Tuesday Traditions : Magic Wand


"Fact: Matt Thomas can inhale two magic burgers, large fries, and a large shake in the van in under five minutes." --- From Finding Our Way, Witmarsum 1993

The tennis team played its first season in the fall of 1992. It was also in the fall of 1992 that the Magic Wand tradition began. Like many traditions, it was born of necessity. Coach Jim Buller and I were talking the other day about the Magic Wand, and Jim said that when he started coaching tennis in 1992, there was no McDonald's in Churubusco, no other place to eat before making the 50 minute drive back to Goshen besides the Magic Wand. So it was the only choice.

And now, 16 years later, we make special team trips just to make sure that the tradition takes place every year.

It's a funny thing, why we love the Wand so much. It's a creepy place really, with clowns plastered all over the walls of the back room where we normally sit. The food is just regular diner quality food. The ice cream is your typical small-town ice cream shop fare, soft serve with Reese's Pieces and chocolate sauce (or at least the E.T. Sundae has that). But somehow it has made it's way into our hearts...

Maybe it's the donuts.

Yea, that is one really weird part of eating at the Wand with the tennis team. Everybody is ordering burgers, fries, shakes, and things of the dinner nature. But just about everybody also orders donuts, the cinnamon-y fresh out of the oven kind of donuts. It's like breakfast and dinner together. But it's not as weird as the clowns.

And yes, this really is a clown from the Magic Wand.

Some of my personal favorite Magic Wand memories...
- Evan Stahley ordering more than $20.00 worth of food for himself including a steak(?)...
- Alex Bullard taking food on the bus from the Wand and getting it thrown at him on the way back...
- Taking our Wayne Invitational individual trophies in with us and setting them on the table...
- The waitresses botching our orders every single year...
- Tator tots and those E.T. Sundaes...
- Never eating there after a loss...
- One year not having a match in Busco or Fort Wayne, so we checked out a van and went after practice just to keep tradition alive...
- I'm sure there will be plenty more to come!

If you read this, comment with your own thoughts on the Magic Wand meal and fun!

Middle School Minute

Bethany Christian Middle School tennis started officially for the first time on March 23! We have about 25 middle schoolers testing the waters of tennis. Many are beginners, but several are talented with a lot of promise for high school and beyond.

Yesterday we had our first competition, and as a way of honoring winners, I thought I'd name them here. We played "King of the Courts" and two players tied for the win: Ryan Minter and Caleb Morris.
Today we have practice "Challenge" matches, so tomorrow's middle school minute will look at some of these results.

I *think* I'm writing a book

Ok, if I am the "writing" part is done and the compiling work is just starting. I’m taking a look at the series of garnished poems I did a while back. I’m considering putting them together into a book of poetry garnished with watercolors and such. I have 36 images at this time, could make more if I decided it was needed. Which has led me to a dilemma.

Each 5x7 image could work beautifully on a page… thing is… how much white space do I leave? Should I do a garnished poem on every page or do one per right hand page so that they could be removed and framed if someone chose to? Suggestions and ideas welcome!

Telecheck Electronic Check "Solutions" (don't believe a word of that "Solutions" business!)

I don't generally talk about non-Art things on this blog. But I’ve had some trouble with my bank and Telecheck this weekend, so today I bring you a tale from the unseemly underworld of Electronic Check processing.

Our bank cards were involved in some kind of security failure, so they were all canceled and new ones were sent to our home. Only the bank had our old address and the cards were returned to sender and were destroyed. We were not contacted by the bank so we found out when hubby went to buy a few things at Wally’s and they declined first one card, and then his other card. He left Wally’s and headed straight to the bank where they explained the situation to him and he ordered all new cards and changed the address on the account. And to think, he had picked up a deli pizza for dinner!

I also had to go in and get new cards for my accounts, sign all the papers and confirm the address change. The lady at the desk was very sweet and helpful. So when my cards do finally come, I hope I can figure out which one goes with which account and which password goes to which card. It took me a month to sort out my cards the last time this “security breach” thing happened because the ATM likes to gobble them up and the folks inside can’t do much but offer you the card back to try again. Munch, retrieve, repeat… It’s like a game of fetch with a big loopy Labrador retriever who eats the stick and then comes back for you to throw another one anyway.

