November 30, 2009

Because we all need a laugh on Monday...

Having a case of the Mondays?

This might help.

A college comedian takes on Pachelbel's Canon, playing the cello as a kid, and the musical sameness of modern pop and rock... And it's hilarious.

November 29, 2009

Sunday Poems - Billy Collins's "Marginalia"

I've decided to post a favorite, thought-provoking, or just plain fun poem here each Sunday. Today's inaugural poem is "Marginalia" by Billy Collins, a wonderful, wonderful poem that only gets better when read aloud. Enjoy!

Marginalia - Billy Collins

Sometimes the notes are ferocious,
skirmishes against the author
raging along the borders of every page
in tiny black script.
If I could just get my hands on you,
Kierkegaard, or Conor Cruise O'Brien,
they seem to say,
I would bolt the door and beat some logic into your head.

Other comments are more offhand, dismissive -
"Nonsense." "Please!" "HA!!" -
that kind of thing.
I remember once looking up from my reading,
my thumb as a bookmark,
trying to imagine what the person must look like
why wrote "Don't be a ninny"
alongside a paragraph in The Life of Emily Dickinson.

Students are more modest
needing to leave only their splayed footprints
along the shore of the page.
One scrawls "Metaphor" next to a stanza of Eliot's.
Another notes the presence of "Irony"
fifty times outside the paragraphs of A Modest Proposal.

Or they are fans who cheer from the empty bleachers,
Hands cupped around their mouths.
"Absolutely," they shout
to Duns Scotus and James Baldwin.
"Yes." "Bull's-eye." "My man!"
Check marks, asterisks, and exclamation points
rain down along the sidelines.

And if you have managed to graduate from college
without ever having written "Man vs. Nature"
in a margin, perhaps now
is the time to take one step forward.

We have all seized the white perimeter as our own
and reached for a pen if only to show
we did not just laze in an armchair turning pages;
we pressed a thought into the wayside,
planted an impression along the verge.

Even Irish monks in their cold scriptoria
jotted along the borders of the Gospels
brief asides about the pains of copying,
a bird signing near their window,
or the sunlight that illuminated their page-
anonymous men catching a ride into the future
on a vessel more lasting than themselves.

And you have not read Joshua Reynolds,
they say, until you have read him
enwreathed with Blake's furious scribbling.

Yet the one I think of most often,
the one that dangles from me like a locket,
was written in the copy of Catcher in the Rye
I borrowed from the local library
one slow, hot summer.
I was just beginning high school then,
reading books on a davenport in my parents' living room,
and I cannot tell you
how vastly my loneliness was deepened,
how poignant and amplified the world before me seemed,
when I found on one page

A few greasy looking smears
and next to them, written in soft pencil-
by a beautiful girl, I could tell,
whom I would never meet-
"Pardon the egg salad stains, but I'm in love."

November 28, 2009

Well Worth a Trip to NJ

Yesterday, my final full day with Daryl before (sniff, sniff) dropping him off at the Philly airport this afternoon, we decided to explore a landmark we've wanted to visit for months: Grounds for Sculpture. It was awesome. As Daryl said several times, "Why didn't we do this sooner?"



Grounds for Sculpture is located about 10 minutes from Princeton in the industrial part of Hamilton, NJ. It's $8 for students, $10 for adults, and it's an enormous 35-acre landscaped park full of sculptures. It's so cleverly laid out that you'll often be confronted with an enormous work of art when you climb over a hill or turn around.



There's a warming hut, a gazebo, a Wind in the Willows themed restaurant (with dinners starting at $35 we contentedly ate fruit snacks while checking it out from the bridge), and over 200 sculptures of all types, shapes, and sizes.



Some of the sculptures are modeled after impressionist paintings. Recognize the one above, with the red poppies?


 



This one made me walk around quoting lines from "So I Married an Axe Murderer" in a faux-Scottish accent, much to Daryl's annoyance.

"HEAD! Pants, NOW!"

"Honestly, that kid's head is like Sputnik! It's round, but quite pointed in places!"





There are also several indoor galleries that have rotating exhibits. For the next month they have these beautiful and intricate metal sculptures by Albert Paley, who I had never heard of before, but now love.







Daryl always hits on the 19th century women... I think it's the hats that really draw him in...





