In late October here in Louisville fall has been rather warm. That was not the case 10 years ago when my family and lived in Minnesota. 10 years ago this weekend I headed south for the weekend, while my wife, son, and dog went north instead, past Duluth, MN, to the North Shore of Lake Superior, to Grand Marais, MN, and beyond. Despite the warmer weather in Georgia, I’ve always been a little jealous of my family, as my wife told some very entertaining stories about their visit up there.
I had found them a cute motel along the lake, with little cabins on one side of the road and on the other side, big white Adirondack chairs, next to the lake (which didn’t really have a beach). They got there late, but the motel had advertised pizza. So when my family asked for food, they pulled some frozen pizza out and popped it in a toaster oven, and that was their dinner. It was cold that night – there were already no leaves on the trees up there – and so my wife cranked up the radiator heat. The heat took a while to get going, and at 3:00 a.m. my wife woke up to our dog vomiting, because he had gotten so hot in the room. They rushed outside and crossed the road. I’ve always enjoyed thinking of that vision: Stephanie, Vincent, and Frisco sitting out in their pajamas on the Adirondack chairs, looking out at Lake Superior at 3:00 a.m.
In the morning, my family got up to watch Canadian TV about the actor who played Dumbledore dying. And then they drove on to Judge Magney State Park, where lots of hiking was in store. At one point, my wife urged them down a hill, but our son stopped, sat in the middle of the trail, and cried. It’s downhill, said Stephanie. But, Vincent cried and blurted out, “eventually we’ll have to come back up a hill” (to get back to the car). So he stayed put and Stephanie and Frisco went on.
Entertaining memories – memories of a wintry late-October Minnesota weekend – that I missed.
-Perry
Thursday, October 25, 2012
Thursday, June 21, 2012
Hail to the chief!
At the risk of offending my Republican, independent, and Clinton Democrat fellow Toastmasters, and our guests, I am going to speak today in praise of the work of our President, Barack Obama. With a high unemployment and profound political polarization, this may seem like an odd time to be praising the President. But, ultimately, President Obama’s record makes my task an easy one.
I’m going to praise the President’s leadership in five areas. I’m going to talk about he has led our country out of two wars, help prevent economic catastrophe, begun to reform three critical sectors of our economy, tried to ease polarization, and served as a role model for all of us.
Let me first talk about the wars. Some people may argue that it was President Bush that laid the groundwork for the withdrawal from Iraq and that the situation in Afghanistan is so complex that any president would have begun withdrawing troops from there. The latter is just not true. When President Obama asked his generals in 2009 to prepare plan that involved starting to withdraw U.S. troops 18 months later, they essentially declined to do so. President Obama had to get out his laptop and type out a three-page plan that made way for the withdrawal a year and a half later. It’s only because the President took that initiative that the withdrawal is underway.
Let me now talk about the economy. Tea Party folks, bless their hearts, like to ignore what was patently obvious in the fall of 2008. Capitalism, let to its own devices, can destroy itself. Sometimes the government has to come in and save the day. As much as President Obama might have had to hold his nose about the bank bailout, the auto bailout, and even the fiscal stimulus package, long-term zero-percent interest rates, and the temporary extension of ALL the Bush tax cuts, he had the government do what it had to rescue the economy.
The three critical sectors of the economy that President Obama has begun to reform are the energy sector, the banking and finance sector, and the health care sector. Let me focus on the health care sector. Regardless of what you may personally think about the universal health care mandate, you must concede these facts: The United States has the highest-quality health care in the world. But the United States also spends more money on health care than any other country, for among the worst overall health care outcomes of any wealthy country. The health system is broke. Obamacare, if you want to call it that, is a good stab at fixing it.