Friday evening I decided to stop at Goodwill to kill some time. I found some good glass and some clothing and handed over a check. She ran it through the system and my check was declined. Confused, I was surprised that there wasn’t enough money in that account so I gave her a check from another account. That check was declined also, twice. I was shocked! She showed me a 1-800 number to call so I left my un-purchases and stepped outside to make the call. A few minutes into the phone call I had given my routing number, my checking account number, a bunch of other private information and he asked me to confirm my name. So I spelled it for him and he royally screwed it up… repeatedly… like not even in the same ballpark. If you’re “confirming” my name, shouldn’t you have it in front of you? I started to get concerned because I had just given him a bunch of info about myself and my bank account and he sounded like he was spelling my name in Thai characters. Had I even dialed the right number? Who was this letter scrambling fool? Was this a scam? I was not amused. Suddenly I was not in the “Goodwill” mood!

I walked into the house and headed straight for the laptop… I checked my bank balances online and our money was still there, plenty to cover the $46 I just tried to spend. I was relieved, for a moment at least. Now who is the hack that kept me from spending my money? I got a bone to pick…

The bank has very short open hours on Saturday, and only one branch is open. So I drove across town and visited the lovely ladies at the other branch. As chance would have it, the same lady who put in the order for my new cards was the one who asked if she could help me. I told her the situation and she called in another woman who also knows me and is the boss at my usual branch office. So they tried to explain to me that it wasn’t anything to do with their bank. I looked at them and said that I have money in the account, I can’t spend it, how is this not the bank’s problem? She kept trying, I felt like I had ear plugs in cause it wasn’t getting through.

So they decided to help me by calling the 1-800 number on the receipt that I’d gotten at the not-so-Goodwill. The gentlemen refused to speak to them, so they handed the phone to me.

Lewis was his name. Lewis works for Telecheck Electronic Check Solutions, a company that processes checks in real time. Lewis told me that there wasn’t a problem on my account (thank you) and that he didn’t know why my check was declined. He gave me a list of five or six possible reasons why my check was declined but couldn’t tell me which reason it was.

“Lewis, you mean to tell me that I have money in my account, I attempted to spend it, your company denied me that privilege and you can’t tell me the reason why or guarantee that it won’t happen again?”

Poor Lewis was speechless and kept saying “excuse me?” whenever I gave him an especially nice bit of flack. Round and round I went with Lewis, and the ladies at the bank kept offering me other suggestions of things to ask. We triple teamed Lewis to no avail. He was as void of helpful information as a man could ever be.

I asked Lewis for his supervisor. Silence. “Lewis? Are you still there?” Yeah, Lewis was there. I tried again and finally he put me on hold for a very long time. He came back and said that the supervisor wasn’t available and he would not give me his/her name. Nope, not happening. I finally ran out of ideas, looked at the two tellers who were listening and they both apologetically shrugged.

“Lewis, what would you do if you were me and you needed a few things at the grocery?” I got nothing. I finally put Lewis out of my misery and hung up.

Meanwhile the branch manager had googled the company and found a second 1-800 number and so she got on her phone. She confirms that the 1-800 number we’d been using did actually go to that company. She explained that she was an officer at the bank and had a customer that needed assistance, would they help me? And that’s how I came to be speaking with Maria, my next victim.

All the same questions… all the same answers. But Maria was willing to do a bit more than Lewis was willing to do. Maria speculated that the reason my check was declined was my check writing history. Apparently I don’t write checks very often (well duh, I usually use my bank cards) and so they believed my purchase at Goodwill was out of character given my history. Therefore the check was declined.

Yes, ladies and gentlemen, my check at Goodwill was declined because I don’t write checks very often.

I don’t write checks very often because I usually use my plastic, but my plastic had all been cut up by the lady at the bank after she’d ordered my new cards.

