I’m A Facebook Felon – Come And Get Me, Coppers.

It was with great reluctance that I was dragged into the Facebook world a few years ago. But I kept hearing how you had to have a Facebook page if you were an author. So I made one. And an account for me as a non-author.

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I have enjoyed both to a great extent. The contact with old friends has been a delight, and I relish getting to know acquaintances via this particular social medium. (There’s got to be another Latin joke I could tell right about now, but I’ll spare you.) There are the occasional scams out on the site, some really vulgar and stupid people who contribute to strings I’m in – well, that might be me. I’m kind of vulgar and stupid on occasion. But the magic line has been drawn in the sand and crossed lately – by me. Yes, two lines, two sets of footprints, two angry entities.

First, I’m done acknowledging birthdays on Facebook. My friends for many years will not be shocked by this news. For the rest of the universe, I barely acknowledge my own birthday. I’m doing really well to get cards out to relatives in my nuclear family on time. I forget my niece and nephew until the last minute, and the spouses of my siblings have long ago given up on my pretending to send them cards. It’s not that I don’t like these people, but I’m just not a birthday guy. The story, if you must know, relates to my tragic childhood. Maybe not. Let’s just say that my birthday was overshadowed by a big holiday and since nobody else cared, I quit caring as well. (Except you, Mom. Sniff. You always loved me. And my wife – now I’m getting weepy. Okay, everyone except those two…)

This decision was motivated, in large part, by a posting by a friend about how “The few special people that remembered me yesterday really touched me on a day I thought others had forgotten… blah, blah, blah.” Yes, they were unhappy about some of us forgetting their birthday. I just want to know if they wasted their time counting birthday messages and likes on those posts and compared them to their friend list at the stroke of midnight. I can hear it now, “That creep Courtemanche didn’t send me a note – he’s the only one. I’m never going to wish him a happy birthday.”

Oh, the agony. I miss most of this stuff because I don’t live on Facebook. I enjoy it, but I don’t go back after I’ve been gone for 15 hours and catch up on all the stuff that happened in my absence. I have this thing called a life, and I’m trying to live it. (Would this be a bad time to remind you to hit the Facebook box on the right and go like my author page? No?)

The straw that broke this camel’s back, and sent me to the land of outlaws, came fairly recently. I knew that my anti-social use of social media was branding me as an outcast. But when the stern warning came from Facebook, I knew that I’d hit felony levels. Let me recount that moment for you as it happened.

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There I was, sitting at the keyboard, hammering out friend requests like a drum of .45 caliber death from the barrel of a Thompson submachine gun. I slammed the enter key with gusto and the screen of my computer went as blank as the look on the puss of that doll at the diner when I asked if the bacon was Kosher.

The rap on the door came almost in the same whiskey-soaked breath. I lurched to my feet, kicked that rotten cat out of my way and threw the door open, brandishing my wireless mouse like a Roscoe. Two mugs who had met with a shovel in the face stood on my porch. “Whaddya want, boys? I got deadlines to meet and you two ain’t on the dance card.”

The short, nerdy one produced a wallet I.D. and flashed it in my face. “Facebook squad. Sit your keyster in that chair. We got issues with you and your friending of strangers. It ain’t pretty.”

I knew they had me trapped like a rat under a stove. I’d been hard at it when they knocked. Now I knew why the computer had shut off – they watch you like a hawk on that Facebook. The taller one, with the acne like a bad night in a Neapolitan pizza joint, reached over and snatched the mouse from my hand. “This thing’ll getya banned, fat-boy. You’ve been sending requests to people who don’t know you. We don’t like that, see? So knock it off or we’ll ban you.”

I couldn’t afford to be banned. I needed that fix. It was the biggest user of bandwidth on my tablet. I needed to be able to chat and snark 24×7. But they’d do it. Oh, yeah, like a homecoming queen protecting her corsage – only meaner.

Zits spoke again: “Sit down and log in.”

I shifted my gaze between the two of them. Hard looks all around. One of them was booting up my laptop. This was going to get ugly. I reached for the power cord to my DSL modem but a vice-like grip squeezed my fingers into a painful flesh pretzel. It was the nerdy one. “Don’t even think about it. Log in or else.”

I pulled up a fresh browser and logged in. “You might want to change that password. We don’t like it.”

My fingers hesitated like I’d touched an iron. I could feel the sizzle of a keylogger lurking in the keyboard. The account popped up and instead of my timeline there was a list of all the people I’d sent friend requests to that had never responded. I knew most of them. Or had served with them in the military and wanted to renew our friendship after all these decades. But that wasn’t going to be discussed. Instead the munchkin said, “You have a choice. Delete the requests and behave yourself or we’ll lock this down, put you in a trunk, and drop it in a sewer. Your choice, fats.”