Let me now talk about easing political polarization. From the point of view of summer 2012, it’s easy to forget that President Obama TRIED to appoint three Republicans to his original Cabinet. He jettisoned some of his most cherished policy objectives that were particular anathema to Republicans: the “public option,” “cap and trade,” and repealing the Bush tax cuts for the wealthy. And parts of his program that have been enacted he borrowed from Republicans: The health insurance exchange system was an idea of Senator McCain. The universal health insurance mandate was an idea of Governor Romney. Most recently, the administrative version of the DREAM Act, for young undocumented immigrants was an idea of Senator Rubio.
Finally, let me talk about President Obama as a role model. I want to refer you to the photograph that most of you should have in front of you, a photo I like quite a bit. I understand that a man was retiring from the White House staff in 2009 and he and his family toured the White House and met with the President. The man told the President that his son, then five, had a question for him. The boy told the president that he wanted to know if the President’s hair was just like his. President Obama leaned down, as you can see in the photo, and asked: why don’t you see for yourself? When the boy hesitated, President Obama said, “Go ahead – touch it, dude.” After the boy did indeed touch the President’s hair, he nodded that, yes, indeed their hair was the same. Throughout his three years in office, President Obama has generally avoided talking about race. But this was an occasion in which this boy, African-American, seemed to appreciate that the President was also African American. Now, I’m not African American, but I can tell you this: As a biracial person, with an immigrant father, with roots in Asia, and with a funny-sounding name, I also appreciate that the person in the White House is a biracial person, with an immigrant father, with roots in Asia, and with a funny-sounding name. President Obama’s story helps convince me –like many others across the country and across the world – that anything is possible.
I’ve spoken today in praise of the work of President Obama. I’ve talked about how President Obama has served as a role model, tried to ease political polarization, begun to reform three sectors of the economy, helped save our economy, and led us out of two wars. I hope that I’ve persuaded one or two of you to do what I plan to do in November: the vote to re-elect President Obama. Think about all of the difficult challenges the President has faced in the past three years, and all he has been able to accomplish despite these challenges. I can only imagine what he could accomplish in four more years. Watching that would help remind me – and Republicans, independents, and Democrats alike – that, truly, anything is possible.
-Perry
Saturday, March 5, 2011
Progress!
Click on each of these images to see evidence of Vincent's school progress. The information below was from the English he was essentially taking for the fourth time - for the second time for high school/college dual-enrollment credit.
Wednesday, January 26, 2011
Medical innovations
All three of us have been embarking on medical innovations. At a quarterly visit with one of Vincent’s doctors, the doctor heard more stories about Vincent’s long sleeping and sometimes sleepless nights and laid out a path for Vincent to take a waking-up medication that might require a sleep apnea diagnosis – so off Vincent is to a sleep specialist later this month. Although Vincent’s got less than a month to finish his English class, he’s been periodically energetic, apparently writing down ideas for novels, scripts, or video game storyline ideas. Vincent apparently came back from a counseling session with this idea – ostensibly to do research for Asian-themed story lines – by going back – 2 ½ years after quitting – to St. Matthews Martial Arts, where teachers all seemed to remember him.
As I continue to go to physical therapy to work on my knee, I’ve gone back also for an aspect of the shoulder-neck-back problem that began during a June 2006 visit to Michigan. I had hoped to combine knee and shoulder visits – but I’m having to separate them , for reasons of time – and so I’m going not only for essentially do-it-yourself work on my knee, but also work on my shoulder, for which I need more help. On my first visit my PT found evidence of shoulder problems and gave me a chiropractic-style intervention that I’ve only gotten for this injury (not for the knee injury). We also took about her idea (an epidural) and my idea (acupuncture?). PT for two different injuries for a while.
Stephanie’s forays into sewing classes helped her realize that it’s not easy to find patterns that fit her, and some patterns may produce clothes that need to be altered. That – and a return to Weight Watchers, with its new Points Plus system – got her not only to count points (plus) again but to use our gym membership regularly. After going to the Breckinridge Inn gym/pool twice in one year (for some $600 – that’s $300 per family visit), we’ve gone five times in the past month – including three times in the past week. Now, in turns out that some of the knee weight machines actually bother my knee. But between swimming and weight machines and the stationary bike/”elliptical” machine – both of us have been losing weight.