I explained to Maria that I had money in my account, and that I wanted to spend it. “Because I don’t write enough checks” wasn’t good enough reason for me not to be able to spend my own money! Dead silence on the line… I’m looking at the tellers, they are looking at me… we’re all shaking our heads at each other, incredulous. We went round for round, Maria and I. The tellers kept egging me on. I asked Maria how I was supposed to buy something if I knew that when I got to the checkout that I only had a 50/50 chance of having my check accepted? I asked Maria what she would do in my situation? How was I supposed to fix this problem that kept me from being able to spend my own money? I worked her over with each new idea that my bank tellers provided. Finally, Maria explained to me one final time that my check was declined because I don’t usually write checks and that was it. I was done! I was so livid I was shaking. “Make it stop!” I whimpered and handed the phone back to the teller who hung it up with a lovely little thud. It was over and we’d been there so long the bank was closing.

We all stood there, quietly for a bit. We looked at each other and shook our heads. They apologized profusely and I thanked them for their support like a Politian’s concession speech. It was over and I was thanking my supporters and preparing to leave public life (or at least the bank.) My peace loving husband spoke a few words of benediction and gratitude and we smiled politely and left.

Ladies and gentlemen, I am not impressed. At this point I don’t have debit cards, and if I decide I want to try writing a check, I’ve got a 50/50 chance of having it declined at any location that uses Telecheck Electronic Check Solutions. (And the word “SOLUTIONS” is in their NAME! Isn’t that hysterical?!) And I now have access to cash only during my bank’s open hours. And I have money in my accounts. I want to do my part to stimulate the economy, really I do. Telecheck Electronic Check Solutions gave me a “Solution” all right, but I am not amused!

No matter how bad this economy gets, no matter how much bad news I hear... I will always be grateful that I am not so desperate for a job that I must work for Telecheck like Lewis or Maria!

Monday's Important Things : Practice


Important thing number two, practice. I should add that these really aren't in any special order other than the order that they occur to me. This one occurs to me during spring tennis season when practicing is a self motivated choice and not a school regulated requirement. It's during this season of the year that we are tempted to think of excuses not to play, because the season is far away, because we're involved in some other things, and so on and so on.

But practice, especially during the offseason, is a super important thing. Today, I want to discuss 3 reasons why it is important.

#1: Opportunity
Practice gives you lots of opportunities. The most important opportunity that offseason practice gives you is the opportunity to try new things and make adjustments. During the season, it is really difficult to change someone's entire swing pattern or teach a brand new type of shot because there is a certain amount of failure involved in learning something new and during the season that failure may cause losses on that individual's record, and perhaps the team record. So the best place to try new things is during the offseason.

Last year, Jared and Luke both worked extensively on hitting the ball on the rise. This became a dynamite stroke for them throughout the year. Jared also was able to concentrate on having proper footwork between every point, and it became a habit for him by the time the season came around. Jonny Shenk worked on passing shots, Ben and Austin developed more biting and reliable serves, Daniel's groundstrokes improved about 10 times, and Seth transformed into the most dominant #2S JV player ever.

Point being, in the offseason there should be no fear of failure. So pick something to work out, try some new things out and stick with it.

#2: Repetition
You can really gain these new skills because practice gives you the chance to repeat something over and over again. You can take a hopper of balls to the courts and hit 100 serves in a row to try to work on your topspin. That just doesn't happen when we play matches. You can hit crosscourt for 20 minutes, you can work on overheads for as long as you want. You can develop the new skills you are trying to gain through repeating and repeating and repeating.

#3: Character
Practicing develops your character. Because it takes a commitment, but it also is rewarding. This year's seniors were the hardest practicing group I've ever coached or been a part of in any sport, it's no wonder they were able to achieve a Sectional title. But that commitment, that time spent on hard work has developed their ability to pursue their goals in other areas as well. They know what it means to sacrifice time for an important task, so I would be confident asking them to take on more responsiblities in academic fields, or work oriented ventures, whatever.

When you make a choice to be dedicated, you mature as a whole person. You understand how to set goals, how to work towards them, what it means to succeed. This makes you more of a whole person, and can transfer to other areas of your life. It's not always fun to come out and practice, but if you can push yourself through that feeling, then the rewards are worth it. Life works like that too. Not everything feels fun, but staying dedicated pays off.