That oily sweat on my bald head must have given me away. Zits reached over and started clicking the mouse on my behalf. He eliminated all but six of the requests. I had no idea who those six people even were. He was priming the pump for the next time – those half-a-dozen clowns were the first six rounds in his Facebook snubbie.

He smashed my hand with the mouse, breaking my little finger in the process. But he’d managed to move the enter key and submit my deletions. I heard the door slam and a voice call from the yard, “Don’t even think about what you see there. Just move on to the next item, it’s about a kitten making a wry comment. That pussy cat won’t get you banned.”

I looked at the screen. Sure enough, the second item was a cat playing with yarn and a Caturday caption.

It was the first item on the page that left me feeling like a gorilla had just hurled an American Tourister at my bread basket: Suggested Friends.

Just when you think you’re out, they pull you back in.

Answered Prayers – A Lift For Your Weekend. (And, Some Funny Stuff!)

This blog has a praying audience. I know this from the comments I get on different pieces. Sometimes you pray that I’ll get bad arthritis and quit writing, but most of the time you’ve lifted me up in prayer, or prayed for someone when I’ve assembled the prayer warriors to embark on a special mission. Those prayers we lift up to Heaven are not always answered with a yes. But when they are, it’s good to mention them in public.

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I have seen miracles in my life. Some great, some small. But any miracle is huge when you consider the fact that modern people assign all miracles to the Bible. Some even think that they stopped shortly after the Pentateuch, and that anything in the New Testament is embellished by a cult of yahoos following a carpenter around. I beg to differ. I will offer one small example today and then we’ll get on to the levity.

Tuesday my wife and I had a discussion about where we wanted to travel this next year. We both want to go back to Haiti with Healing Haiti. But an amazing trip to Israel is on the horizon. We discussed it and decided that we would likely go to Israel and wait on Haiti. But we agreed that Haiti wasn’t off the table, just pushed slightly to the side. We’d never been to the Holy Land (well, lots of trips to the Deli, but not to .. never mind) and wanted to do that before we were both old and decrepit. (That’s scheduled for 2016)

Wednesday a friend of mine announced he’s leading a trip to Haiti. I called him within minutes of his post on Facebook and got the low down. He and I had talked about doing this a month ago and I told him the odds were against it – my vacation lining up with his trips was unlikely. Well, God made it work – I already had that week off. I’d much rather be on a mission than attend another writers conference (good conference, but God’s work in the fields of Haiti takes precedence) this year. I’ve already been and done, I can skip one.

I prayed last night, asking God to help me find the finances to make it happen. My acting is sporadic but it can crank up unexpectedly and pay for a lot of these trips if it goes well. I went to bed with that on my mind.

I woke up early this morning – my phone was ringing. It was a friend who had been talking to a friend in another state. He needed somebody to do a voice over series for local distribution in a small market. Would I be interested? Could he give the guy my number? Absolutely. I aimed him at the voice over links on the “About The Author – And Some Links” page of this blog. You may never have noticed it. My mugshots and voice over stuff resides there until I build a comprehensive new site.

Six hours later the phone rings again, this time it’s Tom from Moore Creative Talent. Tom wonders if I can come in and audition for a voice over tomorrow morning. Sure thing.

In the space of 14 hours God sent me two opportunities. I’ve got to make them work, but that’s twice the voice over work/opportunities I’ve seen in a while. (I know, 0x2=0 but math has never been part of this blog.)

The point is, God listens. He has us do the work. But I asked with a pure heart for help in making these trips to serve him and grow in my faith. The answer came whistling back in hours. That’s why I continue to pray: not to get stuff, but to keep in touch with my boss the Jewish Carpenter.

So, I promised levity. It’s even related. I found this delightful series on youtube.com called Adventures in Voiceover. Mike Rowe, the Dirty Jobs guy, is a very talented voice over talent. He did these videos and really touched my heart. Some are sincere in nature but he infuses them with humor. All of them offer a bit of a view into what voice over is like for me. I’d love to have half of his talent, but I’m good to go with what God has given me. See above. WARNING: Mike occasionally uses bad words.

I hope you enjoy these and have a great weekend. I will. What are you up to for the next 48 hours?

Happy Any Day Now – A Book Review And Fan Letter.

First, for those of you in the audience who won’t ever read anything outside of the Christian bookstore, Happy Any Day Now is not for you. What a shame that is, please reconsider that choice in reading material, as there are many excellent secular authors and Toby Devens is at the top of that pile for pure enjoyment. Her book does contain mild cursing and sexually suggestive scenes – nothing graphic, but I can understand that you won’t want your 11 year old reading the book. Nope, this is a book for adults. If you fall into that category, read on and get the low down. It’s a Five Star Amazon book, and I have to agree with that score – it’s wonderful.