-- Perry
As I continue to go to physical therapy to work on my knee, I’ve gone back also for an aspect of the shoulder-neck-back problem that began during a June 2006 visit to Michigan. I had hoped to combine knee and shoulder visits – but I’m having to separate them , for reasons of time – and so I’m going not only for essentially do-it-yourself work on my knee, but also work on my shoulder, for which I need more help. On my first visit my PT found evidence of shoulder problems and gave me a chiropractic-style intervention that I’ve only gotten for this injury (not for the knee injury). We also took about her idea (an epidural) and my idea (acupuncture?). PT for two different injuries for a while.
Stephanie’s forays into sewing classes helped her realize that it’s not easy to find patterns that fit her, and some patterns may produce clothes that need to be altered. That – and a return to Weight Watchers, with its new Points Plus system – got her not only to count points (plus) again but to use our gym membership regularly. After going to the Breckinridge Inn gym/pool twice in one year (for some $600 – that’s $300 per family visit), we’ve gone five times in the past month – including three times in the past week. Now, in turns out that some of the knee weight machines actually bother my knee. But between swimming and weight machines and the stationary bike/”elliptical” machine – both of us have been losing weight.
-- Perry
2010 Outreach Council Annual Report

Outreach Council serves as a hub and catalyst for Crescent Hill Presbyterian Church’s outreach, mission, and evangelism activities. In 2010 Agnes March, Bob Abrams, Chris Snyder, Izzy Jones, Janine Linder, Jeff Gilbert, Lowell Linder, Lucy Steilberg, Marcus Perry, Perry Chang, Rebecca Barnes-Davies, and Wanda Abrams participated regularly in Outreach meetings, with Amy Linfield, Carlos Lara, and Pastor Jane Larsen-Wigger also participating periodically. Marcus and Perry led the Council as co-chairpersons. Participating in individual meetings were Alan Pauw, Brooke Pierson, Diana Stephen, Gail Bingham, Jennifer Thalman Kepler, Kashama Lengulula, and Paula Tibbs.
Everyone is welcome to Outreach meetings at 7:00 p.m. on the second Wednesday of every month, in the Fireside Room.
Key activities of the Council, and the church, this past year included:
- Book distribution. Thanks to the generosity of CHPC’s Ann Yeargin, the church gave 1,000 books (Bluegrass Breeze and One Tiny Twig) to local children and families through half a dozen partners: United Crescent Hill Ministries, Presbyterian Community Center, Eastern Area Community Ministries, Breckinridge-Franklin Elementary School (in Irish Hill), and Fairmont Elementary School (in New Albany) (pictured above). The council worked with the books’ author, Dan Rhema. Among the others who helped with this were: Alan Pauw, Chris Snyder, Dave Bush, Diana Stephen, Gayle Trautwein, Izzy Jones, Pastor Jane, Johanna Wint, Marcus Perry, and Stephanie Gregory.
- Food for Thought series. Working with Pastor Jane, Charlie Boyd, Molly Boyd, Bruce Whearty, and Lora Whearty began this series of light lunches and presentations by Crescent Hill folks involved in various missions and ministries this past spring. Many presenters made PowerPoint presentations, and most let folks know how they could get more information and what follow-up action they could take. Making presentations were Anne Del Prince, Bruce Whearty and Lora Whearty, Christi Boyd and Jeff Boyd, Fletcher Padoko, Jerry Van Marter, Mary Love, Stephen Bartlett, and Tricia Lloyd-Sidle. These lunchtime events gave people a chance to hear about different mission, outreach, and advocacy opportunities, and gave individual CHPC folks a chance to reflect on what difference their work (paid and volunteer) has made in their lives and the lives of others.