Well, that's the end. It is important to practice, I hope you decide to put in some time. Now is the time we catch up and work harder than other teams. Tell everyone that now is the time to practice!

Making a Cordial Invitation

Today I made invitations for my parent’s 50th Anniversary Open House. I started out by printing up the information on the paper.
I scanned in the photos and printed them out in small black and white squares, and trimmed them up on the paper cutter. My parents were such cute Mennonite kids when they married! And now they are seasoned and full of wisdom. :)

Add in a little colored paper in my Mother's favorite colors... lavender, purple, plum...

Trim them all up, make sure there are enough!

I used the paper cutter to crease the paper exactly on the measurement.

All the folded papers waiting for the photos to be attached:

So then I added the front photo to the left flap.

And using that as a guide I then placed the second photo directly behind it on the right flap.

So on the front is the old photo, after you open that you see the new photo and on the inside in the invitation.

There they are, alllll done! Yay! So they were stuffed, stamped, sealed with golden seals and sent on their way this evening. There's gonna be a party, and I'm doing the cake. It's going to be a fun celebration! :)

I'm delighted that these two got married some 50 years ago and that they had my brother and I. They are two amazing people (and my brother is spectacular!) and I'm a very lucky girl indeed to have them in my life. Thank You Jesus!











































Friday Thoughts


Friday Thoughts : Remember

Every now and then I get down on the every day things in my life, students in my classroom, players slacking off on the tennis team, my own regrets, sins and worries, and eventually even faith and God. The whole cycle of life, repetitiveness of each day can get so wearing.

It always helps me, at these times, to remember who God is. To remember that God is defined by taking bad situations and turning them to the good. Or at least as much as our choices will allow God to. It helps me to remember that God is a renewer, bringing new life out of dying situations. That this brings God much joy.

Here is a quote that I absolutely love, that reminds my of the "freshness" of God, God's perpetual youth, and how God never tires from creating beauty and pushing things towards excellence.

"The thing I mean can be seen, for instance, in children. When they find some game or joke that they specially enjoy, a child kicks his legs through excess, not absence of life, because children have abounding vitality because they are in spirit fierce and free. Therefore they want things repeated and unchanged. They always say 'do it again!'...and the grownup person does it again until he is nearly dead. For grownup people are not strong enough to exalt in monotony.

But perhaps God is strong enough to exalt in monotony. It is possible that God says every morning 'do it again!' to the sun, and every evening, 'do it again!' to the moon. It may not be automatic necessity that makes all daisy's alike - it may be that God makes every daisy separately, but has never got tired of making them. It may be that he has the eternal appetite of infancy - for we have sinned and grown old, and our father is younger than we."

from G.K. Chesterton's "Orthodoxy"

May we remember this appetite of God's, and find ourselves renewed within our own monotany. Amen.

Thursday Cartoon

Click on the cartoon to enlarge.


Yeah... I don't know either...

A quilt for today


This little bitty quilt is no more than 7.5 x 7.75 inches. I’ve used one of my old art prints on watercolor paper in there which adds an interesting texture. The rest of the fabric is hand dyed plus a piece of batik. I was pleased by how quickly it came together, that fusible stuff is pretty amazing and works on paper as well as it does on the fabric. This little quilt taught me that sewing through paper will require some adjustments but at this point I don't mind the purple bobbin thread showing. It seems to fit with the other intentional imperfections such as the fraying edge.

I think I’ll call it “Catharsis.” There is a sense in which the beautiful parts, the poetry and vibrancy is in the distance framed by the present reality that requires moving through the current grief and fraying edges. It is fitting for a new round of personal and private grieving that has become an assertive companion of late.

“She was no longer wrestling with the grief, but could sit down with it as a lasting companion and make it a sharer in her thoughts.” ~George Eliot

Wednesday Numbers : 3


There are 3 seasons that stand out as the most successful (on-court) seasons in Bethany Christian history. Those seasons are 1998, 1999, 2008. Those are the 3 seasons that are recorded on the plaque in the gym lobby.

There are some similarities in these programs, so let's take a look at how the number 3 runs through them.

