Fr Gene

  • Easter 2008

    Catholic_Kelly encouraged readers to read up on each day’s saints to better appreciate the Communion of Saints. Another option is Saint of the Day, revised 5th edition, for times when you’re away from the computer.

    I know it’s a big jump to go from Halloween 2007 to Easter 2008, but I need to catch up somehow.  Maybe I’ll return to the time inbetween in the future, maybe I won’t.  I know that I need to get back into the swing of things, as I’m losing my ability to fully articulate my thoughts and forgetting the details of the events in my life without journaling them.

    As is family tradition, my mother, step-father, and I went to the Easter Vigil mass at our former parish, St. Theresa.  That was our parish when I was in high school, and while we live in different dioceses now, we return togther there every year for Easter Vigil.  Our friend, Matt, is a transitional deacon now.  So he gave his first baptisms at this mass.  It was awesome.  The entire time at Matt he had the complete demenor, vocal intonations, and mannerisms of a priest.  Yet after mass when I talked with him, he was the same old Matt.  How cool is that.  I’m so excited for him. 

    Fr. Mike, soon to be our new pastor — replacing Fr Gene who is retiring, gave the homily.  Apparently, he’s stationed at St Theresa through the end of June, before he begins his new position at our parish in July.  It turns out that Fr. Mike is a convert, who never expected to be a convert nor when he converted did he ever expect to become a priest.  He was able to tailor those experiences into an excellent homily, not only for the newly elect, but for all the assembly.  I congradulated Fr. Mike on becoming our new pastor after mass, but he was dismissive.  Hopefully he’ll be better than that as pastor. 

    I also had the chance to talk with one of my 8th grade RE instructors and Dave from Game Depot.  I saw Patty briefly, but didn’t get a chance to talk with her.  Dave gave me a hard time, saying that he old ever sees me anymore at the Easter Vigil and at Phx Con Games.  It’s true, but I don’t ever go to the southeast Valley anymore.  I don’t hve a current gaming group over there, and my father and I don’t visit that often.  I should try going over there to visit them, see the Jim Henson exhibit, and see the Walace and Ladmo exhibit.  Some day.  I’m still busy using all my free time painting my house.  Today I tore off the old, worn out carpet on my stairs and painted them. 

    I spent the night at my parents’ place, then Mom and I went to my maternal grandparents’ to celebrate my grandmother’s birthday.  We had cake, played games, and otherwise enjoyed socializing. 

    Easter Monday my friends and I were going to complete Centicle’s Legion, but Lisa suffered a setback in her recovery from surgery.  The rest of us ended up browsing AZ Mills instead, where I had the first Garcia’s food in many, many years.  Back in the day, it used to be a birthday dinner tradition.  Back when this journal was still paper. 

    The Second Sunday of Easter was Divine Mercy Sunday.  It was my turn to lector again, and I ended up needing to do both readings.  Luckily, I always prepare both just in case.  Father Milt gave another excellent homily.

    Thanks to Alluveal for the music video:

    “Everybody can be great, because anybody can serve.  You don’t have to have a college degree to serve.  You don’t have to make your subject and your verb agree to serve.  You don’t have to know about Plato and Aristotle to serve.  You only need a heart full of grace.  A soul generated by love.”  ~ Martin Luther King, Jr.

  • Father Bob

    I find it humorous that an album titled More Mellow Sixties would include “Something in the Air” by Thunderclap Newman.

    So you might recall that before I left for GenCon it was announced that we’d be getting a new associate pastor.  Father Bob was supposed to be introduced at all of the masses the week I was in Indianapolis.  Well the following weekend our pastor and the other priests who preside over masses were all out of town, leaving him the whole parish in only his second week.  What a sudden amount of responsibility, but he seemed to be doing well under the pressure when I saw him at the Sunday evening mass.  He said a wonderful homily as I recall, even if I don’t recall the content these several months later.  It definitely tied into the narrow gate from the gospel reading.  I recall that much.

    In the meantime he has been settling into the parish life well.  It turns out that both Fr. Bob and Fr. Milt went to the University of Notre Dame.  In his homeland of Uganda he used to celebrate mass in Parliament once a week, and was even the spiritual director of the nation’s VP, as the nation’s first Chaplain to the Catholic Parliamentarians.  So, as you can imagine, Uganda and Indiana did not prepare him for Phoenix’s heat.  He’s so good natured, however, that he really appreciates the luxury of air conditioning, pizza, and cheese cake. 