- Mission month. With a kickoff sermon at the beginning of the month by Pastor Jane that reminded Crescent Hill folks why we do mission, Crescent Hill celebrated August as mission month. Church mission teams that traveled to Appalachia and Guatemala (and participated in the Presbyterian Youth Triennium) led worship services. All long-term Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) mission co-workers who Crescent Hill supports participated in this. Christi Boyd and Jeff Boyd (in west Africa) spoke at a Food for Thought lunch, and Jeff also gave a Minute for Mission during worship. Amanda Craft (in Guatemala) spoke to a Wednesday evening audience (pictured below), before Council meetings. (Our own Hunter Farrell, director of PC(USA) World Mission, also preached.) Carrying over into early September were: (1) a worship service led by participants of Louisville Presbyterian seminary Brazil mission trip (with Rebecca Barnes-Davies preaching), which Outreach had recommended for church support; (2) a sermon by JoElla Holman, who later this past fall left for the Caribbean became a fifth PC(USA) mission co-worker the church supports; and (3) a dinner with Nancy Collins (in east Africa) and some Outreach folks. Carrying over into December was a talk by outgoing Young Adult Volunteer Luke Van Marter to current Youth Group folks and Youth Group alumni/ae. The month plus helped focus the church’s attention on mission.

- Ministry opportunity fair. In October Outreach put together displays about its work and arranged for displays by several CHPC ministries and CHPC partner organizations (many of them staffed with people to respond to questions): greeters ministry, Guatemala mission partnership, Habitat for Humanity, joint three-church English as a foreign-language teaching ministry, PC(USA) international mission co-worker liaison team, Presbyterian Community Center, Sustainable Agriculture of Louisville, and United Crescent Hill Ministries. Participating in this were Amy Linfield (who designed two beautiful displays), Ana Lara, Bob Abrams, Diana Stephen, Jamie McMillin, Jennifer Thalman Kepler, Lowell Linder, Stephen Bartlett, and Wanda Abrams, along with mission partners Irene Spicer and Lori Jacobs. Several dozen Crescent Hill folks signed Christmas cards for the mission co-workers, and their families, who the church supports, and several people signed up for volunteering or to receive more information for each of the ministries with displays/sign-up sheets. The Latin American food in the Outreach Council corner (which Lowell supplied) was among the most popular at this very successful event, and drew more people to the displays (pictured below). The event also pushed Outreach to pull together more detailed information about fall 2010 volunteer opportunities with some dozen ministries with which the church works.
Everyone is welcome to Outreach meetings at 7:00 p.m. on the second Wednesday of every month, in the Fireside Room.
Key activities of the Council, and the church, this past year included:
- Book distribution. Thanks to the generosity of CHPC’s Ann Yeargin, the church gave 1,000 books (Bluegrass Breeze and One Tiny Twig) to local children and families through half a dozen partners: United Crescent Hill Ministries, Presbyterian Community Center, Eastern Area Community Ministries, Breckinridge-Franklin Elementary School (in Irish Hill), and Fairmont Elementary School (in New Albany) (pictured above). The council worked with the books’ author, Dan Rhema. Among the others who helped with this were: Alan Pauw, Chris Snyder, Dave Bush, Diana Stephen, Gayle Trautwein, Izzy Jones, Pastor Jane, Johanna Wint, Marcus Perry, and Stephanie Gregory.
- Food for Thought series. Working with Pastor Jane, Charlie Boyd, Molly Boyd, Bruce Whearty, and Lora Whearty began this series of light lunches and presentations by Crescent Hill folks involved in various missions and ministries this past spring. Many presenters made PowerPoint presentations, and most let folks know how they could get more information and what follow-up action they could take. Making presentations were Anne Del Prince, Bruce Whearty and Lora Whearty, Christi Boyd and Jeff Boyd, Fletcher Padoko, Jerry Van Marter, Mary Love, Stephen Bartlett, and Tricia Lloyd-Sidle. These lunchtime events gave people a chance to hear about different mission, outreach, and advocacy opportunities, and gave individual CHPC folks a chance to reflect on what difference their work (paid and volunteer) has made in their lives and the lives of others.