An 8-foot tall King Lear. It was windy and gusty all day, so I loved how this giant metal man actually looked like he was reacting to the elements.

I especially appreciated the fact that the whole place seemed to have a sense of humor. I love art, but the snobby parts of art culture get old pretty quickly. This place was the anti-snob version of every nose-in-the-air art museum I've been to (except for the ridiculous Princeton-esque father dragging around his four kids and making comments like, "Now you see the angle on this one signifies that the artist was commenting on the idea of light. It is meant to be viewed from this angle, here." The kids looked like they wanted to kill themselves).

But aside from the odd stage-father, it's a great place to enjoy art, enjoy nature, and just play. It's fun to see the sculptures change as the daylight does. There are no guards or ropes or security cameras. Just hundreds of sculptures spread out among trees and flowers and ponds. You're allowed to climb on many of the sculptures, for crying out loud. You don't have to stay on the trails. Any little alley that looks fun is open for exploration. And they seem to have thought of everything. It's open year-round, which seemed odd, as it gets pretty cold and snowy here by February or so. But by the time Daryl and I were getting chilly (he packed to come out so quickly that he only had a hoodie to keep him warm!) we stumbled upon a warming hut with a big fire place. Can't beat that.

Well worth a visit.

November 27, 2009

Why Being a Student is Actually a Good Thing

I am a student.

For the past 22 years of my life (with the exception of one year off to work) I have been a student. My job is to read and study, to write papers and to do research. I've known I've had a nerdy streak all my life. This streak really started growing in high school. It was not very normal to like learning at Northland Pines High. We had a period called "resource," which was intended to be a 35-minute study hall each day. I remember sitting in resource as a sophomore and reading some novel or other for fun. It was probably Robert Louis Stevenson - I got on quite a kick of his for awhile. Anyway, I was quietly reading this novel when the girl who sat behind me (who was, in ways I was not and will never be, cool), tapped me on the shoulder. She rarely deigned to speak to me, a nerdy nerd, so I quickly turned around.

"Is that for a class?" she asked.

"No," I replied. "I'm just reading it on my own."

"Huh," she said, her thickly eye-lined eyes studying my own, quiet confused. "Well... do you want to borrow my Cosmo?"

Nice of her to ask. Surely anyone reading a book that wasn't for a class must be fresh out of magazines.

That was twelve years ago, and I'm still the one reading the books for fun, even if they're textbooks. At this point, it looks like I'm about six months from the end of my formal education. In the coming months I will begin to look for a ministerial job and end my official time as "student." I've been reflecting a lot lately on what it has meant to be a student, how students are treated in our culture, and on how I will continue to be a student even after the end of this degree.

This summer I interned as a hospital chaplain at a hospital in north Jersey. My supervisors were always quick to point out that if I got stuck in an awkward or difficult situation, it was always okay to proclaim my student status. The "I'm a student" or "I'm still in training" line would hopefully give people more compassion and understanding if I made a misstep. Yet, I often found the opposite.

The "I'm just a student" line was often greeted with raised eyebrows and a brush off. "Oh," people would say. "Can you get me the nurse?" In a teaching hospital where nine out of ten doctors were still "students" in the sense of being interns or in residency, a student chaplain seemed unprofessional. I quickly learned to keep that information to myself as much as possible. After all, who really wants someone to "practice" ministry on them?

Then I realized how I was introducing myself. "Just a student." I was demeaning my position on my own, leading them to believe I really was just. I had decided that being a student chaplain was far, far less than being an actual chaplain, and projecting my fear of inadequacy all over my patients and their families. With prayer and some wise instruction from my supervisors, I soon I changed the wording, and the confidence with which I presented myself. And suddenly I began doing ministry, not just playing at it.

These tricky moments helped me to reflect on what it means to be a student. Often we think of being a student as not knowing it all yet, or in the process of formation. If that is the definition, then I hope to always be a student. Both Goethe and Nietzsche agreed that those who "cease to change are not my friends." There is something about Christianity that necessitates discipleship and formation. We don't know it all yet. In fact, we never will.