The regular season records of the teams, 16-3, 12-3, 15-4. It may look as if the 2008 team is throwing off the theme of 3, but keep in mind that those four losses came to only 3 different teams, as 2008 team lost twice to Concord.

At least 3 players who played college tennis (or are considering it)
1998: Aaron Wieand, Andrew Lanctot, Aaron Lehman
1999: Aaron Wieand, Andrew Lanctot, Andrew Kauffman
2008: Jonny Shenk, Daniel Buschert, Luke Hostetter?

3 positions with over 75% winning percentage:
1998: #1S, #2S, #3S
1999: #1S, #2S, #1D
2008: #2S, #3S, #2D

3-2 wins over Fairfield

2-3 losses to Concord

3 players on each team who go by Biblical names without shortening them.

3 is the favorite number of the coach.

3 teams in which Andrew Lanctot is involved.

#3S was a position that won a lot for each of these years, compared to other lower achieving teams (Mike Mallot was 18-1 for 1998, Andrew Kauffman played 1999, Jonny Shenk 17-5 in 2008)

3 (x2) - okay, this is stretching it but these teams combined for 6 trophies (2 LaVille, 2 Lakeland, 1 Wayne, and 1 Sectional)

I'm sure there is more and more and more... but I'm running out of concrete knowledge, so I'll stop now.

(P.S. Notice how more was repeated three times, I'm so tricky!)

Tuesday Traditions : Night Out

Night Out started as a simple tradition. Basically, we would get together and do something fun on the night that I went to find out who we were playing in Sectional. In 2003, it was very informal. I put the guys into groups and gave them some silly things to do, then some more serious things, like praying together. Then we met at the courts at NorthWood, to pray on the courts that the Sectional would be held at. While we were there, someone was video taping, and it gave me the idea for a bigger and better video scavenger hunt.

The idea for the whole practice at all came from when I was in high school. We used to get together at the coach's house for a party, and then the assistant coach would come back and tell us who our Sectional opponent would be. Then we would leave, only to come back to the coach's house about an hour later and TP him, then we went to the assistant's house and TP'ed it as well. Then we would drive to DeKalb, the site of our Sectional, and claim their courts as our own. We'd get really excited and jump around and do cheers and other things.

Anyways, I thought we should do something like that. So the 2003 year was tame, but 2004 started the video competition. This was the first list of Night Out ideas:

Tennis Stuff

Facing the net between the legs shot, must go in (10 pts)

Three overheads into the court then over the fence in a row (20 pts)

Hit a serve from outside the fence, into the correct box (20 pts)

Imitate the playing style of one player on our team, tell us who it is (20 pts)

Hit an overhead in while falling backwards to the ground (20 pts)

Hit a serve that goes in and then gets stuck in the fence (30 pts)

Back to net, between the legs shot after you’ve been lobbed over, must go in (40 pts)

Get an actual rally that lasts 100 shots (50 pts)

Challenge a random person to one man war, and get them to play (60 pts)

Hit ten first serves in, in-a-row (70 pts)

People Stuff

See if you can get a cookie from my Grandma (20 pts)

Make a prank call to one of your own houses (30 pts)

Write and sing an original song for our departed seniors (40 pts)

Deliver dinner to a person you know, with a secret admirer note (50 pts)

Paint someone’s toenails while singing a love song (70 pts)

Use a pickup line, on a random guy (70 pts)

Gross Stuff

Try to eat 6 saltines in one minute with no drinks (10 pts)

Eat a full can of anchovies, no drinks (20 pts)

Get a video of three of your team members brushing each others hair and singing (20 pts)

Have an eating contest, you decide the food, between your group members, the worse the better (30 pts)

Pass the same marshmallow from mouth to mouth of each of your team members (30 pts)

Make the worst tasting food you can, every body take 2 bites (100 pts)

Make a disgusting mixture of drinks, find someone other than one of your group members to drink it (50 pts)

Drink vinegar, all group members (50 pts)

Lick the lines, make a court at Bethany yours by licking the sidelines and baseline, the whole line (60 pts)

Wash each others feet, in a bucket of your combined saliva (70 pts)

So, then it proceeded from those humble beginnings to what we see today. General craziness. My favorite memories from Night Out...

