Month: February 2018

Satisfied Shelfie

 

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It has been a really big week! Big in the sense of getting a lot done but still feeling like there’s a heck of a lot left to do. The great news is that I finally have a new game room, my old game room will become our TV den and we’ll actually be able to use the fireplace. Yesterday my Ikea order arrived and this is the larger shelving space which I have dedicated to larger boardgames. There are about 30 or so large games up at the cottage that will eventually have a home here (at least when they visit). I have another unit that is half this size which is currently full of role playing accessories and small games. It looks disorganized right now so I’m thinking I’ll put doors on most of the cubbies to clean up the look. I also have a book shelf that is full of role playing games, everything from indie RPGs to Dungeons and Dragons (3.5 and 4th).img_20180222_235525.jpg The only thing I do not currently have space for is all my Injurious games terrain and miniatures, I will have to get creative for that challenge. I am thinking that I could build a bench with storage that will pull double duty as seating at my gaming table. The other idea is to build an insert that will slide into the back of my desk, I might even build both because storage is an issue at this point. Even if I purged my boardgame collection I will not have logical space for big pieces of terrain in the gaming room. Also I need to think about where to put our big Dominion box (currently on top of the RPG shelf). Sharon thinks I should build something to let us hang it on the wall, after all it is our favourite game. For now I’ll make due and enjoy building a solution in the summer.

So tonight we will try out the new gaming room. I am looking forward to hosting my bi-weekly Dungeon World game that has been on hiatus for far too long. I still need to clean up some of the painting supplies that Sharon left out, take out the boxes from the shelves, and clean up my old gaming table so that it can be brought downstairs. Oh yeah, and I still have a tonne of marking to do for school. But that should be doable for the day. I’ll post pictures when the room is all set up.

 

First Art!

IMG_20180220_205816Another big day and the trim is done! Well almost all done. Tomorrow morning I will caulk and fill in the brad holes. Tomorrow evening Sharon wants to paint the trim that we didn’t have a chance to pre-paint. The most exciting part is that there is no more cutting in the basement, my chop saw is back in the shop. I have a small paint station set up in the hall downstairs, but I swept up all the sawdust and am eagerly awaiting the arrival of my new shelves.

To celebrate I hung up a picture that my awesome daughter Chelsea drew when she was just starting out. Yeah, she was talented like that from the start. I have another whole wall to decorate when I find the right pieces, but I’ve had this picture in a frame since we started the build in the basement. I think it looks fantastic.

You can bet we will be gaming in this space Friday evening!

 

The Hectic/Productive Life

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Sometimes life feels really full. Those aren’t bad times, in fact they can be very rewarding times. But it is a fine line that separates feeling productive and feeling like you are sinking under the weight of it all. This was one of those weekends where I stood precariously on that line.

Sharon and I poured on the steam to get the basement finished, at least functionally finished. That meant sanding all the drywall in the last room as well as in the stairwell, priming everything, and painting. I managed to finish up the sanding and move my chop saw out of the main room on Saturday (I’ll bring it back to finish up the trim this week). We had lots of other things on the go so the order of when we completed tasks is a bit of a blur. I managed to prime and caulk everything Sunday after church. I was also able to do a prime check which I would quickly prime this morning. Then I started in on the ceiling paint while Sharon sealed the stairwell, this was necessary because previous owners were heavy smokers and the last owners sealed the ceilings but not the walls so that now the nicotine in the walls is starting to emerge! Not pleasant. We did not want to have that happen in the new basement so all of the existing drywall has been sealed.

We had just enough ceiling paint for the game room (main area). We did not have enough wall paint to finish the walls in the game room, although I almost managed the second coat. I’m going to pick up some more paint tomorrow and finish the job, I think Robert is coming by to help me install trim. Oh and tomorrow is already packed with the car going in for repairs in the morning and a Skype call with my good friend Beth Stovell in the afternoon. But I am motivated to finish because I ordered the Kallax shelving which arrives Thursday Afternoon! Finally my games will have a new home.