    Two weekends ago he was similarly left the parish all to himself when all of the other priests were once again out of town.  The deacons were kind enough to assist him, and he did really well again.  Because Father Milt usually handles the Sunday evening mass he was really stressing the lack of EMs before mass.  I tried to assure him that the Sunday evening mass is always (even since I can recall) short on EMs.  They’re scheduled, they just either don’t show up or show up late, so the mass requires a lot of last minute substitutes.  (It’s bad enough that after two years of requests, my mother & I finally caved in and took training to become an Extraordinary Minister of the Eucharist myself.  I haven’t needed to substitute yet, but I’ve only been trained for a month and I’ve been lectoring every other week for the past few months.)  He wasn’t assured until we filled all of the slots with substitutes.  He gave an excellent Right to Life homily, brilliantly tying in the words of Habakkuk, Paul, and Luke with the special collection for Respect Life Sunday.

    So, thank you God for bringing our parish another associate pastor.  Fr. Gene isn’t getting any younger.  He keeps discussing retirement more and more each year.  We may not be the biggest parish in the diocese, but we can certainly use a younger priest to assist our pastor.  God Bless Father Bob.

    Thanks to septentrio for the quiz:

    Right Brain:
    RIGHT BRAIN FUNCTIONS
    uses feeling
    “big picture” oriented
    imagination rules
    symbols and images
    present and future
    philosophy & religion
    can “get it” (i.e. meaning)
    believes
    appreciates
    spatial perception
    knows object function
    fantasy based
    presents possibilities
    impetuous
    risk taking

    “Maturity is knowing you were an idiot in the past.” ~ Dora
    “If that’s true, then wisdom is knowing that you’ll be an idiot in the future.” ~ Marten
    “And common sense is knowing that you should try not to be an idiot NOW.” ~ Faye
    Questionable Content #976: “Dora Dharma” by Jeph Jacques

  • The Road to…

    ayca introduces Featured Question.

    So, there I was:  I had one week to go before GenCon and I got nothing done (other than finish HP7).  Thus, the Sunday before was busy:  doing laundry, packing for the trip, building a deck for my first Ritual of the Unnameable tournament, attending mass, buying chocolate for my catsitter, checking for last minute updates on Guardian 6, and packing for work the next day; all the while trying to make time for my cat before I left.  At mass Fr. Gene announced that a new associate pastor, Fr. Bob would be introduced at all of the masses.  I’m sure he was happy to get a replacement for Fr. Joy.

    Monday morning Bob was kind enough to give me a ride to work.  Midmorning I realized I had left my badge, event tickets, and my hand written schedule at home.  Luckily, my mom was kind enough to stop by my house on her way home from work and drop them off at my work.  After work, Doug was kind enough to give me a ride to Troy’s place.  It was the first time I’d met his third child.  His daughter showed me their baby scrapbooks (again), while his older son showed me the Over the Hedge console game.  Ken called and asked if I could bring some extra Shadowfist decks for him to borrow, as he was having trouble finding any of his built decks and didn’t have time to build new ones.  Then we all watched the first few episodes of Jack of All Trades, which turned out to be an awesome television show!  We interrupted an episode for dinner, but never returned to it as we adults chose to watch Star Wars:  Fool’s Errand instead (as Troy’ brother-in-law has a small part) while the children went to bed.  As we needed an a/v cable to watch it, Troy and I did a quick trip to his bank and Wal*Mart.  After the film we all called it a night.

    Tuesday morning Troy and I headed to Sky Harbor.  We met up with Steve and had a overpriced, overly heatlamped breakfast at the terminal’s Burger King.  After a short delay, we boarded.  Steve busted out Settlers of Catan to pass the time.  The flight was mostly uneventful, though we had to wait through some very light turbulence for the storm to calm down at Indy before we could land.  Bill came and picked us up, and we went to check-in at the hotel.  It turned out that the hotel was having a Guest Appreciation Evening in their 120 West Market.  They had cocktail tables set up throughout the restaurant, some delish fruits, breads, and cheeses; sushi and sashimi; gourmet pizzas (including an awesome salmon pizza); and the piece de resistance:  a mashed potato bar!  For dessert they had various cakes and tarts, plus a chocolate fondu fountain with pretzels, cake cubes, and fruits.  The mashed potato bar was too incredible.  The server would take an ice cream scooper and scoop either mashed sweet potato, mashed yukon gold potato, or mashed garlic potato into a large martini glass.  She’d hand the glass over to you, and you could load it up with over a dozen different topping choices.  I could have ate that every day for the whole week, but the hotel didn’t offer the mashed potato bar ever again, even for a fee.  We settled into our hotel room while Bill went to run some Cthulu for KFG at the Ram.  I called up Mary to confirm that she and Ivan would be joining us for True Dungeon on Friday night.  Steve and I played a couple of hands of Shadowfist.  That’s when I discovered that I had somehow packed several decks, but not the Ritual of the Unnameable deck I had built on Sunday.  That was very frustrating.  Meanwhile, Troy had an online game to run, the name of which escapes me.

