Month: January 2018

Trying Out a New Game

With creatures and cunning, you'll rule a fantastic forest kingdom in the ultimate asymmetric game of adventure and war.

I have a couple of regular gaming groups, one that is primarily role playing and the other that mixes things up. Our mix it up group got together tonight to try out a print-and-play version of Root: A Game of Woodland Might and Right which my friend Richard backed on KickStarter. Root pits various woodland critters (armies of them) against each other in a quest for points. The game is asymmetric in nature meaning that each race (cats, birds, little critters, vagabonds) has different mechanics for how it generates points. Asymmetric games are great fun when they are balanced, and with only one play through I’m skeptical about the balance in Root but I need to try it a few more times to really make that call.

I really liked the art and the theme, those make the game super interesting. Even the different ways that each race operated proved interesting. Each player fights over clearings which are assigned to the factions of bunny, fox, and mouse (the bird faction is a wildcard). Having clearings of specific factions helps you to be able to perform actions. I played cats so started with units all over the board, but being spread out left me deceptively vulnerable, especially when the birds really got going. The combat is fairly elegant, roll two four-sided dice and the defender inflicts the lower number of damage and the attacker the higher. There are a few other rules around combat, but it is fairly quick. I think this game has real potential, although my first play through was not that satisfying.

I disliked two aspects of Root. The first aspect is the inclusion of special victory condition cards. These cards change up the dynamic fairly quickly, but choosing the wrong card is devastating. I ended up in a no-win situation early on in the game. I spent the majority of the game knowing I couldn’t win and trying to find some other meaning in the game play. This was my mistake, but for a game to have such a costly mistake potential right at the beginning of the game might require some tweaking (either seed them deeper in the deck or remove them altogether).

The other thing I disliked was the potential for analysis paralysis with the races. This is especially evident with the birds. The other races start off with a fairly simple action, but the birds need to make a decision that will effect their whole turn. I think it is a cool mechanic but the result is that whenever we hit the bird player the game ground to a halt. The birds easily took 3 or 4 times the amount of time the rest of the players together spent each turn. And this was not even with our slowest gamer present (he missed the game tonight). So while it is a very interesting mechanic, there needs to be a way to streamline it.

Maybe things will improve now that we know the game. We’ll have to see. I must say that I am dreading a play through with our slowest player. Often we get to play a couple small games in an evening as well a longer game, not tonight. I’m keen to see the production values of the final game. Root has some real potential. I’ll let you know if things improve next time we play it.

Percussion and Getting Out of the Way

DSC_1132I’m not sure why I’m making a goofy face in this photo, but my buddy Andrew took it at a Vineyard pastor’s retreat a few years back. I believe I was just getting into percussion at that point. Sharon had bought me a djembe for Christmas and it is such a different dynamic than guitar or even keys. One of my favourite ways to play percussion is in concert with a full drum kit.

I was playing percussion today at church, playing with a kit drummer, and the sermon was on the value of team leadership. That got me thinking about some of the dynamics of playing on a team.

When you have a full kit in the mix, unless you are trying to bolster something the kit is already doing I find it better to simply get out of the way. It is not always possible with my hand drums which is why I bring various shakers and my harmonicas with me. For our first song there was a nice groove that I could play off the kit fairly easily, add the odd accent here and there but mostly to give is some texture with the highs from my djembe. I usually have my cajon as well, but I use the cajon to keep something of the beat steady and to enhance the boom of the kick on the kit (it needs a bit of push and the mic on my cajon usually gives an excellent boom). When we went into the second song ,Jason on the kit had a nice tight beat that I felt I’d just muddy up if I played along. So I grabbed my harp and echoed some of the lyrical lines, sustaining a root when I felt a nice drone might be appropriate. I ended up harping on about half the songs this morning and adding some shaker on another. The object is to not stand out, but to also to be adding something to the overall mix. It is a great dynamic, really challenging, but when the music comes together this way then it is magical.

Riffing on Richard’s message on leadership, I love the healthy sense that our Vineyard has about not having everything focus on a personality. He is right that so many churches rely on a cult of personality because this is the norm for church growth philosophies. I get that some people like to attend a church where they can be spectators more than participants, but I’m not like that. I want to add a note or a beat here and there that makes the music fuller.

When I was pastoring Freedom Vineyard, as I was when this picture was taken, I often did what we called the Frank show. I didn’t terribly like the Frank show, but in the latter years of our church that was the norm. The Frank show was when I was running all the aspects of the service, from worship to teaching. What we discovered, the hard way, was that once this pattern was the norm unless I was part of events they generally were unsustainable. So while I am fairly confident in just about any role within the church, I am really hesitant about another Frank show.