So add to all of that preparing worship for our small group tonight, going to small group, visiting with my buddy Kadry to see his kitchen upgrades, Sharon taking in Les Miserables, and a surprise flat tire (not one, but two screws!). It was a pretty full long weekend.

In the picture my buddy Richard Dufault and I are battling my dark Jedi daughter Chelsea. This was from a photoshoot Richard did for us to promote a game Chelsea and I developed called Quack, Quack, Duck

 

Videos

IMG_20180215_143805You might have noticed that I recently produced my first maker video. I wanted to do this as a proof of concept, something that would give me an idea of the amount of work required to bring to life that part of my vision for this blog. In keeping with my eclectic nature I really want to do videos that dip into all the different aspects of my life: teaching, hobbies, spirituality, etc. So I wanted to see just how intrusive the process of filming a project can be. Even though I record videos for my courses, at home I do not have a producer watching the camera angles and making sure I get enough takes to convey my message effectively. At the end of the process I think adding regular videos is quite doable, although I will need to upgrade a few things.

The first video was shot with my phone and compiled quickly in lower resolution than I intend to work. The editing process took me about 2.5 hours to produce the video from the footage I had collected. I anticipate that it will take about double that amount of time if I’m using my Canon T5i to record. I also have access to microphones that will help with the audio. I’d eventually like to add a few go pro cameras to capture other angles, but more video footage means more work. I need to start by developing my skills with the tools I already own.

A carpentry video was a great place to start because I make lots of mistakes in carpentry. For example, I should have made the base of my transition 3/4″ wide (1/8th” wider), fortunately I did make the floors to accommodate this size which is what I need for better stability. That said, I am very much an amateur carpenter. But that fits with my vision because I want to produce video content that isn’t about getting it right all the time. I want to show the learning process as well as encourage people to try things on your own. Even though carpentry is really a hobby for me, I have good friends (like my buddy Robert) who are professional carpenters that can answer my questions and help me understand my mistake. This is invaluable in any of life’s endeavors.

Years ago I had the idea of a cooking show called My Messy Kitchen where sometimes the meals turn out, but it is always an adventure in real life with kids interrupting the cook. I will definitely do a few cooking videos along the way – I love cooking. This blog has the same philosophy. Let’s do some things, in real life, and see what happens. Sometimes you end up with an amazing testament to your growing capabilities and other times you learn from your mistakes. We’ll have to see if there is an audience for this approach, but I suspect that there is.

 

Transition Strip (part 2)

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=67M–46FSIo]

Ultimately the transition strip I carved was too narrow, but I videoed the process and I’ll post some images when I install a slightly wider version tomorrow.

Lent and the Crucified God

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Over at the Jürgen Moltmann Discussion Group on Facebook James Blackhall shared about his practice of reading through The Crucified God as a Lenten devotion. His post came as I have been trying to discern a healthy Lenten practice for myself for this season. I usually find giving up a food item might help my waistline, but it usually doesn’t translate into a devotional practice which is more fitting for the season. The years that I’ve found Lent most meaningful have been those when I’ve added a practice to my daily life. Last year I took on the daily office, which I do, albeit quite a bit more sporadically, otherwise. This year I wanted something different so I was inspired when James mentioned his use of The Crucified God.

The Crucified God was one of the first books by Moltmann that I read. My first read of the text was likely in the third year of my undergrad. I remember a conversation in the hall about it with Ken Melchin, he thought I should go back to the beginning and read Theology of Hope. I followed Ken’s advice after I finished The Crucified God and have read Theology of Hope many more times since. I had forgotten just how good The Crucified God is because even though I used much of it in my doctoral research, I hadn’t read the whole of The Crucified God since those early years of study.

Right from the get go, Moltmann confronts us with the arresting claim that “[t]he cross is not and cannot be loved.” (p.1) Then he draws us into the notion that any Christian theology of hope is in fact built upon “the resurrection of the crucified Christ.” (p.5) I am hooked. I’ve decided that I will post one or two quotes on Facebook every day, both as a way of keeping myself accountable to the practice and as a way of letting the text live in my real world context. I’m sure there will be commentary here as well.

May your Lenten reflections be rewarding.