    How lame, apparently there is a limit on the number of tags I can put in my blog.  Oh well, I’ll just split the week here and continue further in the next entry.

    My Flixster

    “Continuous effort is the key to unlocking our potential.” ~ Black Elk, Indigenous North American

  • Thank God for Heroes

    i_Wan has a cool Heroes/Marvel Comics inspired custom header.
     
    Thursday Wayne and I did some more work on HLA4.  It’ll be earlier this year, and we haven’t heard anything from any of our usual cast.  We thinking about either continuing on through HLA7 or ending with HLA4.  We have an idea for another LARP should we end HLA with HLA4.  It’s still too early in the process to make a decision.
     
    Friday my leg was acting up a bit again.  It caused me some discomfort on the commute to work and while limping around the building at work.   On the way home I stopped in at KFC again and asked for a fish bowl.  I had a different employee this time, and he wasn’t sure how to answer.  So he went into the back and converesed with someone out of view.  When he came back, he asked me to confirm that I wanted to substitute fish for popcorn chicken on a rice bowl.  I confirmed that request, and he confirmed that he could make it happen.  After I paid for it, he had to go tell the food preparer about the substitution, as apparently the computer system for KFC was unable to let him convey that.  But that’s progress.  Hopefully KFC will wise up and let the computer handle such requests next year.
     
    After that, while heading uphill through the mountain preserve, my leg started acting up enough I ended up catching a bus the rest of the way.  On the way home, Liz’s daughter got on the bus.  It turns out that she was kicked out of the house some five months before, and now lives within a mile of me.  She asked me for an update on LepreCon, but as I had just missed her mother’s convention’s meeting I wasn’t of much help. 
     
    Trollgod has started a new game on Trollhalla, Buffalo Castle Tag.  I signed up for the game, then asked Khayd’haik to add some weapons to the Armoury for the game.  He was able to add some, but not others.  I was waiting to see if they’d be added before submitting my character stats and description.  Once I saw that he’d added what he could, I decided I’d make my character once I was home and had access to my T&T7 rules. 
     
    But when I got home from watching Batman & Mr. Freeze:  Subzero with my friends, I got a call from my maternal grandfather.  My grandmother was back in the hospital and he needed me to call my mother.  She’s long distance, and he’s never been willing to learn how to use the calling card.  So, suffice it to say, my character had to wait. 
     
    Sunday, after hiking and having breakfast at Village Inn with our hiking group, my mother picked me up and we visited my grandparents at the hospital.  She’d broken a bone between her ribs and shoulder, and it was likely that it was bone cancer.  Afterwards, my mother joined me for mass.  Father Joy presided, but Msgr. Mike gave the homily as the kick off for the Lenten Mission.  The mission is on the mass, and he promised to explain the forest of the mass, not the trees of the mass (to abuse a common metaphor to summarize his explanation). 
     
    Once I got home, I rushed to make my Buffalo Castle Tag character by deadline.  I posted it, but shortly thereafter Turn One was posted, and I wasn’t included.  Apparently I’d been too late in posting my character statistics.  I was disappointed, but it happens.
     
    Monday morning I got up early so I could attend the Lenten Mission.  Msgr. Mike presided over mass and afterwards gave a 45 minute talk.  He paraleled the Exodus of the Israelites with the Exodus of Jesus.  After that, he explained how the Jewish people relate their lives to the Exodus of the Israelites, while Christians are called to model their lives after the Exodus of Jesus.  The mass is one of the ways we do so, with scriptures, homily, and Eucharist.
     
    After the Lenten Mission I went to work.  After work my mother told me that the cancer doctor had ordered some shots, which my grandmother demanded to have explained to her.  The nurse was unable to explain them fully (as she wasn’t there when the doctor was), and promised to explain them once she had the order in hand.  My grandmother was threatening not to take them if any of them was related to chemo (which she’d already stopped for her breast cancer).
     
