Author Archives: Randy Peterman

Thankful Thursday: Stories from Sunnyvale

I just posted a story about Sunnyvale, California on my finances blog and it reminded me of some other things that had to do with Sunnyvale.  I’m grateful for the good home my parents raised me in.  It was warm, safe and always big enough for me to mess up.  Here are two short stories for your amusement:

Nick

Nick was my neighbor down the street.  Nick would get home from school a little later than I would.  He would get home and I wouldn’t be far behind.  Usually hoping to score some sort of snack from Nick’s mom who would buy sugary treats for her children.  My parents were ‘granola’ in comparison.  That is to say that they would buy healthy foods for us to eat.  Imagine that.  Healthy food – ugh – things that probably didn’t have a high refined sugar content.

So I would show up at Nick’s house and ask if he’d had snack, hoping that he hadn’t, and then after his mom kindly fed us a treat we’d play GI Joes in her garden bed.  Hours of GI Joes.  We probably killed a plant or two, but we dug tunnel after tunnel and probably lost five action figures over the time we played out there.  A bomb would blow up the tunnel, which would then bury the GI Joe, and then we’d forget about it.  A few times we actually found buried GI Joes – score!

Nick was older than me and when we left he was probably a little glad to get rid of the leach that was Randy Peterman, but the downside was that he had one less person to play GI Joes with.  He probably lost a lot fewer actions figures after that!

Israel & Sharone 

We had two Jewish neighbor boys.  I wouldn’t normally point that sort of information out except that they were practicing Jews and not just the ethnic variety.  Every Friday night as the sun was going down their mom would call them in and they would pack up their bikes, their toys and whatever else and disappear until the next Sunday.  When it got dark enough for the Sabbath to be over it was too dark to play so we lost a full Saturday with them as they obeyed the Torah (the Law of the Old Testament).

Every once in a while their mom would be without some ingredient or some cooking tool and she’d send them over on the Sabbath.  That was fun because they weren’t allowed to leave their property which was two houses down and a phone call was work [which if forbidden on the Sabbath].  However, to try to bend the rules and to get the needed item they were allowed to carry a stuffed animal fifty steps from their house, place it down, walk fifty more steps and then place the animal down.  Usually they needed 4-5 stuffed animals to get to our house’s front door where they would ask for something.  One time they asked if we had a brand new skillet that had not been cooked in or touched other pans that had cooked bacon or pork.  Unfortunately we didn’t ever have things they needed, but it was fun to watch them carry toys, which looked like work to me, just to come get some food or item, which would have been carried back, looking like work, to their house where it would have been used in food preparation… which would have been work 🙂

Good times.

Tough Day

Today was a tough day for the girls.  They were both out of sorts.  Evie has some teeth coming and and I’m not 100% sure what’s getting to Abby.  She’ll be five in two weeks (22nd) and she’s just been disobedient and she fell a few times from her jungle gym in the backyard.

Jessica spent much of the day scrubbing the kitchen down from top to bottom.  It looks fantastic.  She just told me it, ” was so disgusting.”  And by my standards it was looking OK.  Apparently she’s just got higher standards 😉  Actually, the kitchen gets dirty fast because both girls, as old as they are, have a way of trashing any area within minutes of entry.  Some people might even go so far as to say seconds from entry.  I would be one of those people.

The last thing that made today tougher is that my buddy Dave, whom I have worked with as a co-worker or as a contractor for years now, is moving on to another company.  He’s a really, really sharp guy, a neat brother in the Lord, and he’s also funny.  All three of those things made working with him great and I’m sure that the folks at his new place of employment will really enjoy him for those reasons and more.

Audacity Digital Audio Editor in New Radio Shack Ad

I was reading at Unclutterer and they linked to a Radio Shack Ad on YouTube. As the commercial played I was able to see what looked like Audacity. Sure enough, once I zoomed in and paused the player at the right time they’re using the open source software to show a large, high quality wave pattern on the laptop display.

Check out audacity, its good, free software and it runs under Windows, Linux & OS X – I have it installed under all three OSes.

Reminder: Tonight is Feasting on Asphalt 2!

Just in case you had forgotten tonight, Saturday August 4th, is Feasting on Asphalt 2 night!  We’re having my sister and her husband over and we’ll be eating jambalaya in celebration of Alton’s starting off his journey in the southern part of the United States.  We’re hoping that we can follow along on this culinary adventure every weekend with some parallel food based on our understanding of the different regions followed by watching the episode from the DVR (thus fast forwarding through the commercials that would keep us from the actual fun).

