Saturday, May 12, 2012

Edward Lear's birthday's today,
He popularized limericks which allow us to play
With words in a form
That is only a norm
of English's poetry array.

Edward Lear (12 May 1812 – 29 January 1888) popularized the limerick. Although it had been around since the early 18th century, Lear wrote "Edward Lear’s Book of Nonsense" (1846) which solidified its popularity, although he never used the term "limerick." he term "Limerick" came from the Limerick Hellfire Club, (in Ireland), where, among their debauches, the drunken members would regale each other with limericks. (presumably of a bawdy nature). Lear's are memorable because they were clever AND clean! The Limerick is the only popular poetry form to originate in English.

Monday, June 27, 2011

Even more...

I was married last Saturday, and am moving to Ohio. Small town. Not what I've experienced before, but I suppose it could be worse somehow. 

Thursday, March 10, 2011

Changes Changes



This year has been an interesting, albeit incredible busy one thus far.

In early January I became engaged to Ben, a Phd candidate in Classics (who defended in December) who I met in Church last year.

He proposed on the steps of the Boston Public Library.

We're getting married at Christ Episcopal Church, in New Brunswick, NJ (where we met) on June 25th of this year.

It will be a small bridal party, with just our closest friends as Best Woman and Maid of Honor. We're both quite excited.

This also leaves both of us in a rather interesting situation in terms of long term employment. The academic job market is quite tight. At the moment, Ben is applying for short-term appointments, in hopes of later getting a tenure track job. What this means however, is that we have no idea where we will be living.

In February I quit my job, and started as the Interim Reference Librarian at New Brunswick Theological Seminary. This job is only guarantee through June, which should be fine as we will likely be moving. I love working in a seminary environment. It is a rather ecumenical seminary, so I've been able to meet and assist many different people from many different places.

I don't know what the future will hold, but for the moment, I'm feeling that God is Good.


Monday, December 13, 2010

A Series

A Series of Verses Describing the Variety of Librarians



There are many librarian sorts this is true
reference, catalogers, and school teachers too
But this isn't the best way
to KNOW who they are
But with this short cheat sheet you will go far.

Typical awkward librarian males
Are skinny, obsessive, intelligent, pale
They’re good at their jobs,
I don’t question that,
But with socialization their skills may fall flat
YA librarian’s clothing is snazzy
Her glasses are stylish, her weblog is jazzy
With gaming and concerts
She gets the teens looks
But no one’s quite sure how it comes back to books

The older librarian shusher’s a throw
Back to when librarians viewed patrons as foe
Her sign may say reference
But if we have our preference
Will stick to answers we already know
Archivists often can seem rather cluttery
And reasons for acquiring similarly buttery
To those that surround them
They may seem mentally stale,
As we wait for that day when they find the true grail.

More to come!

Friday, July 23, 2010

What Does Anglo-Catholic Mean to You?

I don't mean the history... but pragmatically, what does it mean to you?


Please respond in comments section

Thursday, July 15, 2010

Here's to the Weatherman (in light verse)

Here’s to the weatherman
For giving me knowledge
That makes it quite clear
That he went to college.
For solving the mystery
I couldn’t alone
For giving me insight
That I now can own

You’ve used all your maps
And your meteorology
To explain this deep concept
In correct terminology,
Thanks for the info
That I could know not
That at 104,
It’s rather darn hot.

Thursday, June 3, 2010

A Series (in progress)

A Series of Verses Describing the Variety of Librarians


There are many librarian sorts this is true
reference, catalogers, and school teachers too
But this isn't the best way
to KNOW who they are
But with this short cheat sheet you will go far.

Typical awkward librarian males
Are skinny, obsessive, intelligent, pale
They’re good at their jobs,
I don’t question that,
But with socialization their skills may fall flat

YA librarian’s clothing is snazzy
Her glasses are stylish, her weblog is jazzy
With gaming and concerts
She gets the teens looks
But no one’s quite sure how it comes back to books

The older librarian shusher’s a throw
Back to when librarians viewed patrons as foe
Her sign may say reference
But if we have our preference
Will stick to answers we already know

Archivists often can seem rather cluttery
And reasons for acquiring similarly buttery
To those that surround them
They may seem mentally stale,
As we wait for that day when they find the true grail.

Monday, May 24, 2010

Strange job Possibility

The rector of a parish about 20 minutes from me called me out of the blue a few days ago to ask if I would consider becoming the Director of Children and Youth Ministries at his church. It would be 15 hours a week, with acceptable pay and a continuing education allowance.

I feel extremely conflicted about this.

I have been applying for other jobs outside of library science, so that isn't my greatest concern.


I've been avoiding youth ministry for years, because normally "young adults" get automatically saddled with it. However, I feel that I am now old enough for it to be clear that I am an adult and doing this by choice. I actually wouldn't mind working with youth. The church has a decent sized Sunday school, so most of what I would do regarding that would be administrative. There are a number of post-confirmation teens that are looking for ways to stay involved, and I'm excited at that opportunity. It would also be an exciting change to actually work for the church as empowered laity!

However, the rector is asking for a 2-3 year commitment at minimum. I thoroughly understand his desire for stability for the kids, however, I'm not sure I could handle being locked to Central Jersey for another three years. It would also mean I couldn't take full-time employment. My current job runs Mon-Thurs evening. I would be committing to losing nights and weekends.

It is also a somewhat politically conservative parish, and also the "other Episcopal church" in this town (the other being a cardinal parish of the diocese).

I'm meeting with the rector on Thursday, prayers are welcome.

Monday, March 29, 2010

Limericks against Universal Higher Ed

(You know I've having a fed up/off day when I start writing limericks)

It’s not that my expectations are high
That isn’t what I mean to imply
But with students in college
You expect some basic knowledge
And these kids, they don’t even try

Maybe a student or two
have some inkling of the work they should do
but the rest of the time
I can feel the decline
Of the language I thought that I knew

Sometimes I just have to pray
That this is an isolated display
Of why the system is broken
And we need more than token
Words to repair the disarray.

The notion that higher ed is for all
Will quickly be this nation’s downfall
The poor get further indebted
And we all will regret it
When there’s a clog in the lone bathroom stall

Sunday, March 21, 2010

Smoke Pot and Wear Condoms

This is written in response to listening to comedians and others talk about Christianity, especially the line about a religion that says that "sex is wrong and Christian rock is good."

Evidently, I've had a different experience with clergy than many others. Aside from the large amounts of cursing and drinking, there was also confirmation class.

We were sixteen years old and were told not to do drugs, but if we had to do drugs, to smoke pot, but to only do it once. Also, don't have sex, but since we were all going to do have sex anyway, to be sure to wear (or carry) condoms. And if our parents wouldn't get them for us, they (the priests) would. The same went for the gynaecologist. More to the point, if we got pregnant, it created more work for them.

Ditto Catholic school, where the sisters distributed an extremely detailed list of what type, how to use, the reliability, and where to get every form of contraception imaginable -- that it was a sin to use.