- Mission month. With a kickoff sermon at the beginning of the month by Pastor Jane that reminded Crescent Hill folks why we do mission, Crescent Hill celebrated August as mission month. Church mission teams that traveled to Appalachia and Guatemala (and participated in the Presbyterian Youth Triennium) led worship services. All long-term Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) mission co-workers who Crescent Hill supports participated in this. Christi Boyd and Jeff Boyd (in west Africa) spoke at a Food for Thought lunch, and Jeff also gave a Minute for Mission during worship. Amanda Craft (in Guatemala) spoke to a Wednesday evening audience (pictured below), before Council meetings. (Our own Hunter Farrell, director of PC(USA) World Mission, also preached.) Carrying over into early September were: (1) a worship service led by participants of Louisville Presbyterian seminary Brazil mission trip (with Rebecca Barnes-Davies preaching), which Outreach had recommended for church support; (2) a sermon by JoElla Holman, who later this past fall left for the Caribbean became a fifth PC(USA) mission co-worker the church supports; and (3) a dinner with Nancy Collins (in east Africa) and some Outreach folks. Carrying over into December was a talk by outgoing Young Adult Volunteer Luke Van Marter to current Youth Group folks and Youth Group alumni/ae. The month plus helped focus the church’s attention on mission.

- Ministry opportunity fair. In October Outreach put together displays about its work and arranged for displays by several CHPC ministries and CHPC partner organizations (many of them staffed with people to respond to questions): greeters ministry, Guatemala mission partnership, Habitat for Humanity, joint three-church English as a foreign-language teaching ministry, PC(USA) international mission co-worker liaison team, Presbyterian Community Center, Sustainable Agriculture of Louisville, and United Crescent Hill Ministries. Participating in this were Amy Linfield (who designed two beautiful displays), Ana Lara, Bob Abrams, Diana Stephen, Jamie McMillin, Jennifer Thalman Kepler, Lowell Linder, Stephen Bartlett, and Wanda Abrams, along with mission partners Irene Spicer and Lori Jacobs. Several dozen Crescent Hill folks signed Christmas cards for the mission co-workers, and their families, who the church supports, and several people signed up for volunteering or to receive more information for each of the ministries with displays/sign-up sheets. The Latin American food in the Outreach Council corner (which Lowell supplied) was among the most popular at this very successful event, and drew more people to the displays (pictured below). The event also pushed Outreach to pull together more detailed information about fall 2010 volunteer opportunities with some dozen ministries with which the church works.
- Preschool. 2010 was a time of promotion, reflection, and restructuring for this 50-year-old-plus children’s ministry of the church. Licensing issues, up-and-down enrollments, staff changes, the economic downturn, and changing marketing strategies helped trigger a discussion among Outreach Council, the session, and especially the preschool board about the preschool’s future. A mid-year marketing campaign that included several dozen Crescent Hill families and individuals putting CHPC Preschool yard signs in their front yards, and inviting opportunities to talk about the preschool and the church in general with neighbors, netted just enough students to continue preschool operations during the 2010-2011 school year. Discussions about the future (of both the preschool and ministries to children in the community, in general) continue. Participating on the board are Ada Asenjo, Katherine Futrell, Pastor Jane, Janine Linder, Julie Leake, Lucy Steilberg (board chairperson), Lowell Linder, Sally Flick (preschool director), and Tom Peterson.
- New members. Two classes of 16 people total joined, affiliated, or associated with Crescent Hill church, in March and October. Those included: Andrew Black and Dawn Black, Anne Del Prince, Dana Hemming, Donna Burch and Marsha Berry, Eric Proctor and Laura Hayes, Jennifer Thalman Kepler and Paul Kepler, Jim Hubert and Kristy Hubert, Kara Smith and Taylor Smith, Risa Musto, and Stephanie Gregory (who moved from affiliation to membership). Pastor Jane and Lucy Steilberg helped coordinate new member activities and connecting new members and sponsors.