I guess this makes us junkies 🙂

Thankful Thursday: My Brother Hated My Drums

I know its a little goofy to be thankful for my brother not liking my playing the drums when I was younger, but if it wasn’t for his frustration (and the evil happiness that it caused me to make him frustrated) I wouldn’t have stuck with music.  I hated practicing, and really I wanted to be a rock star but I knew I wasn’t enough of a rebel to be one, but hearing my brother complain made my lack of devotion go away and it helped me explore other instruments.

I love my brother a lot, next month is his birthday and I think I shall write him a song, but it’ll be about how I hope the instruments his son and daughters have come together to make one sweet song that brings him much happiness instead of frustration.  Brennan, my nephew will probably be the next Pat Boone.

A Funny Story to Keep You Secure

If I were Bruce Schneier and I had witness the following conversation I would tell the story at any possible opportunity because what you’re about to read is true, and stupid.  Instead this story comes from my friend, Dave.  Dave was telling me that while he was waiting for the shuttle at a hotel to take him to some destination the following occured:

 Two co-workers checked in together, one headed off to his room, the other asked the clerk what the first guy’s room number was… She wouldn’t give it out, “privacy” she said.  Good for her.

I decided to “help out” (okay, I like tweaking people), so I went up asked if he was in 105 ’cause I stayed in that one before and it had a funny smell…

She said, “No, he’s in 104.”

You just can’t make this stuff up 🙂

Feasting on Asphalt 2

Last year Jessica and I really enjoyed Feasting on Asphalt – a tour across the width of the United States on back roads with Alton Brown & his production crew. Love it. Watched each episode at least once and most of them twice. We’re that sick. But its coming up again and they’ll be premiering season two this Saturday night on the Food Network. Set your DVRs, rescheduled your otherwise important events and check it out.

You can learn more on Alton Brown’s site.

Big Step in the Seated Position

Evelyn went potty on the toilet tonight.  Much cheering took place – as you can imagine – and she was excited.  I’m not sure she realizes how wonderful it will be for us to not have to spend so much money on diapers and wipes and having to always remember to carry the diaper bag.  This is just the start and she’s by no means done being potty trained, but I’m excited to see this next stage coming.  As a parent you love the next stage because you see your child develop and grow, but at the same time there is moderate sorrow to see that the memories are what you have left because that very child is growing.  Its wonderful, though, and I’m glad that she’s not going to be thirty, living in the basement and wearing diapers 😉

Trials & Suffering

I don’t know how to respond to this article about suffering other than to say that the people involved seem to be enamored with themselves.  Christianity doesn’t have simple answers for all things, but the things the people in this article are saying make me want to hurl.  Their attitude towards pain and suffering indicates that they have not read their Bibles, they haven’t evaluated the afterlife, and that they don’t understand the full potential of pain and suffering that could take place.  I once heard a teacher discussing this very issue bring up a good point: what if God was halving suffering from what it could be?  What if we, on this earth, were only suffering one one-hundredth of what we could be suffering?  Would we care?  Would we be thankful towards God for preserving us and letting us suffer so little?

I have written before about a former elder at our church who simply taught about trials and suffering and went over the need for the Christian to understand God’s use of trials and suffering in their life.  Hal actually suffered a lot as he died of cancer, but that cancer was not a trial he couldn’t fathom, he spent much time rejoicing that the Lord used it to bring people into his life that he could share the gospel of Jesus Christ with.  Hal saw that the trials and suffering were a beautiful gift that was only temporary.  He saw eternity with God as a clear and powerful goal that made the suffering less of a distraction.  Yes, he hurt.  Yes, his family and our whole church cried when he died, but we all know where he’s going and we all wept with joy as we came together to share stories of love, compassion and awesome counseling that were all part of Hal’s life.

The article linked to above doesn’t offer answers and hope, it offers hopelessness and really nothing worth keeping track of.

Snakes

I have seen two snakes, of the garden variety, around my house.  Two!  Its pretty cool to see those sorts of critters since we have a garden.  As if the snakes weren’t cool enough Abby today watched in rapt awe as a spider wrapped up an earwig near our back porch.  She said that it was wrapping the earwig in its yarn.  You just have to love kids’ vocabulary.