The best pastors I know are all, by their own admission, still students. My CPE supervisors admitted to learning from us even as they taught. These role models of mine study the Scriptures, the tradition, our culture, their congregations. Many of them have returned or are currently working on advanced degrees to keep sharp and broaden their knowledge bases. There are different types of learning, of course. Some of us aren't the bookish types, and gravitate more toward the study of art or music, relationships or culture. That's fine - learning comes from all over, the key is to keep being open to it, and to seek it out. There's a whole crazy, interesting, wonderful world out there.

One of my favorite things about my parents is that they love to learn. My mom is always delving into some new craft or art project, and back when my sisters and I were homeschooled, she read dozens of books on the subject in order to help us succeed. My dad picks up things from baking bread to using Facebook to writing nonfiction. They are both eager to explore the world, and in part because of them, I am, too.

The moment we all decide that the student status is a lowly one, rather than the highest one, we stop growing ourselves. So be kind to the students in your life, or to yourself if you are one. Give your favorite student a hug - holing up with books and papers is often lonely. Admit to not knowing something this week, and ask to learn from someone who knows. There's no such thing as "just a student."

November 26, 2009

Thursday Recipes - Pumpkin Pie with GF Crust




I've gone gluten-free. Yes, I know... For those of you who know me, this must be a shock. I've always been bread-girl. I was such a fussy eater as a kid that I would often find myself eating just the bread portions of a meal (rolls, tortillas, pizza crust) and turning my nose up at the other parts. I was that kid who often had a ball of white bread wadded up in her fist at the lunch table. I didn't just like bread, I liked squishy, white bread.

I also normally bake glutinous foods like a crazy person, especially when I'm stressed. There's an episode of Grey's Anatomy where Izzie, one of the main characters, has a breakdown. Her roommates know she's losing it because every inch of counter space is covered with muffins, and she's still making more. That's not far from how I usually act during finals week... There are brownies and cupcakes and cookies and breads on every available inch of kitchen space. Daryl finally made me promise to start giving the stuff away so we didn't turn into human blimps.

Anyway, when I visited Daryl in Nashville back in August, I decided to go gluten-free for a couple of weeks. The point in this was more practical than experimental - one of the friends he is living with has celiac, and gets really sick if she eats gluten. Since she and her husband are being incredibly kind and gracious in giving Daryl a place to crash for the year (hi, Ted and Heather!), the last thing I wanted to do was accidentally poison her with stray cookie crumbs. So I just avoided it entirely. It's amazing the amount of fresh fruits and veggies I found myself eating when cinnamon rolls were no longer an option...

And something crazy happened. I felt great. I've always had minor stomach troubles. Nothing truly terrible, but bad enough that I have always felt lethargic and crampy after eating. Enough to send me to a couple of doctors over the past three years, both of whom proclaimed it stress. I got a lot of fairly worthless advice, from "do yoga" to "eat more whole wheat" to "try to cut stress out of your life" to solve the digestive troubles. Um... okay... when I'm a full-time graduate student who needs to hold down a couple of part-time jobs to put food on the table, how exactly should I eliminate stress? Also, eating whole wheat made me feel terrible. So nyet to that.

But being a bit obtuse, I thought I felt better because I finally had time to rest for the first time in months, not because I had given up gluten for a time. My ordination exams were over, I was sleeping in most days, and I had little work to do for the first time in over a year. So when I got back to Jersey, I went back to my usual diet (bagels for breakfast, sandwiches for lunch, pizza for dinner, etc., etc., etc.). And again, I felt terrible. "Hmmm..." I thought.

So I went back to being totally gluten-free in early September, and I've avoided it since (except for a few meals at friends houses where I indulged... and then immediately regretted it). I'm going to get myself tested for celiac and other complications in the coming months. I'm praying I just have gluten sensitivity and not anything more serious.

In the meantime, I've discovered the fun of gluten-free cooking. There are loads of good products and recipes out there, and for those of you who are interested in giving it a try, I thought I'd post a recipe I've tried and liked each week on Thursday. Today's is a new one - the finished product is currently cooling on a wire rack in our tiny kitchen. It looks delicious, and I'm hopeful that it will be. If not, expect this post to disappear tomorrow...

