A personal blog

  • This resonates.

    From @richnewman:

    I suddenly felt like I had an online network that I had to “manage” (not just on Facebook, though I am going to talk now only in terms of Facebook, since that’s where I lived the lion’s share of my online life). This idea of management, of course, implies a certain level of accountability, and so I spent more and more time monitoring Facebook, keeping track of what people were saying, finding things to say myself—which meant I was spending less and less time doing my own blogging, doing my own writing, my own reading…well, you get the idea.

  • 🐶 We rescued Dusty today. Welcome to the family!

  • Can you help me replace OneNote?

    I think I’m ready to think about replacing OneNote, and I think I need helping finding something.

    As great as OneNote is on the desktop, I’m pretty frustrated with how the mobile works, especially when clipping articles from the web.

    I’m looking for something that can clip text from the web, provides easy search across notebooks, and works well on the desktop (Windows) and mobile (iOS).

    I’m not opposed to paying for something that works well!

  • TIL text.npr.org is a thing, thanks to @eli. This is very cool.

  • Got a chuckle out of this.

  • 🏃🏻‍♂️ 6 mile run today felt great.

  • John Bacon, writing for Anglican Pastor:

    In our current climate, it would be very Anglican to return to the feet of the early, divided Church, and ask how we could more fully participate in the life of the Triune God in Holy Communion and in sanctified community.

    It would also do us well to remember that Christendom and the Church are related, but not the same thing. The death of Christendom does not spell the death of the Church. Pentecost took place in a pagan empire, around three hundred years prior to the conversion of Constantine.

  • 🎵 Sermon inspiration this week