apply to college education -- and money is a factor in that issue. How long will it be before private schooling institutions extend their programs into secondary education? Not long. (I myself already have half a mind to start a university for secondary eduation, albiet someplace a la the movie "Rejected.")

Between these two topics, are you seeing an over-throw of "experts"? The people whom society has trusted for so long, professors and doctors, have begun to let us down. (There are a smattering of articles that reference this phenomenon - and I will assume you've read some of them or at least have wondered this question yourself, "Why can't I do a better job at that?")


Now, what about some other areas? This de-expertizing phenomenon has spread to other places, but I'm going to point to an area dear to us: our work.


Many small business and investing books start with a forward that discusses the insecurity in trusting a company to take care of an employee's life long needs. Then follows a prologue about the rising popularity of self-employment and starting small businesses. I'm raising my standard of readership and asking you to at least steal a few minutes at a bookstore/library and read one or two of those -- and I'll spare your eyes covering those topics.

De-expertizing our work obviously creates these phenomenons, but it also carries these movements to fruition. Watch.
If enough people start their own business, some fraction are going to realize it's not the only business they can start. (Another portion don't realize this and over-commit and find themselves trusting a business that they themselves created, like a carpenter praying to his own carvings.)
If enough people start several businesses, what will this teach to growing employees or on-lookers? That their own work is insecure; their future lies in their hands (two sides of the same coin) -- a good fraction will follow suit and start providing businesses of their own (or services) to compliment their work long into retirement.
(The concept of retirement will fade away at the same speed as the speed at which people develop successful businesses doing what they love. In this projected in-between time, people will view retirement as when they are able to just do the jobs they like.)
When the populace is able to get more services from local venders, the concept of "Brand Names" will disappear as the respectibility of those local venders rises.

And here lies the conclusion... (partly because I'm tired of formatting pictures into this long blog entry) ...
The world is changing because society is losing grips on its traditional supports. I pronounce the deconstructivism period of postmodernism over. People are building now. People have finished testing the old ways against the new circumstances -- and they're fashioning the new tools.

Here is where the Christian's work becomes most potent in affecting society. We all are in this turmoil -- believer and non-believer. As the church adjusts, it has the opportunity -- Lord willing -- to establish the conventions (the new supports and systems) that future generations will be relying on.

Shocking, isn't it? God's people may be used in these dark times to create lasting change--God willing. Always His will.

Tuesday, September 04, 2007

The Best Penny-Dreadful

My own comments on the Harry Potter debate have always sounded so strong because I am always arguing from the fact that so many people who oppose Harry Potter are so vehement. Of course, I'm not imagining Harry Potter as Christ at all, but it may seem that way because I'm trying so hard to show people what is so good in these books.
I found an article that, if I've shown everyone what it says, allows me to rest my peace. It's by Alan Jacobs from Wheaton College (where Youssef almost went) and the thing that Youssef really liked about it was that the author actually argued from the text. Here are some enlightening quotes, followed by the link...


"There is no class of vulgar publications about which there is, to my mind, more utterly ridiculous exaggeration and misconception than the current boys' literature of the lowest stratum."[attributed to Chesterton] Chesterton is perfectly happy to acknowledge that these books are not in the commendatory sense "literature," because "the simple need for some kind of ideal world in which fictitious persons play an unhampered part is infinitely deeper and older than the rules of good art, and much more important."

"And above all, what Chesterton loves about the penny dreadful is this: 'It is always on the side of life.'"

http://www.christianitytoday.com/bc/2007/005/1.47.html

Friday, August 31, 2007

The artwork that is now in the Gallery

This first one "Harpistry" might be my favorite. And it took the best picture because I hadn't put the glass on the picture yet. :) (It's 20x24)

This one "Knot, eye" looks a lot better in person... the colors aren't as true in the picture because the glass was on the frame and I was trying not to get a glare, but the blue and reds are the same as the previous one... it's just a bad photo. This is the smallest as it's only 11x14
I really like this one as well. It was probably the hardest to do because of the shading in the roses petals. I used to draw roses all the time when I was younger. :) (I can't remember the size of this one but it is in between the sizes of the previous two...)


This is "Trinity," and it would probably be a good time to say that I put an eye shape (or in this case three eyes as I was thinking about the Trinity at the time that I made it) as a way to put God in all of my pictures. Some are more subtle than others depending on the picture.

This is "Haven," Youssef wants a sail boat some day and I made this for him... though now he wants to sell it for monetary gain. :) I'll have to make him another one some day (It's 36x24 and is going for $800 at the gallery so I guess I don't really mind. ... as long as someone buys it.)