For today, in honor of Thanksgiving, I give you: Pumpkin Pie with GF Crust

GF Crust:
  • 1-1/2 cups Pamela's Baking & Pancake Mix (This stuff is pricey but great - it eliminates all the random types of flours and xantham gum you have to mix to get a normal-ish gluten-free flour mixture, and it can be used to make everything from pancakes to cornbread to brownies. Most bigger grocery stores have started to stock it, but you can also find it here.)
  • 2 teaspoons sugar
  • 4 tablespoons unsalted butter 
  • 2 tablespoons oil
  • 1/4 cup ice water
Yield: one, 9-inch pie crust

1. Combine the baking mix and sugar in a bowl.
2. Cut butter into flour mixture with two knives until butter is in very small pieces.
3. Add oil, then ice water, slowly until dough comes together, not sticky. You may not need all of the water.
4. Press dough into pan with fingers, the thinner the better. (Rolling it out is much too tricky, as it doesn't stick together like normal crust will.)


Pumpkin pie filling (naturally gluten-free!):
  • 3/4 cup white sugar
  • 1 teaspoon ground cinnamon*
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 1/2 teaspoon ground ginger
  • 1/4 teaspoon ground cloves
  • 2 eggs
  • 1 (15 oz) can pumpkin
  • 1 (12 oz) can evaporated milk
  1. Preheat oven to 425 degrees F.
  2. Combine sugar, salt, cinnamon, ginger and cloves in small bowl. Beat eggs lightly in large bowl. Stir in pumpkin and sugar-spice mixture. Gradually stir in evaporated milk. Pour into pie shell.
  3. Bake for 15 minutes. If you're using the crust above, cover the edges of the crust with tinfoil or it will burn.
  4. Reduce temperature to 350 degrees F.; bake for 40 to 50 minutes or until knife inserted near center comes out clean. Cool on wire rack for 2 hours. Serve immediately or refrigerate. 
* You can also substitute 1 Tablespoon pumpkin pie spice for all of the spices in the pie filling (especially if you are a financially strapped student who doesn't want to buy several $6 jars of spices... ).

Yum. Pie. And no tummy aches, to boot!

 

November 25, 2009

On the Joys and Difficulties of a Long-Distance Marriage

Last year around this time Daryl was neck-deep in PhD applications. Some seminary friends of ours refer to difficult academic periods as when a diligent student's "face is turned toward Mordor."




That was definitely true for round one of applications (back in 2006). But this time, round two, was easier. Not easy, mind you, but easier. Daryl knew the ropes much better, he had some great connections with other PhD folk at our seminary, and he was admittedly a stronger scholar and thinker the second go-round. And so we sent them off. And waited. And while Daryl was technically the only one applying, I felt as though I was applying, too. After all - the fate, location, and job possibilities for our next 4-7 years of life were hanging in the balance. Where I would look for my first pastoring job depended on which program accepted him. And so we waited. And prayed. A lot.

Daryl ended up earning a great spot in two very well-respected programs, and we had a tough decision to make. I'll let him post about all of those factors someday, if he wants. But to make a long story short, he (and we) chose Vanderbilt University in Nashville. With my program unfinished in New Jersey, we made the additionally difficult decision to spend the year apart. He would begin his program and I would finish mine. This took some explaining.

But now we're three months in to the long-distance marriage, and despite the occasional raised eyebrows, we are managing quite well with a situation that's less than ideal. So for today's post, I'd like to share the three main things I've learned about being married to someone who is doing a PhD in a different state.

1. It stinks.

Daryl and I did the long-distance dating thing on a few occasions. One summer I worked in Carbondale, Colorado while he studied in Boston. For six months I lived in downtown Chicago while he lived out in Wheaton. Both of these were inconvenient and annoying, but not downright lousy. We traveled to see each other often, had memorable visits and vacations, and made the best of things.

A long-distance marriage, however, feels different. I'm not waiting to visit my boyfriend, someone of whom I am very fond. Now I'm waiting to visit my husband, the person who falls asleep with me at night, the one who knows me better than anyone else, the one who finishes my sentences and knows exactly how I like my eggs cooked. I believe now more than ever what Scripture says about a man leaving his father and mother and becoming united to his wife. We really do feel like a unit, not two separate people. And part of my unit is all the way over in middle America for 9/10ths of this year. It not only stinks, it aches. Boo.

To those who've asked if we drive back and forth, we could... if it wasn't for West Virginia. West Virginia adds a good 7 hours to what would be a 6-hour drive.