    A friend of mine had been out of town for the weekend, and I had wanted to welcome her back to town.  So I called her right after that.  Perhaps I shouldn’t have, as the words that came out of my mouth didn’t seem to match the ones in my head.  I probably should have waited, but sometimes I get so stubborn.  I set my mind towards doing something, and I’ll do it regardless of a change in curcumstances.  Thursday I emailed her an appology and clarification.
     
    Monday evening I stopped by Monte‘s on the way home so I could watch Heroes:  The Best Show on Television.  It continues to get better with each episode.  I was so jazzed by the end of the episode, it was totally what I needed.  Then, Trollgod gave me a call and told me that he’d made a Turn One addendum, and that I could participate in Buffalo Castle Tag.  That, too, made my day.  Two good things (even if they’re just fantasy, they’re good distractions) in the same evening went a long way towards bolstering my spirits.
     
    I got home and submitted my Turn One response, then went to bed.  I slept in, so by the time I got to church I’d already missed part of the Lenten Mission.  So I left, deciding to catch the evening session.  On the way home I dropped off my tunic at the drycleaners and went grocery shopping.  Once home I paid some bills, weeded the yard, and did laundry. 
     
    I wanted to see about visiting my grandmother, but couldn’t get ahold of anyone.  Eventually, my mother was off work and I called her.  She seemed surprised that I hadn’t read her email on the matter.  I’m always telling people to call me and leave a message rather than email.  I get to phone messages the same day, emails within a few weeks.  I tell people this all the time, yet no one listens.  It is very frustrating.  My mother and I just went over this last month.  It turned out that my grandmother was moved to the cancer ward and that she was talking about how we’d all missed her when she’s gone. 
     
    Eventually, it was time to go to the Lenten Mission.  After the Lenten Mission mass, Msgr. Mike refreshed us on what he’d covered the day before, before launching into the main portion of the mission.  The mass begins with asking for forgiveness, continues with blueprints for our lives, and culminates with gathering together as a community at the altar.  The scriptures are our blueprints on how to live life.  We read those blueprints before we come to the altar with our own individual crosses, which we offer up to the Lord.  Jesus was/is offered up on our behalf, just as the Jewish priests offered up holocausts to the Lord.  Msgr. Mike also mentioned that the priesthood is allowed to share in the sacredness of others’ crosses.  I found that very profound.
     
    Wednesday morning I got up early for the Lenten Mission again.  This time, Fr. Gene precided over the mass.  After mass he thanked Msgr. Mike for giving the mission, as he normally sees twelve people left by the third day of the mission.  This time, Father claimed, the assembly grew each day of the mission.  Msgr. Mike then launched into the mission, which he promised would be different than the previous two days.  Jesus emptied Himself of everything (including His divinity) and filled Himself with God’s will.  That was why Satan tempted Him to use His divinity, that was how He was able to experience doubt on the cross, that was how He has left us an example of how to live our lives, and that is how He is able to identify with and share with us in our humanity.  We are called to follow that example, imperfect as we are, to empty ourselves and fill ourselves with the will of God.  Baptism begins that, but being imperfect we need to periodically reempty ourselves and refill ourselves with God’s will, which the mass gives us, especially in the Eucharist. 
     
    After the mission was a social with coffee and doughnuts.  They didn’t have any beverage other than coffee, so I took a cup and regretted it the rest of the day.  Gross.  Gross.  Gross.  I couldn’t get the taste out of my mouth the rest of the day.  I’m done with coffee for the next decade.  At least the maple longjohn was good.  Fr. Gene invited me to join him at “the problem children” table.  One of the ladies at the table will be celebrating her 50th wedding anniversary a week from today, and she was talking about the sausages that were going to be catered at the big party she was planning.  Father was trying to talk her into using sardines instead, but she wasn’t going to hear any of it.  Msrg. Mike was going from table to table, and he commented that “the problem children” hadn’t learned the message of the mission yet.  I’d have to agree.
     
    Eventually, I had to head to work.  After work, I heard from my mother that her mom had been moved out of the hospital and into a neighboring building.  That building allows people to wear street clothing, accept a greater number of visitors, et cetera, and she is being wheeled over to the hospital for various tests and treatments as they come up.  Unfortunately, Medicare will only cover the first 21 days, so if she needs more (like the professionals suspect), she’s hosed.  Tonight they were discussing their options again, and it looks like she’ll go home after 21 days if she’s not discharged earlier.
     