 

Transition Strip (Part 1)

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Time to break out the fine carpentry tools! We are having a bit of a Chinook the next two days so I thought it was a great opportunity to carve the transition strip for the new bathroom. When you have two types of flooring meet and they are not at the same level the only real option is to create some sort of transition. I love carving these from hardwood and this will be the fourth one I’ve carved, so I have a sense of what I’m doing. Most of the work will be done with the table saw, but there are a lot of steps to make the transition pretty.

IMG_20180214_095022The picture to the right is the last transition strip that I carved. This is installed in our front entrance after I tiled the space. I still have a bit of finish work in the entrance, but I’m waiting for warmer weather to finish off the built in cabinet, I really do not want to spend the day on the tablesaw and router in below zero weather. For this transition I used a leftover piece of the maple floors that the previous owners had installed and carved it to fit into the gap between the tile and the existing wood floor. If you were to look at the transition piece before it was installed it was essentially a T shape with a little more material over the wood floor than the tiles (to account for the height difference). I simply installed this one with PL glue but in the past I’ve screwed transitions in and made plugs that I would smooth over. I prefer the finish with glue. This transition has been here for almost a year now and seems rock solid. This is the trajectory for my new bathroom transition.

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I meant to grab a piece of wood yesterday when I came home from lecturing. However I forgot. The wood was in the garage which is cold, so I need to let it warm up. I took some rough measurements and found another piece of maple flooring that will serve my purposes. They had a stack of this stuff in the rafters of the basement, I’ve been slowly using it up for little projects.

The bathroom door is only about 2′ wide, so I grabbed a piece that was about 26″ to give myself plenty to work with. I needed something at least 3/4″ thick, which this piece is. Worst case I might need to laminate a strip on the bottom, we’ll take care of that later if it is necessary. What I want to do first, after the piece acclimatizes, is carve a T so that the top will be level and no more than 1/8th” above the tile. Because the wood I chose has ridges on the bottom, I’ll need to carefully carve it so that the bottom of the T is right over a ridge, otherwise I’ll lose about an 1/8th” of material and definitely need to laminate something to the bottom. I’ll post my measurements when I get in there and some pics of my table saw setup for each cut.

*Just a note on the header picture, a few years back I made a book of the contents of my various tool boxes so that my wife might have a better idea where tools went when she was done with them (I do realize this is pure fantasy). This was my fine woodworking box at the time, it has changed quite a bit since then. Lots of measuring new measuring tools and even a pin nailer live in that box now. I need to update the photo, maybe do a comparison post. I do try to keep the list under the picture fairly up to date, but in the end it is more for my own curiosity than anything else. 

 

 

Transparency and Leadership

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Two events have been occupying  my thoughts early this morning. The first is from yesterday’s sermon. Towards the end of the sermon the elder preaching opened up about struggling with the fruits of the Spirit. That might not seem like a big confession and in the context it was the elder identifying with the self-disappointment we all often feel when we take the time to examine our lives. It is a big deal when juxtaposed with a recent conversation from a small church pastor’s forum. On that forum one pastor was lamenting that when they tried to open up and get help for some trivial struggle a congregant shut them down and told them that as a leader they should never confess weakness to the congregation. I remember reading that and feeling angry. Some of the strongest moments in my own ministry were also those where I was most transparent about my struggles. Here’s the rub, leaders are people too, lovely flawed people. We can all be idiots, we can and will let ourselves and the people we love down. The moment we pretend otherwise is the moment we start loving a fiction over the truth.

Now when our elder mentioned their own struggles the context was how they have been meditating on  the fruits of the Spirit as a way of trying to be better. My instant thought was: keep talking like that and you will lose people. The sad thing is that many people do not go to church to be challenged in their own failings let alone want to follow someone they think of as being less than perfect. Often people prefer the willful lie over reality because facing reality means working on ourselves. It shouldn’t surprise us that churches which expect perfect leaders have a hard time dealing with leaders who do evil things and even cover up wickedness that should never be covered up.