- Giving and benevolence. Outreach helped coordinate the church’s participation in four churchwide special offerings, the One Great Hour of Sharing offering (which helps fund the PC(USA)’s Disaster Assistance, Hunger, and Self-Development of People ministries), Pentecost Offering (which funds PC(USA) ministries for at-risk children), Peacemaking Offering (which helps fund the Presbyterian Peacemaking Program), and Christmas Joy Offering (which helps fund assistance to needy active and retired church workers and PC(USA)-related racial ethnic schools and colleges). This year the church received about $7,300, down slightly from the previous year, when there were fewer competing giving opportunities. That includes $2,715 for the One Great Hour of Sharing offering, $1,321 for Pentecost, $1,862 for Peacemaking, and $1,398 for Christmas Joy. Two of these offerings include local funding opportunities, and Outreach recommended that $330 of the Pentecost Offering receipts go to support the Bellewood Presbyterian Home for Children and that $465 of the Peacemaking Offering go to help support the peacemaking lecture series at Louisville Presbyterian Seminary, in honor of Professor George Edwards, who died in 2010, and Jean Edwards. Brad Wigger, Chris Snyder, Janine Linder, Jerry Van Marter, Martha Gee, Ruth Farrell, Sally Pendleton, Shannon Langley, and Stephen Bartlett helped promote the offerings. Outreach made recommendations about use of the brand-new CHPC Mission Fund, including $1,000 that went to the United Crescent Hill Ministries (and got the church a logo on the December Santa Sprint and Stroll promotional materials and T-shirt) and $500 to the EFL ministry. Outreach also worked with Dave Bush and UCHM to turn some $800 Crescent Hill church folks donated into $4,000 for utility assistance for Crescent Hill residents (through the Metro Match program) and to have Crescent Hill church folks donate nonperishable food items for UCHM’s emergency food assistance program once a month, instead of just once a year. Outreach played a role in a successful December effort to shore up end-of-the-year finances, which helped the church keep its 2010 benevolence commitments.
- New ministries. Outreach Council blessed and helped provide an advisory committee member (Lowell Linder) for an outreach ministry with French-speaking African immigrants and other French-speaking people. Helmed by Kashama Lengulula and Paula Tibbs, the ministry began offering Sunday afternoon worship services in the CHPC sanctuary in November. Outreach also helped provide a member (Lowell Linder) to a new board for the CHPC Community Garden, as well as $500 to the year-old EFL ministry.
- Neighborhood outreach. Outreach Council talked periodically during the year about ways to reach out to Crescent Hill/Clifton neighbors. The Council continued to have the church buy ads in the Crescent Hill Community Newsletter, mailed to residents, and considered other strategies.
-- Perry
- Giving and benevolence. Outreach helped coordinate the church’s participation in four churchwide special offerings, the One Great Hour of Sharing offering (which helps fund the PC(USA)’s Disaster Assistance, Hunger, and Self-Development of People ministries), Pentecost Offering (which funds PC(USA) ministries for at-risk children), Peacemaking Offering (which helps fund the Presbyterian Peacemaking Program), and Christmas Joy Offering (which helps fund assistance to needy active and retired church workers and PC(USA)-related racial ethnic schools and colleges). This year the church received about $7,300, down slightly from the previous year, when there were fewer competing giving opportunities. That includes $2,715 for the One Great Hour of Sharing offering, $1,321 for Pentecost, $1,862 for Peacemaking, and $1,398 for Christmas Joy. Two of these offerings include local funding opportunities, and Outreach recommended that $330 of the Pentecost Offering receipts go to support the Bellewood Presbyterian Home for Children and that $465 of the Peacemaking Offering go to help support the peacemaking lecture series at Louisville Presbyterian Seminary, in honor of Professor George Edwards, who died in 2010, and Jean Edwards. Brad Wigger, Chris Snyder, Janine Linder, Jerry Van Marter, Martha Gee, Ruth Farrell, Sally Pendleton, Shannon Langley, and Stephen Bartlett helped promote the offerings. Outreach made recommendations about use of the brand-new CHPC Mission Fund, including $1,000 that went to the United Crescent Hill Ministries (and got the church a logo on the December Santa Sprint and Stroll promotional materials and T-shirt) and $500 to the EFL ministry. Outreach also worked with Dave Bush and UCHM to turn some $800 Crescent Hill church folks donated into $4,000 for utility assistance for Crescent Hill residents (through the Metro Match program) and to have Crescent Hill church folks donate nonperishable food items for UCHM’s emergency food assistance program once a month, instead of just once a year. Outreach played a role in a successful December effort to shore up end-of-the-year finances, which helped the church keep its 2010 benevolence commitments.