I've also found myself reverting to many of my bad habits of singleness. I keep odd hours, staying awake until 2am nearly every night. I am ridiculously disorganized with everything but the essentials (work papers, school papers, and plane tickets). I will actually go out and buy more cheap clothing to avoid doing laundry in our icky, flooded basement... I know, right? It's bad. The habits of discipline and diligence that Daryl naturally has (he eats vegetables, regularly! he exercises, regularly! he starts his papers weeks before they are due, regularly!) rub off on me when he's here, but when he's gone it's up to me, and I'm not always great at them.

2. It isn't quite as awful as I expected in many ways.

Yet, I am not in despair. I find myself much less lonely than I had anticipated. With work and school and other activities that fill my days, I don't mind coming home to a quiet house. In fact, I've begun to look forward to a few hours in the evening (or half a dozen, depending on if I do indeed stay up past 2 am...) to read, play my piano or guitar, or catch up on emails.

I've enjoyed the extra time I have to cultivate new and old friendships and to host family. For the first two weekends I was alone my parents and sister visited. I've been able to reach out to some new Princeton folks, when I probably wouldn't have had the time if Daryl was here. I've been able to volunteer a bit back at my CPE hospital, doing an overnight on-call and signing up for more. One of the random clichés I threw around back when I was single and trying to make myself feel better about being single was that single people have more time to love on other people and to serve the Lord. In a lot of ways, I'm discovering, this is actually true.

Also, Daryl is so happy with his program. It's hard for me to be grumpy about the geographical distance when I call him and he can't wait to share the new ideas he's come across and the conversations he's had and the books he's reading. And the decision been confirmed in a thousand ways that it was the right one. And doing a hard thing is always easier if you know that the hard thing is also the right thing.

3. It is much more awful than I expected in some ways.

What I really wasn't prepared for about this year was how difficult it is to go from a household of two to a household of one. All of a sudden weekly chores that once were once halved were all mine. The car (which I usually don't pay any attention to) needed its oil changed. The kitty litter needed refreshing. The closet door was broken. The trash needed to be taken out. I invited friends over for a party and didn't have the food ready when everyone arrived because I had forgotten how long it takes to prepare for a party alone! Where was my guacamole-making, bathroom-cleaning partner?

All of this was just minorly annoying and mostly manageable until last week. Last week, my beloved cat Eliot got sick. Not just sniffly-kitty sick, but death's-door sick. This is him in a healthier moment:



He suddenly went from eating like a horse to eating nothing. And drinking nothing. And not moving. And not using his litter box. And then he developed a really painful bump on his back leg. And he started turning yellow. So off to the vet we went.

Long story short, he was so sick he could have died. The vet's solution (after running very expensive tests and never figuring out exactly what was wrong) was to have me force-feed him and give him antibiotics. He's a hefty cat, so I asked why a week of malnutrition was such a big deal. Well, apparently when cats stop eating even for a couple of days, they can go into liver failure. Which (as I learned during CPE this summer) is pretty ugly and almost always fatal. The early sign of liver failure in cats? They turn yellow. Yikes.

So, according to the vet, if I force-fed him enough, he would live. If I didn't, he would die. No pressure, right? I launched into nurse mode.

Four to five times a day I would hold Eliot down and feed him watered-down prescription food through a feeding syringe. He hated this. It was like splatter painting. There was food everywhere. I eventually designated some old clothes as my "feeding clothes" so that I wouldn't have to do laundry every two days. I tried to tempt him with every cat-related snack I could think of or cook up: yogurt, wet food, dry food, chicken, salmon, meat-flavored baby food, scrambled eggs, fish sticks, you name it. No dice. He wouldn't sit anywhere but on my bed, and then he started randomly peeing all over it. The force-feedings continued. This went on and on and on.




At 4:45am on Wednesday, I was at the end of my rope. I could hardly get any food in Eliot, and he was going downhill. I was afraid to go to sleep and wake up to a dead cat. I had just worked and gone to school for a 12-hour day while running home to do cat feedings. I was exhausted. So I did something I have a really, really, really hard time doing. I asked for help.

Daryl got a desperate email around 5am saying, in essence, "Please come home. I need you." He had a paper due and three more classes to attend before Thanksgiving break. I assumed I'd see him by Friday or Saturday at the earliest, but even that would be able to keep me going. I finally fell asleep at 5:30am for a couple of fitful hours. When I woke up, I checked my email.