- Jeremy Thomas going through the car wash as a freshman.
- Joe Friesen offering flowers to a Goshen College student.
- All of the groups showing up and singing my wife songs, and giving her flowers ripped up from Goshen College.
- Jay Mast's group getting his cousin to join them on the whole scavenger hunt.
- Casey Diener's group convincing soccer fans to drink their concoction of grass, dirt, Sprite, spit, hamburger and fry remains, rocks, and other generally dirty things.
- The various disgusting foods that are blended together.

Anyways, enjoy "Night Out" all over again!






Shenandoah Moon Quilt

12.75 x 16 inches
$220
Hand dyed fabrics, photo techniques, vintage fabric and various cottons.
Machine and hand quilting, with embellishments
vintage buttons, beads and notions.






This piece is inspired by the local production of Shenandoah Moon. It’s the story of the building of the Skyline Drive through the mountains of Virginia and the people who were displaced along the way. It’s funny and at times sad and poignant. It’s a musical written locally by some very talented folks.

I spent some time with the Library of Congress photographs of the actual people displaced by the building of the park, it was interesting to see those faces and the houses they lived in. The photograph of the woman and her four children on the left is the closest thing I could find to the character I portray in the production. The photo of the cabin on the right is a place someone called home. The old twisted up apple tree is a reminder that these folks lost not just their homes but their professions. The roots are visible to suggest their roots to family and the land that were broken as they were forced out.

Driving the Skyline Drive of Virginia is a beautiful experience for a pretty afternoon, it’s great to stop and take photographs and soak in the natural beauty. But it’s also interesting to consider the stories beneath the surface.

Find the novel by Duane Hahn here.
Read about the musical production here. That's me playing Mollie Shifflett. :)

Monday's Important Things : Muscles

The spring season is officially upon us, and so break out new spring segments for the tennis site. Today we begin a weekly discussion of things that are important for tennis. Of course, the topic is muscles today, and I'm sorry for all of our lady fans that there is no shirtless pictures of Mr. Hostennis on the hard drive of my computer. Maybe we can get him to post them on his own personal website, or perhaps the tennis team will get together one last time for a "Men of Bruin Tennis Shirtless Calendar." I wonder whose page would get the most views?

In any case, strong muscles definitely lend to a strong tennis game. Why else would professionals spend about as much time in the gym as they do on the courts? So what does all this hefting of heavy iron bars do for one's tennis game?

First of all, lifting weights can lead to prevention of injury. Of course, as muscles get stronger they are able to take more strain. Over the course of a quick and intense season, injuries are not uncommon. Ask Mikey, Johnny, Luke and a variety of others who experienced aches and pains last year. However, regular weight training can decrease the occurrence of these pains. Okay, this is fairly obvious, so let's move on...

Secondly, muscle strength gives stability to your tennis game. This is important in many instances. One great example is when you play against a power player, someone who pounds their shots with the aggression of Rafael Nadal (of which there would only be one, namely Rafael Nadal, but you get my point). Throughout the course of a match, good shots and solid form are not enough to combat heavy topspin and powerful groundstrokes. There needs to be strength to push back against your opponent's often tiring game. A good base of strong legs and solid core strength will help you endure through that. And you'll also have the strength to carry on your footwork and stroke through your own attacking shots, which takes us to...

Power. Yea, if you want to hit the ball harder consistently, you need bigger muscles. Well, okay, not really beefy muscles, but stronger muscles. And I'm not talking just about arm muscles so you can swing your arm faster. Real power is generated throughout the body in a swing, especially from the legs. As these parts are made stronger, you can coil your body up more often and rip through forehands, backhands, hit overheads over the fence like the mighty Johnny Kauffman and more!