And of course the other one that is in the gallery Youssef already put a picture up of it several posts ago, so there it is. I'm tired of making these for now and really want to scrapbook (as I'm still finishing up last Christmas! ... I'm so behind, and I really need to catch up before this Christmas and the new baby of course.) ;)

Saturday, August 25, 2007

Funny Lily things

I was folding clothes today and in the laundry basket Lily saw her blanket. I pulled it out and showed her how clean it was by sniffing it and holding it up for her to sniff (she loves to sniff things. She even entertained herself for about 20 min. the other day with an empty tea bag box by letting all her dolls, teddy bears, the cat, me, and herself sniff it over and over again.) Anyway, she really liked the idea of sniffing the clean clothes, so she pulled each thing out of the basket and sniffed it before throwing it on the floor. That cracked me up. :)
She says "go" now when she's going to run or jump off of things. When Youssef is playing with her and throwing her around he says "1, 2, 3..." and now she says "go" then he throws her in the air. She loves that.

The other day when I was making popcorn, Lily opened the cupboard and found the bowl almost as big as the popcorn bowl and held it up to me saying, "pease?" That was a pretty big hint that she'd like some (or actually a lot of) popcorn.

Just today she got into the diaper bag and took out the little changing pad and a diaper and proceeded to lay down on said changing pad while holding the diaper and looking perplexed as to how she was to change herself. We got the hint there too. ;)

She's becoming quite independant.

Wednesday, August 15, 2007

About Harry Potter (Part 2)

First off... You may be wondering why this seems to be such a big deal to me.
Actually, it's because Rowling has done just what Youssef has said he wants to do as a writer. Rowling is a christian who wrote a series of books to a secular society. The books were filled with a christian world view that became more and more obvious as the series progressed. She affected our culture towards a mindset that could be more open to accepting God.

Now before any of you freak out about that statement and think I'm being unholy and believe that we should all live in a christian getto and never affect the world around us, I would like to point out that other religions and ideas have been incrementally affecting our culture and most of the time we don't know it! When you next watch a movie or read a book really try to look for those underlying messages that have small references to accepting homosexuality or humanistic ideas. When you realize how much of that is affecting our culture what is wrong with a christian doing the same thing? (And *shock* people even liking the books. Perhaps there is a desire for that world view in our society... maybe people are seeking God in some fashion and don't realize it?)

A really good web site to look at in regards to Harry Potter is http://hogwartsproffesor.com He wrote a book called "Looking for God in Harry Potter" the only christian book that I could find that actually sounded reasonable and well thought out. (The few that I found who were against the books didn't really have any real reason and mostly sounded like every thing they said came from fear and an unreasonable stretching of issues that wheren't really there... in my opinion.)

Someone who commented on that website said the following that I found to be very helpful.

-In Vine’s Complete Expository Dictionary of the Old and New Testament, look up “witch or witchcraft” and it refers you to “sorcery” which is the Greek word pharmakia, from which we get our English word pharmacy. This word “primarily signified ‘the use of medicine, drugs, spells’; then ‘poisoning’; then ’sorcery.’ In ’sorcery,’ the use of drugs, whether simple or potent, was generally accompanied by incantations and appeals to occult powers, with the provision of various charms, amulets, etc, professedly designed to keep the applicant or patient from the attention and power of demons, but actually to impress the applicant with the mysterious resources and powers of the sorcerer.”
I worked with Wycliffe Bible Translators (publications) and I assure you that the shamanistic power among indigenous peoples is real and Satanic, and is used to control and terrorize. There is a world of difference between such sorcerer/shamans and the mechanical or technological “magic” in Harry Potter. There is no sorcery, occultism nor incantational magic in the Potter books (the first is actually called Harry Potter and the Philospher’s Stone, but American publishers changed it).



Therefore, if we as christians assume the books are evil because there are words such as witch, magic, wand, and so forth aren't we doing a disservise to the truth? The Bible does not condem a person for holding a stick and (pretending as the books are fiction) that they can say a word and their glasses will come zooming to their hand from wherever they lost the glasses in the house. Is "magic" like that a sin? My point was that if you tell people that "Yes any 'magic' is sinful" and they can see that that kind of magic isn't actually wrong couldn't they possibly not understand what the truly evil magic is? When Eve said that they couldn't eat the fruit on the tree and not to touch it either (going a step farther than God told them), but when she did take the fruit "and saw that it was good to eat" perhaps noticing that touching it didn't do anything bad to her she thought eating it would be all right too, but it wasn't. The sin wasn't in holding it or looking at it in this case it was exactly what God had said, "Don't eat it." I'm not saying that you should look into incantational magic and test the waters, but not actually do it. The Bible says that is a sin. It does not say however that pretending that you can fly or turn a mouse into a teacup is a sin. Problems happen when we add to what God says.


Youssef feels called to write books for a secular audiance, and I would love it if he was able to write something that would become as popular as the Harry Potter books. Then be able to share his faith with so many people who would listen to him! That is why this topic is important to me. I'm sure that at some point he will recieve critisizm from christians about what he writes just like Rowling did (and does), but does that mean that he should write books for a christian getto and never attempt to reach out to our society at large and incremetaly bring some minds into an openness to hearing God?

That is why I liked the Harry Potter books. That's why it bother's me when Christians reject them without knowing what the Bible says about incantational magic. Not understanding that what the Bible condems, Harry Potter does not promote.

(To which my origional post could have been title "Let's stop shooting down people on our side" or something to that effect.) :)