"I'm sorry it's been so hard," said a 6am email from Daryl. "I'll come today."

And this is why our long-distance marriage is working. Not because a PhD program trumps everything. Not because we can just barrel through this year, ignoring its difficulty. Not because we both value our schooling above each other. But because I married a man who loves me enough to drop everything and get on a plane to help me force-feed a sick cat because he knows how important that silly cat is to me.

So the distance is difficult. And not our first choice. But we're making it work, because we have to, because the Lord is gracious, and because it's worth it. And Eliot even miraculously pulled through, and is now happily eating everything in sight and acting like nothing happened. And my graduation is coming, immediately after which I will once again move in with my husband. And the long-distance portion of our lives will end. And I can't wait.

November 24, 2009

The Best TV Show of All Time

I like good TV. This is not something I'm entirely proud to admit (according to Stuff White People Like not having a TV is a point of pride for most middle-class, highly-educated white folks), but there it is. Television shouldn't be a crutch, a babysitter, or an excuse for not really living life, but it has its place in modern life and it isn't going away anytime soon, so we might as well all admit that we like something about it.

Part of my love of a good TV show is being without Daryl for the year. The house is quiet and still, and I've found myself studying with the TV on sometimes because it's just so darned silent in here. Another part of it is my literature background and love of a good story. When I don't have time to read for fun (and who does in grad. school, really?), an hour long drama can fill that place in my heart, albeit only partially.

I have some current favorites (Lost, Survivor, The Office), some past favorites (Arrested Development, The Cosby Show), and some guilty favorites (What Not to Wear), but one surpasses them all. This is the only TV show that I own, in its entirety, on DVD. It's the only one I'll occasionally leave on in the background when I'm studying because it feels like I know these characters so well they may really exist somewhere in D.C. What show, you ask?




The West Wing.

The West Wing's seven seasons aired from 1999-2006, and I didn't even discover it until some of my husband's roommates (hi, Joel and Evan!) became completely sucked in by it in 2005. Nerds as they were, they even developed their own riffed title: The Occidental Flying Appendage. Yup, those are my peeps.

Anyway, the West Wing is smart, witty, funny, clever, and creative. It helped that I discovered it so late, so we ended up renting it from the Wheaton library (how I miss you, Wheaton library!) and buying seasons online to  catch up. It's a good show to watch sans commercials, and it's great to watch two or more in a row on a snowy afternoon when I'm grading speeches or quizzes. The characters are all quirky, realistic, and well-developed. Its politics are generally pretty good, though obviously quite far from reality as we know it. A friend of mine says that the West Wing's government is "the one we think we deserve." It's about a democratic president and White House, but it shows both sides of issues fairly often. There are some awful Republican straw men, but there are also some complex and intelligent ones.

I think I must love the West Wing as much as I do in part because I want to be one of the characters: The press secretary CJ Cregg.

 

Played by Allison Janney (who I love - she's great in Juno, too), she's spunky, brilliant, and insightful. She also wears business suits but doesn't look frumpy. I have yet to master this. A wardrobe staff would probably help this... In my best moments, I think I show a little flash of CJ. Doesn't this even look like there's a possible sermon in progress here? She's in a suit, in front of a lecturn, with a distinctly Presbyterian-esque window to her right. This is what I'm going for. Mostly, though, I'm Donna, the secretary.

 

Yeah... working on that one. It's good for a college student, or a graduate student, or even a starting-out adjunct professor, not so much for an actual pastor who needs to be a bit more professional and a bit less...Donna. I mean, would you take ministerial advice from her?

Daryl is a mix of these three:



Grumpy but brilliant Toby...

 

Suave and brilliant (albeit slightly "pretty-boy") Sam...

 

And ridiculous-but-wonderful Josh, the Deputy Chief of Staff who just defies all adjectives. Except maybe punchy. And hilarious.

Anyway, for those of you who haven't yet been converted to the cult of the West Wing (and perhaps have 200 or so free hours to kill, are having major surgery and/or a baby in the upcoming months,  or need something to get you through the winter - if so, this is for you!), I thought I'd list the top 10 West Wing episodes of all time. If you want to get a taste and see if you'll like the show, the starred ones are the ones I'd try first. Granted, they will spoil some storylines, so if you're thinking of watching the show all the way through, stop reading now and just go out and get some WW for yourself. They go for $15-17 per season at Costco! Can't beat that.