My second thought was that any people you lose by being transparent are not the kind people who really want what is best for you anyway. We need to expect something better from the church. We need to be a place where we can come with all our warts and imperfections and call each other to the life God has for us. We need to love truth, especially the truth about ourselves. We need to love each other, especially when we are unlovable. And loving never means pretending everything is perfect, instead we have hope that one day we will be made perfect in the presence of God. Today we work together to help each other be better, a work that is made easier the more we are free to open up.

I don’t expect that this week’s sermon will chase off any of the people I’ve come to know and love in our church. In fact our elders have a good track record of living out their imperfections from the front. I think it is one of the biggest strengths of the new Vineyard here. I am encouraged greatly when I see it. But I also know that some people will not like giving up the illusion of perfect leaders. Hopefully we’ll have few instances where people push back against such transparency, I know I had a few in my time pastoring. My prayer for our elders (the two couples who pastor our church) is that they will be bold in the face of all resistance, continuing to live in such a way as to promote transparency and real growth.

 

Custom Basement Bathroom

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This summer we started in on our basement. We wanted to get things done fairly quickly so we hired my buddy Robert Sykes to be the general contractor onsite. I’ve worked with Robert on quite a few renovation projects, both in our old house and on historical restoration projects for his clients. He’s really a fantastic carpenter and I’ve learned tonnes working with him. Despite wanting to have things move along quickly, life through us a curve ball when my dad took sick and passed away. Since then we have been plugging away at the basement while trying to keep on top of rest of life that was all put on hold while we took care of family. Thankfully, we are on our last two rooms. I’ll post about what we did in other rooms later, but it is so incredible to be down to two rooms (even though we have a bit of finish work throughout)!

IMG_20180201_135236The main area, our family room, will become my new gaming room. And we decided to put in a three piece bathroom which is what we were working on today. The room has been built, including plumbing, for a while now, what we’ve been putting off is all the tiling. The walls and ceiling are simple white tiles with an accent piece off center on the back wall. The glass you see in the picture is the sliding part of the shower door which we’ll reinstall tomorrow when we grout the floor.

Let me tell you a bit about the bathroom. We had a small space, around 5′ by 6 1/2′ to work with. We knew from the start that we’d be doing a custom shower. We tied into the existing powder-room rough ins which meant our location in the basement was fixed and we were stuck with the small footprint to work with. The shower is about half of the room (I think it is 3′ X 5′) which leaves enough space for a small sink (I’ll show pics when I get it installed) and a toilet. This also means we are making the door open out into the family room. We cut a new vent hole in the outside wall to run proper ventilation for the room. IMG_20180201_135242I feel like we did everything right to make a great three piece. Now to make it pretty.

As usual, my lovely wife Sharon chose the tiles and hopefully will choose paint this week so that we can finish the whole bathroom by early next week. The floor mosaic tiles are a real pain because we made the floor so that it drains into the shower. We started with a soldier line under the shower door and liked things up from there. Unfortunately we redid a few  fields of tiles that just didn’t lay the way we wanted. I’m glad Robert did this part, I like laying tile but it is murder on the knees. I was in charge of cuts which made the work go quickly. We did all the little tricky cuts today because it was warm enough to use a wet saw outside, I love my wet saw, I’m not so fond of using it in sub-zero weather.

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However, I ended up using a diamond wheel on a rotary tool. I was going to use it for cutting out the openings for the shower head and handle, but found it was easy to use so rather than setting up the wet saw and going up and down the stairs a million times I went the rotary tool route. I simply filled a roller tray with a bit of water and kept dipping the tile in the water while cutting. This worked quite well and didn’t get water everywhere which my wet saw is prone to do. For all of the other cuts I used the manual cutter that my friend Kadry added to my tile tools last time he borrowed them! Kadry is the best.
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The results so far are great. But we have yet to tile the inside door frame (after we install the shower door), grout everything, paint the rest of the walls, install the fixtures, and carve a transition from the laminate floor to the tiled floor. No more really hard parts, just lots of jobs that you need to wait until dry before continuing.

When I was editing my post I noticed that one of the ceiling tiles had slipped a bit! Saw it in the first picture. I went immediately in to re-set that tile and propped it up with a shim until it dries. Maybe that’s another perk of blogging. 

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