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Stolen from www.tobydevens.com without any hint of shame.

Stolen from www.tobydevens.com without any hint of shame.

I recently attended a meet-and-greet where Toby was talking about her book. She had a great story of how she came to be an author, and she did something I’d never seen done before – she read the first chapter to the audience. I sat spellbound while she read. I was fascinated with the choice of words and called the book up on Amazon.com while she was reading. I bought the book, downloaded it, and finished the first chapter reading along. The amazing internet strikes again.

Without spoiling the plot for anyone, it’s the story of a middle-aged cellist with a symphony orchestra and her approaching 50th birthday. The book opens with her fortune being told by a Korean Mudang and the first chapter ends with a twist/hook that will rip authors out of their complacency and demand they try harder. Yes, the best chapter hook I’ve ever read. Bar none.

The heroine/protagonist is half Jewish, half Korean, and half boy crazy (math does not figure in this blog.) Not as in can’t get enough men, but as in men make her insane. This should be archetypal chic lit, but it’s not. It’s a great story, extremely well told, and written in a superior manner. Toby Devens can write. She is one of those great joys who is never guilty of excess word usage. Not sparse, but right on the money. I loved reading this book.

The ending? You’d never guess it from the first 50 pages. That means you don’t suspect it until later that day when you’ve read the whole thing, ignored your family, and forgotten to eat. I plowed through the book in three days in my time after work. I was truly sorry that it wasn’t longer. But since Toby is writing another book I have that to look forward to on my Kindle.

One final thing about the book that impressed me was the questions/answers/additional material that she provided for the reader. This is the kind of thing that many Christian books do, kind of a study guide for the book. That makes this very compatible with book groups. If your book group is looking for a fun read that is readily accessible, offers insight into two other cultures, and made me laugh more than I have in a while, Happy Any Day Now is the book you seek.

There’s A Leadership Lesson In A Minty Shake.

I have lived in my current home for 20 years. That’s a lot of visits to McDonald’s and a lot of hamburgers for a fat guy. It could have been a lot more hamburgers except that the leadership at my local location is poor on a good day. Some days there is no leadership at all that I’ve been able to spot.

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In that 20 years I have boycotted the McDonald’s at the end of my street for periods that add up to about five years. While that may not seem significant over a 20 year period, it means that the store less than 1/2 of a mile from my front door has missed out on $10/week x 52weeks x 5 years. The math works out to a very conservative $2600.00. The reality of it is it’s probably a much higher number when you factor in my great reluctance to give them any business on a regular basis. I go to other restaurants, make food at home, and go hungry rather than make myself even more nuts with their shoddy performance. It’s probably more like $10,000.00 over the past 20 years that has gone elsewhere.

I’ve observed countless places of business in my 54 years. Some have great leaders, some have poor leaders. Great leadership is seen in places like Tinucci’s of Newport, Minnesota. Over the many years I’ve frequented this place I’ve seen the owners bus tables, direct the staff, carve the prime rib (it’s one of the best prime rib places on the planet) and serve coffee. The Tinucci brothers set a standard for their staff and then make sure it’s met. They lead by example. They learn the customers’ names, they make sure the food is properly displayed, they train and direct the staff. They are how you run a business and make it work through good times and bad.

The McDonald’s at the end of my street is on the other end of the spectrum. There are no standards in evidence. Over the past 20 years I’ve seen a total period of about 8 years (leaving 12 bad ones) with some sort of standards. Managers have been on the site, doing a good job for about 4 of those years and there was a bit of bleed over during the rest. In a few cases the good employees led themselves and their peers, but that’s doomed when you come right down to it. The lazy, stupid, slovenly part of the dark force overwhelms the empire eventually and leads to a half-built death star getting it’s butt kicked.

McDonalds, with a well priced menu of varied foods, should be a default setting for guys like me. It is when I’m on the road. But in my own neighborhood it’s a place I avoid. Last week’s visit tells it all and I’m more than happy to share my story so that other business leaders might learn from this place.

I went in to get a Green Shake and a fish sandwich. Who would guess, an Irish Christian during Lent enjoying that combination. The lackluster young man who operated the register didn’t acknowledge me as a human. I almost walked out but he stood there mute and I was ready to order. I waited past the customary length of being ignored and just gave him my order, complete with a “please” at the end of my order. He, in response, said nothing and stood with his hand over the screen that showed my choices. It was done on purpose. He was covering up the screen to be a jerk. It’s not a convenient, anatomically easy place to leave your paw when operating the machine.

No “Thanks for your order.” No nothing. He just turned away and started gathering something in the back.