Anyway, here they are, in descending order of my love for them:

10. "Liftoff" (Season 6, episode 4)

CJ gets a huge promotion and isn't sure how to handle it. This episode has some great gags (classic West Wing) as well as some interesting political questions. It's a transition episode, but it's handled quite well. And I just love CJ and I love watching how she handles herself when she's upset or worried. These are things I want to learn, even if she's just an actor.

"Liftoff" also has some fascinating scenes with Josh - how do you handle the promotion of someone over you when it should have been you?


* 9. "The U.S. Poet Laureate" (Season 3, episode 16)

The interplay between art, literature, and government here is fascinating. It also made me think about who I want to meet in my lifetime, and what type of obligation artists have to work for change.

 

8. "Commencement" (Season 4, episode 22)

The President's daughter is graduating, which sets in motion what will eventually be the finale of Season 4. Lots of action, excitement, and great father-daughter dynamics. I've always thought that if my dad were president, and I was going out on a date, the instructions Jed Bartlett gives to his daughter's secret service captain would be exactly what my dad would say:

President Bartlett: "...if something comes up and you're faced with the choice of killing the boyfriend or not killing the boyfriend, kill the boyfriend."

 

Also, Taye Diggs as the secret service captain. Nice.


7. "King Corn" (Season 6, episode 13)

During the start of the primary season, all presidential candidates travel to Iowa to speak at the Corn Grower's Association. The decision before them is simple: Do they praise ethanol and pledge to use it, even though it will drive up food prices? Or do they tell the truth about ethanol and risk coming in last in the Iowa caucuses? The political dilemma is explained clearly, and the choices the candidates choose to make are interesting as well.

* 6. "Privateers" (Season 4, episode 18)

This episode has the best-delivered line of any West Wing episode. Ever. And it isn't delivered by any of the main characters. And it gives CJ a fit of the giggles, which cracks me up every time.

* 5. "The Crackpots and These Women" (Season 1, episode 5)

This episode features the recurring theme of the "Big Block of Cheese Day" where all kooky fringe organizations that want 10 minutes at the White House are granted their due. I doubt this actually exists, but it's a great idea and definitely entertaining. It also offers Leo the chance for a speech, and John Spencer is worth watching every minute.


4. "Tomorrow" (Season 7, episode 22)

The West Wing finale. Sad, but good closure. It manages to sum up the show without feeling trite or rushed. It also made me wish it had been renewed for seven more seasons. I'd sure watch.


* 3. "Noel" (Season 2, episode 10)

This is Daryl's all-time favorite episode. It's Christmas in the White House (which is really beautiful), and dour Toby drags some professional bands in because he has been accused of "not being in the proper Christmas spirit." Josh deals with the stress of prior a violent encounter and struggles both to admit how much the tragedy affected him and to heal. The best interchange? Josh: "Am I always going to hear the sirens?" Counselor: "No." Josh: "Why not?" Counselor: "Because we get better."

If that doesn't make you want to watch this episode right now, what if I told you it ended with Yo-Yo Ma playing a solo? Because it does.

 

* 2. "The Supremes" (Season 5, episode 17)



Glenn Close plays a potential Supreme Court nominee. This episode shows several sides of the affirmative action debate, and the merit in free debate of ideas. It is one of the most idealistic of all WW episodes (there's no way the real government works anything like this), yet it's brilliantly written and acted.

1. "Two Cathedrals" (Season 2, episode 22)



The best WW episode of all time. I won't even spoil it with a description. It's incredible, but you have to watch all of Season 2 (in order) first to earn it.

All West Wing photos borrowed from here, which is a great West Wing resource for those of you who already love it.

So... I'm back!




This blog has lain dormant for far too long. I miss keeping it, and I miss keeping up with all of you!

So... in honor of another autumn, my final year of seminary, and the fact that I still live quite far from most of my dear friends and family, I'm back. Autumn All Year will have regular posts, updates, sermons, ideas, lists, links, and theological and literary musings once again.

Welcome back, friends!

cbe