    Thursday I enjoyed sleeping in to my normal weekday time before heading to work.  After work Debbie was kind enough to listen to me discuss my grandmother’s situation.  Right after she had made me feel better about the situation, I got the update call from my mother.  I guess my grandmother had received a couple of radiation treatments that day and afterwards was belligerant, making my mother and grandfather very concerned.
     
    After that, I headed to our TFLAS meeting, where we worked on updating our Cast Database.  We’ve quit using Microsoft Excel and have switched to Google Docs & Spreadsheets, which makes it much easier for Wayne and I to update without worry for duplicate effort. 
     
    This morning it took me two hours to get to work, as my chain kept hoping off of gears.  I had the same trouble getting home, plus I had an injured hand.  While I was at work, one of my grandparents’ friends came in for an Arizona flag.  She was rather worried for my grandmother, and wanted to chat that up a bit before she switched to her purpose for arriving at the store.  After work, I was given the great news that my grandmother was in better spirits.  She was even doing well enough to talk to me. 
     
    And that’s my week in review.
     
    Just in time for SM3:
    You Are Spider-Man
    Quick and agile, you have killer instincts (literally).
    And that kind of makes up for the whole creepy spider thing.
     
    “Challenges are what makes life interesting, overcoming them is what makes life meaningful.” ~ Joshua J. Marine

  • Small Minds Think Alike

    Where did fortune cookies come from and are they really Chinese?

    similar_stranger said, “Somehow your quote makes me feel guilty. Oh well, small mind… at least it works–no?”  I certainly never meant anyone to feel guilty.  After all, journals (including weblogs like mine) are naturally about discussing people.  This here ‘blog is a discussion of me.  Does that mean we all have small minds?  No, my interpretation of the quote is that people that only discuss people are small minded;  those which discuss people and events are average minded;  and those which discuss people, events, and ideas are capable of being great minded.  It’s the natural progression of social development in people, IMO. 

    I’ve been catching up on my lj blogs, but not my Xanga blogs.  Normally I do the opposite.  I need more time,  It’s had to believe that Advent starts next week.  My mother pointed out to me that I hadn’t put away my Christmas videos from last year when I pulled them out and placed them atop my television set.  (Why do we call it a set, when it’s a single unit anyway?)  There’s a lot of things I don’t make time for in my life.  I obviously need to reprioritize, something I seem to always be saying but not doing.   

    Speaking of bad priorities, check out the most recent Onna Chance for another great gaming moment.  How could you not laugh? 

    A week ago Sunday our hiking group resumed, doing the short basic trail between 40th Street and Tatum Boulevard and back.  Afterwards we went to 5 & Diner for breakfast, which was fun.  Then I went home for a nap before mass.  Father Joy read the gospel which inspired one of the best sequences in The Last Battle.  His homily focused on the Communion of Saints, a theme throughout all three readings.

    Monday Bill and I went to Chuy’s before finally seeing the new Pirates movie at the discount theatre.  Can you believe that it’s $3 to see a discount movie now?!  The discount prices keep creeping up and up.  (I must be getting old.)  It was OK, but it was like The Empire Strikes Back or Back to the Future Part II in that it was obviously the dark second act of a three act story.  You knew early on in watching the film that it would end unended.  And amazingly, it did so fairly predictably.  That didn’t make it unfun, just not as entertaining as I had hoped.  That may also be part of the long period of anticipation preceding my chance to finally see it. 

    Thursday saw a day off from work, so I went with my mother and grandparents to Thanksgiving Day diner at Cracker Barrel (yes, just like last year).  Afterwards we headed back to their place to celebrate my grandfather’s concurrent birthday, where my stepfather joined us.  He received a Marines ball cap from my grandmother, cash from my parents, and The Railroaders (from Bookman’s) from me. 

    Friday my mother and I hit the Black Friday sales before I had to go into work.  We hit eight stores in two hours, plus eating breakfast from Jack in the Box while waiting between the stores we had already hit and the stores which hadn’t opened yet.  If you plan your sales out right the night before you can usually get everything you need quickly and without a lot of fuss.  Unfortunately, my mom know what I bought them and I know what she bought me, but that’s the price we pay for shopping when the best bargains are.  Of course, once I was at work it was relatively dead, as we don’t offer any Black Friday sales.  Thus, our holiday customers will hit the time-sensitive sales first and hit us when convenient.  Saturday was kind of slow, too, as usual. 