I chose Luke's picture here for a reason, his game best showed the fruition of weight training. Play a match against Luke and he will simply wear you down with the pace of his shots (generated by strong legs and core) and the grinding topspin. Also, his intense training allows him to not give in when the matches get long. I look back to some of the times where he took down tougher opponents, or challenged them right to the end and can see the importance of strength in these matches. Luke's match in the Sectional final against Preston is a great example. When Preston got mentally and physically tired in the second set, Luke was in physical shape to pounce on this let down and pick up the pace and aggressiveness of his own game to steal the second set and send the match into a deciding third set.

There are other benefits too, of having nice muscles. Yes, Russell, they do look good on the beach. And if that's what motivates you to hit the weight room this spring and summer, then great. I'd love to see us stabilizing our games and getting more powerful all the time.

Hmmm, maybe shirtless tennis camp would be a possibility...

Shenandoah Moon Quilt

Yesterday I started a project that has been running around in my head quite a bit. I’ve done some research into the people who were displaced by the building of the Skyline Drive here in Virginia back in the day. (All brought on by the production of Shenandoah Moon that I’m in.) And I’ve struggled with it some because I am not crazy about some of these old colors but I wanted to keep a kind of old fashioned feel to the elements. I used two of my fabrics dyed with fabric paints for the sky and moon - that ended up being kind of an interesting combination. I found some photographs on the Library of Congress site of the actual folks and a photo of a cabin as well. I printed them out on fabric and gave them some quality time with my iron to set the ink. The woman is as close as I could come to a photo of someone that would look like my character should look. The little cabin kind of looks like a tombstone, which I didn't intend but I don't mind.

So I started by fusing up some fabric and starting to play around with the options. It came together fairly easily and before long I was digging around in my box of vintage lace for something that looked really old that I could use to suggest fog. It’s been foggy here in the mornings for the last few days and I remember that when we lived on the mountain many mornings would find the valley below us fogged in nicely with the folds of the mountains showing above the blanket of fog. I happened to find an ancient bit of ultra fine cotton, very worn and stained in places with freyed edges. It was a nice addition.

I got everything fused down and started with some machine quilting. I toyed with the idea of adding an apple tree, since the people who left had to leave their orchards as well, the government took their homes and their profession away from them. I debated and considered… and then took the iron to that tree and that was that.

A bunch more quilting and then I started into some hand quilting and I’ve been adding some buttons to suggest the apples and I don’t know what else I’ll add. I have a small bag of vintage buttons that I’m using, there are some really cool ones in here!

I’m babysitting a gallery today so it is unlikely that I’ll get much more done. Who knows. I would love to finish the binding today but I don't know when I'd fit it in with everything else. We'll see.

Difficult Week to Blog

Um...so, maybe you've noticed that there haven't been any posts this week. Well, there is a reason for that and it is that I don't want to blog this week. Grades were due early this week, so I was grading papers and writing comments like crazy. Also, it's been awesome outside and I've gotten to take walks with my wife and sun and play tennis without losing feeling in my left hand. Then March Madness starts later this week, so I'll be busy watching basketball. Anyways, I promise to be back next week with some new Spring features!

So instead of my blogging, here our links to my other favorite blogs. Seriously, enjoy these good reads!

Theme - Blog Title

Basketball - The Mid-Majority
Art and Faith - The Other Journal
Language and Faith - Twenty Words
Christianity's Quirks - Stuff Christians Like
Music - Indie Vision Music
Tennis - Dysfunctional Tennis Blog

Notes: At Indie Vision, beware, you have to be discerning, because most of their articles are about crappy hardcore and metal. And well, I haven't found a good tennis blog yet. The Dysfunctional Tennis Blog is okay, but can any of you point me to something better?

