Author Archives: kristen

Small is Beautiful: Economics as if People Mattered

I’ve never been all that interested in macroeconomics, but intrigued by the title, I gave Small is Beautiful by E.F. Schumacher a try. It was a long read, but a good one, and I culled interesting insights from every chapter. Schumacher’s visionary simplicity with the largest elements of society were radical 30 years ago, but incredibly relevant, then and today.

A fair portion of the book is spent emphasizing the way our economy is unsustainable and how quickly we use up our natural resources. Schumacher also explains how little consideration was put towards pollution until it was too late. In the folksy way of a 60s radical, he speaks about the importance of the land in a way that is neither hollow nor flippant, but full of wisdom and grace.

“The whole point is to determine what constitutes progress.” What is progress? What should aid to the third world look like? These questions are where Schumacher particularly shines, explaining a need for intermediate technologies to improve the quality of life for everyone and not just investments which only improve the quality of life for the highest classes and leave the lower ones even more destitute.

No system or machinery or economic doctrine or theory stands on its own feet: it is invariably built on a metaphysical foundation, that is to say, upon man’s basic outlook on life, its meaning and its purpose. I have talked about the religion of economics, the idol worship of material possessions, of consumption and the so-called standard of living, and the fateful propensity that rejoices in the fact that ‘what were luxuries to our fathers have become necessities for us.’

When I read quotes like that one, I couldn’t help but think about what the economic implications of Christian thought are, and how few Americans I know, least of all me, embody them. (10/10, from the library.)

The Plague

The girls have been sick for almost a week and now I’m sick and just plain crabby.  I’d really love some gatorade.  Too bad I didn’t ask Mike to bring me some when I sent him to the store earlier today.  :o/

Winged Feet Design SALE

$10 off all orders until Valentine’s Day.  www.wingedfeetdesign.com

What is Shabby Chic?

The nice description of my dining room at present, with one coat of red paint and no more until the roof leak that appeared in such a timely manner this afternoon (our first!) stops sending a small trail of water between the paint and sheetrock.

That room has been so disagreeable this whole painting process. I was quite thankful tonight that Alabama is Blue Bell country and for the first time in months, we had some in the freezer. I needed some therapy.

ETA: At least Kate likes it. She’s exclaimed multiple times, “Oh mommy! The dining room is BEAUTIFUL!”

Workin’ Hard

Sanding, spackling, sanding again, cleaning, priming & painting multiple coats = a dining room that is no longer orangellow. Pictures after the painting is finished and better blogging then, too!

Winter Blues

I’m a little disappointed that Richmond & Raleigh got snow and even Texas had an ice storm and we got nothing but grey skies, drizzle and chill.

Where Can I Hide from Their Presence?

We haven’t been to Wal-Mart in a month. I’ve blogged about it before, but I just don’t like Wal-Mart. I try to avoid it, even though it’s hard in a small town where Wal-Mart is the largest and cheapest store. We usually drive to the next town over to shop, about seven miles without much traffic but a few traffic lights. Anyhow, even avoiding it, Wal-Mart is still on the tip of my tongue and the front of my mind. When Kate pushes her shopping cart around the house, she is always “going to Wal-mart!” When I recommend my favorite homeopathic teething remedy, I tell where they usually shelve it at Wal-Mart.

On a related note, I would like to confess publicly that I like Starbucks.  I really like independent coffee shops as well, but Starbucks is the closest coffee shop to me and they have above average hot chocolate and decaf drinks.  Due to the kindness of my marvelous husband, I go to Starbucks almost every Monday evening, get something to drink and read for a few hours.  Over the course of the last free months, I’ve come to know several of the employees and we chit-chat about life and books.  I am always surprised that they remember my name and story and was tickled when they made me an extra drink “on the hiz-ouse” this week and gave me a Bearista for Kate.   Some empires, not so evil.

Works for Me Wednesday

I have never done this before, but what the heck…

We love books and we want our kids to love books. Paperback books are cheap, but they wear quickly. I use my trusty packaging tape to reinforce the spine and edges and they are so much sturdier! I learned this trick as a teacher. I’ll try to post pictures later if anyone is interested.

A Severe Mercy

A Severe Mercy by Sheldon Vanauken is one of those books I’ve always heard great things about and never read. It’s of particular importance to a couple I know, which only served to deepen its mystique. I finally read it last week and it certainly met my expectations. I appreciated the integration of both the romantic and spiritual elements of the story, and enjoyed it far more than most autobiographies because the prose was better than most in that classification.

The beauty of the relationship remembered is breathtaking. Sometimes I wondered if everything really happened just that way, but we all reconstruct memories from time to time and even if it is partly fiction and partly fact, it’s nothing but the truth, as Pierce Pettis so aptly sang. The conversion story is also interesting as it captures the classic pattern of the modern coming-to-faith. I think it will help people in the future to understand the classic evangelism of the past.

A quick but thoughtful read. (8.5/10, from the bookshelf, acquired on paperbackswap)

Thoughts on Sharing More

(Another graphic you can use, if you’d like.)

I really like to share what I’ve read here on my blog and get your feedback on it. We’ve had some good conversations. But writing book reviews isn’t easy for me. I give them a little more circulation by cross posting them to Amazon.com. Then I’m sharing not just with my wonderful blog readers, but also with Amazon surfers near and far. I’m still not churning out reviews, but it has improved my sharing a little and every little bit helps.

Overheard

“There are 17 million Anglicans in Nigeria and about 350,000 people in the PCA worldwide.  You could fit our entire denomination in Talledega Motor Speedway.”

Por Favor

I need a few people with different browsers and internet connection speeds (dial-up, dsl, etc.) to report in and tell me how quickly/accurately this page is loading for you. Thank you!
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