- New ministries. Outreach Council blessed and helped provide an advisory committee member (Lowell Linder) for an outreach ministry with French-speaking African immigrants and other French-speaking people. Helmed by Kashama Lengulula and Paula Tibbs, the ministry began offering Sunday afternoon worship services in the CHPC sanctuary in November. Outreach also helped provide a member (Lowell Linder) to a new board for the CHPC Community Garden, as well as $500 to the year-old EFL ministry.
- Neighborhood outreach. Outreach Council talked periodically during the year about ways to reach out to Crescent Hill/Clifton neighbors. The Council continued to have the church buy ads in the Crescent Hill Community Newsletter, mailed to residents, and considered other strategies.
-- Perry
Tuesday, January 18, 2011
New ventures

Only one of three new endeavors for us today panned out. After a 2 ½-year absence, Vincent went back to martial arts classes – Kenpo – down the street, and that seemed to go well, although he said he was a little sore. Although Stephanie and I going back to the gym for the second time in a month (after an eight-month-plus absence) went OK, my effort to shift from physical therapy for my knee to PT for my shoulder, etc. failed, as I miscomunicated in appointment-making with the staff (and I stuck with my knee instead). I’ll try again next week. After sewing lessons with her colleague and twice at Joann Fabrics, Stephanie was excited to go to a two-hour in-home class, with someone she had found on the Internet. But the woman was skeptical about whether Stephanie would be able to alter dresses that Stephanie had found patterns for – patterns that it turns out weren’t exactly Stephanie’s size – and so Stephanie mainly went back to making pajama pants something she had learned and mastered at JoAnn’s last week. Bummer. Now Stephanie’s back to the drawing board, trying to find patterns for clothes that will fit better.
-- Perry
Labels:
classes,
health,
Kentuckiana,
martial arts,
sewing
Thursday, December 2, 2010
"How to Maximize Your Efficiency, Effectiveness, and Productivity"

Key points from the final (Wednesday, November 10) workshop University of Louisville business professor Russ Ray (pictured above) offered on time management and related topics (a workshop that I attended):
- Spend 10-15 minutes every morning planning, going over your calendar and to-do list for the week, month, and further. Review goals/goal-setting. Emphasize goal-setting.
- During large swaths of time, minimize interruptions – perhaps including not checking e-mails or ignoring all e-mails except for immediate colleagues and known clients.
- Work on whatever is most important/urgent in the morning, when you are most productive, including setting aside time for big projects that you need uninterrupted time to work on.
- Minimize subscriptions/listserv subscriptions, etc. Only read that which is essential.
- Avoid meetings. If meetings are absolutely necessary, start meetings on time, end them on time, and stick to an explicit agenda.
- Avoid having conversations in your office, as you can’t control as easily how long someone will stay there.
- Delegate as much as possible.
- Say “no” politely to non-critical tasks.
- Participate in Toastmasters, learn speed-reading, and develop an exercise routine. Get enough sleep. Take real vacations. Nevertheless, go in to work early and leave late.
-- Perry
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