    Saturday after work I also ran the first installment of Chapter Three in Chaos Out of Order, my continuing Dark Sun campaign set 300 years after the normal timeline.  They get some of the mystery so right, but then they get some of it so wrong.  It’s fun watching them slowly solve it, especially when one or the other has the right idea and the others disagree.  I think they’ve all been right at one time or another while the others disagreed.  As long as they’re having fun I’ll continue.

    Yesterday I went to BJ’s birthday party at Peter Piper Pizza before my mother picked me up to go to mass.  It was fun, and BJ seemed happy with all of his many gifts.  I can’t recall them all, so I won’t bother trying to list them.  I gave him some Throne War, Netherworld 2, and Two-Fisted Tales boosters, a rule book from 10,000 Bullets, and a box of Deck Protector Sleeves so he finally has enough cards to hopefully build a deck and use the box.  Between the boosters I gave out for demos and those that he purchased at Hexacon, he didn’t have enough yet to build anything remotely playable.  I also had a chance to play Lisa in air hockey, which was enjoyable.  The time went too fast.  Despite my mother being antisocial, she did seem to enjoy talking with Kim and Lisa.  Maybe someday she can get the ladies to see what’s enjoyable about Doctor Who

    At mass I was supposed to be the first lector, but ended up being the only lector.  Christ the King is a fun mass to attend every year, because before the main procession of the gospel book, altar servers, and priest we have several eucharistic ministers process forward with candles as the music minister announces sacramental and ministerial statistics for the past liturgical year (one stat with each candle that processes forward).  Of all of the parishes I’ve attended on Christ the King, St. Paul is the only one to do this. 

    Father Gene noted before mass in the sacristy that one of the altar servers was now sporting an ear ring, and seemed surprised that his grade school allowed such a thing.  He didn’t make the server take it out, just as he never asks me to hide my long hair.  He did mention once again about his desire to retire in the next year.  I wonder if Father Joy would become pastor or if they’d assign us someone else.  In his homily Father Gene discussed kings and kingship, and how Christ is a holy king rather than a material king.

    Before and after mass I was part of the team maintaining the Christmas Angels on the trees in the vestibule.  My mother volunteered to help, which was nice of her.  The Christmas Angels are clothing items (green angels), clothing sets (blue angels), or something nice–such as a toy for children–(blue angels) for the poor of El Mirage.  When I first was involved in our parish’s El Mirage Christmas Angels Project, El Mirage was a poor hispanic community in the rural area outside the metropolitan area.  Now El Mirage is mostly composed of upper middle class anglo families and retirees in various cookie cutter developments.  The poor of the community are now disenfranchised by their own city, which is now considered to be part of the metropolitan area.   The more things change, the more they stay the same.  Or something like that. 

    Hey, I found my missing Feng Shui sourcebooks Back for Seconds, Thorns of the Lotus, and Blood of the Valiant today while looking for something else completely.  They had been filed with my outdated calendar collection.  Yes, I keep everything.  But, I was actually looking for some stuff I knew I had somewhere that I will be getting rid of after years of storing for absolutely no good reason.  Don’t ask me why the books were hidden with the calendars.  I have no idea.  And, no, I won’t be getting rid of my calendars.  They’re a journal of sorts with various events scribbled in them.  Future generations might want that history. 

    Then I submitted some corrections to the RPG Wiki of RPGnet for the Feng Shui entries.  I’ll have to scan some covers sometime to complete their Feng Shui data for the Daedalus Entertainment (and Ronin Publishing) era.  Then I’ll work on inputting all of the Dark Sun data that they’re missing.  Remind me if I forget.  Thanks.

    Well, Heroes:  The Best Show on Television will be on soon, so I’m gonna jet. 

    Thanks to the_chaos_opera for the quiz:

    Horus

    Sparkling personality, intense will, intelligent, understanding, impatient to exert influence.
    Colors: male: red carmine, female: gold
    Compatible Signs:
    Bastet, Geb
    Dates:
    Apr 20 – May 7, Aug 12 – Aug 19
    Role:God of the pharaoh
    Appearance:
    Form of a falcon-headed man, wearing the double crown of Upper and Lower Egypt

    Sacred Animal: falcon
    What is Your Egyptian Zodiac Sign?
    Designed by CyberWarlock of Warlock’s Quizzles and Quandaries

    “If an idea’s worth having once, it’s worth having twice.” ~Tom Stoppard

The Seasons of Mount Chernabog

July 2014
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