The ill-trained young woman with the filthy uniform (I didn’t know McDonald’s authorized bare-midriff this time of year. But, it did show off her gang tattoos quite nicely) stuck a plastic cup in the shake machine and punched the button. A glob of white hit the cup, followed by a large plume of green, followed by a dribble of white. As she put the second cup in the machine and repeated the sequence, she cursed to herself and said, “XXXX thing is still XXXXX’d up.” No call to a manager to fix the machine, no dumping the drink. She furtively looked to see who was watching her and then grabbed a long spoon sitting in a container of water and stirred the shake so it was uniformly streaky. Rinse and repeat with the second one, now coming out of the machine. Spoon back in bucket.

I bit my tongue. I had places to go and work to do. I was going to blog about this so I let them rampage.

The bags with my food were delivered by another employee a few minutes later. Set on the counter with a readback of the items inside, they moved off without any apparent care in the world who picked them up. End of customer service.

The fish sandwich was done wrong. I’d ordered two of them without tartar or cheese, and two regular. I got two with no tartar, no cheese, and two with cheese and a passing glance from a Tartar who lived nearby in a Russian Language home for the mentally ill. Not enough sauce to entice an ant out of hiding.

The fries were cold. That’s a great trick at any fast food store, but if you prepackage them and let them sit in a rack away from the warming lamp I guess it can happen.

How does leadership come in to this? If the owner of the franchise, or the manager the chain put in place, actually cared about me as a customer, they would be all over the staff for their attitude to begin with, and work their way on to the shake machine. It’s the small things, as the Tinucci family understands, that make the whole thing work or fail. If you tolerate the noisy employee yelling at a coworker in the back, you’ll tolerate the broken shake machine, and then move on to the point where the parking lot is filthy and the windows smudged.

Each step in the ladder is either up or down. You can stand at the bottom and push, or you can show how to climb the ladder. You can climb to the top and offer a hand up, or you can climb to the top, hop on the roof, and lose sight of all that goes on below. But if you stand anywhere on the ladder and stop, all of the others are stuck in place. Likewise, if you don’t put the ladder in place, and encourage your team to learn to climb, they all stand around with nothing to do.

So, McDonald’s, I’ll be absent from the local franchise for the next 6 months – my usual time-out period. During that period I’ll be frequenting White Castle, Mickey’s, my own kitchen, and Holy Land. I hope that revenue isn’t really too important to your survival. I don’t care anymore about you and your welfare. It’s a reflection of your attitude toward me and my neighbors.

Lead, follow, or get out of the way. But at least fix the shake machine.

Book Review – Make That Endorsement, for Dive Deeper By Jenifer Jernigan

Given the submarine related posts you find here on occasion, you might expect a title like Dive Deeper to be involved with evading torpedos, getting below the sonar layer, or perhaps, just trying to avoid a super-tanker coming your way at periscope depth. Nope: it’s a Bible study book. And it’s really good.

Dive Deeper

Dive Deeper


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The full title is actually Dive Deeper: Finding Deep Faith Beyond Shallow Religion (InScribed Collection) and it’s written by Jenifer Jernigan who is with the same literary agency as your genial host.

It is the nature of the publishing world that we cross paths with other writers and are asked to endorse their books. They will do the same for you down the road. I hope so, and I hope the other authors like what I write. Because I won’t endorse anything I haven’t read, and I don’t expect them to do anything but that when my time comes.

In full disclosure, I have not read the entire book. I read the first part of it, what is called a “launch team” version of the opening. But it was enough to let me know that this study program is going to be great.

Many times you find yourself, especially as a baby Christian, dragged to a Bible study class where one of the older women in the church rambles on for an hour about what Samuel meant to the ancient Israelites. Or, worse yet, how we can incorporate ancient law as found in Leviticus in our daily chores around the farm. Yes, those are how Bible study groups die. Jenifer’s book is a fresh approach to the concept. It engages, promotes a deeper look than just the scripture, gives a cultural context, and aims the reader toward exercises that put the passage under study into effective use in their life.

I perused my advanced copy of this while I was on vacation and was impressed. Impressed enough that I bought it on my kindle while writing this blog today. I was under no obligation to do anything here. I could have ignored the launch party, ignored the polite emails, ignored the whole thing. But it is so well done that I bought a copy with my very own visa card.

I may be a bit lazy (very, let’s be honest) in my Bible studies. I’ve been spoiled by a pastor that does a great job every week. But my work schedule is going to keep me out of the church that day for the next few months and I need a new approach. That new approach is Dive Deeper: Finding Deep Faith Beyond Shallow Religion (InScribed Collection) .

I’d encourage you to at least download the sample and look at it today. You’ll buy it. I am sure of that in my heart. Jenifer has done a great job making the works much easier for newbies to approach, and for old hands to Dive Deeper.

Good job, Jenifer!

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