When Freedom was at its best we had a great sense of team. We failed however to recognize team play as something to make into a non-negotiable. Much as people seemed to want the Frank show it was not the healthiest approach to ministry. So I applaud the new Ottawa Vineyard for making that a central value. I believe it will serve them well. I am hoping that they continue to make space for me to add accents and notes that make a the music of our church fuller.

Must mean a little more

Image result for jesus face palm

Recently a friend of mine, a guy named Bob who likes to stir up trouble, posted this little conversation starter:

“The power of His church is in the pew, not necessarily in the Pulpit.”

My initial response was to think that this statement (which is a very Bob statement) has the power dynamic backwards. I get that he’s concerned about a Christianity that is all formalism and no action. When I read though I immediately thought that the real power is the Holy Spirit and I responded in such a manner. And while I think that is true, Bob’s statement has been running around in my head during conversations I’ve had since.  I want to reflect a bit in what I think Bob was pointing to.

If you claim to be a Christian and that makes no difference in how you live your life in this world then something is definitely wrong. 

Watching the debates around evangelicalism unfold in the US this past week leave me struggling to find Christ in what is going on. Compound this with a conversation I had this morning with an old friend whose interactions with a very dogmatic Christian leave him wondering where the relationship with God is for the guy peddling a strict form of neo-Calvinism. My own observation is that the people who are the most uptight about their faith, the most dogmatic and hardnosed, also tend to be assholes in real life. I know there are exceptions, at least I hope there are exceptions, but this is sadly the case I’ve run into over and over again. Please prove me wrong.

I feel like I’ve been there too. I remember an incident years and years ago when I found myself reaming out a parishioner for not wanting to be part of our evangelistic outreach. I was a real asshole to him. And he wasn’t the only one. When my faith was built on a tenuous structure of hardnosed beliefs I found myself defending that faith by belittling others. I’m sure I can still get that way although I try my best not to. Even Jesus’ disciples got that way from time to time – which is why I think Jesus took them to have the encounter with the syrophoenician woman. (Take a look at what happens to the miracles before and after that encounter, then look at how the disciples behaved.) The point though is that Jesus did things to show his disciples how they were acting, I worry that we are not always listening to what Jesus might be showing us about our actions.

What I really find troubling is when through our self-righteous attitudes we treat others like crap. Especially those who we do not think know that we are claiming to be Christ followers. Being a Christ follower doesn’t mean you are perfect, but it does mean you probably should stop being an asshole. My friend was telling me stories of his crew (not Christians) who go into the homes of Christians to do work and find that they are some of the worst of the people out there. Why is this the case? What makes us think that being a Christian makes no difference in how we treat others, especially when we think they might not realize we are Christians? Why does it not disturb us more that as soon as they see our Jesus bumper sticker they have that aha moment as to why we’ve been an asshole to them?

I get that not everyone will care to hear this. I hope some will. I myself am trying to be a good witness in all I do, and yes part of that is carefully choosing my words in this post. The bottom line is that claiming to have had a life changing encounter with someone like Jesus must mean more than just walking around feeling like you have one up on everyone else. Following Christ is costly, it will cost you your right to be an asshole.

Thanks Bob for the food for thought.

The Eclectic Life

Ah blogging, how I missed you.

In 2015 I finished up my Ph.D. and decided to close the blog (http://freedompastor.blogspot.com/) that had accompanied my academic formation. I briefly jumped back into blogging with the idea to review board games (http://happygamereviewer.blogspot.ca/), but if you have read my profile you will know that I have a lot of interests. I need a vehicle to help me frame this next phase of my life. I would like that vehicle to be as eclectic as I am. So here I am blogging again.

What I’d like to do with the Eclectic Life is give you a window into my pursuit of all that life has to offer. Here you will find the musings of a father, theologian, gamer, pastor, musician, woodworker, and philatelist. The teacher in me wants to share how I go about doing those things that I love to do. I expect to include maker style videos and conversations with the people whom I do life with, especially my wildly creative family. However, I need to be careful to say that in all of these eclectic interests I still have lots to learn, so expect that this journey will be full of mistakes and discoveries. If you are looking to journey with a life-long learner then you are more than welcome to come along.

The Eclectic Doctor

note: The photo is taken by my good friend Richard Dufault (Open Shutter Photography) and is my steam punk persona the Evangelist. Yes, I do like cosplay as well.

 

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