Weaving Rainbows into Glass

Someone emailed me with a question about art glass and I am sorry, I have missplaced your email. I don't know where it went. So feel free to email me again if you'd like. But while I’m here maybe I’ll write some about my work in art glass.
I work in reclaimed glass. The glass has already been shaped and served its usefulness once. I make the rounds of local stores such as Goodwill and friends keep a look out for glass for me. I apply glaze on a potter’s wheel, the glazes and textures are spun on. This way I can create fields of color without much in the way of brush strokes, which can be very distracting to a design. The glazes are an amazing blend of smart chemistry and beautiful colors. After they are painted and fully dried, I thermo-harden them and they become dishwasher resistant. The whole process can take a number of days to finish from the first wash to the final firing. The firing process can be a delicate dance because of the various ways glass interacts with heat, so I’ve learned to take the heat very slowly and cool down very carefully. The colors may be matte or glossy, may have an iridescent sheen and metallic or pearl details. They are non-toxic and food safe though I don’t do much in the way of food serving dishes. Most of the shapes I work with are best on their own, but flowers and candles can be a nice addition. Most of my work is in vivid colors, rarely less than three colors per item, and most of the time more. I’ve done some commissioned pieces in special request colors but that is quite rare.
I have a nice collection of some of my favorite pieces around the house. My favorite display is in the two street facing windows of my family room to be enjoyed from inside and out. I consider this a revolving display and I add something and remove something each time I produce new work. I often work in series, creating groupings of vases of similar shapes and color scheme. This makes decorating especially fun if the client wants to display them in a grouping or use them throughout rooms to unify and balance the colors of a space.

I have art glass all over the US and in Japan, Germany, France, UAE, and a bunch of other countries that escape my memory at the moment. Believe it or not, glass tends to ship pretty well. I do corporate gifts and have shipped glass around the world for some exceptional folks at GE.

During the busy season of October through the Holidays it is all I can do to produce enough work for the demand, that is why I’ve never put art glass for sale online. All pieces are unique and it is hard to get it all photographed and listed before it’s gone. That doesn’t bother me at all.

Here are some links to a few posts loaded up with lots of photos to look through. I don’t have a photography set up in place yet so I’ve been using the back porch for some of these photos. Natural light is best anyway. So check this out, and this, and O! and this…

I spent some time with a reporter years ago and when the article came back she had called me a “Master of Color” which struck me as really strange at the time. I understand that it is a very nice compliment and I do appreciate the sentiment. I think I am more a servant of color than a master of it. I have had a lifelong love affair with color, I think that is why making art glass is so right for me. I had a vision once where I danced within a rainbow, it encircled me like ribbons of fabric but more elusive and transparent and iridescent, and unfettered by gravity. That’s heaven for me, being wrapped in rainbows.

Oh, and while in the archives looking for the old posts about glass, I came across this self portrait.

Shenandoah Shopping Spree

I pulled into my parking place at Walmart this morning to pick up a few last groceries for our dinner party tonight. I’m making a homemade margarita pizza with spicey shrimp and another one our local pizza place calls “The Shenandoah.” Some of the guests are bringing salads. And for desert I’m making my secret recipe chocolate cake with raspberry filling. Plus fresh strawberries, pineapple and kumquats with my favorite fruit strawberry lime yogurt dip.

I realized walking into the store that the gentlemen who pulled in only seconds after me was now walking beside me. It seemed strange to be walking with someone without acknowledging them so I looked over at him. Just in time to see him hock up a loogie and spit it on the pavement. Oh! The revulsion and regret hit me like a double whammy!

Another woman was walking directly toward me, I looked at her expecting to give her a cheery “good morning” when she acknowledged me but she never looked up, even though we passed by rather close. It struck me as strange.

In the boonies, if you park next to someone and walk toward a building – “howdy’s” and “good morning’s” are exchanged. You’ll hear things like: “Right nice weather today, ain’t it?” “Yes ma’am, isabeen a cold un.” “I reckon it’s a-gonna snow.” When you live in the most rural parts of Virginia and drive in to get your mail at the post office, the person walking toward you expects to recognize you. And if you grew up locally, then they very likely know your family and your ancestors along with a list of the epic pranks, and the tragedies and triumphs along the way. It’s impossible to be invisible in those places. When we first moved there it struck me as odd to make eye contact and exchange pleasantries with the old timers on the streets in the morning. After a while I realized that it’s part of the charm of the place, these people have roots and attachments to the land and each other. Those are cords that aren’t easily broken.

Maybe it’s the production of “Shenandoah Moon” that we’re working on that has me thinking about my old life in rural Virginia. I spent some time in Beldoor Hollow east of Elkton as a child. And I vividly remember sitting out on the steps of a country church on a summer night listening to the calls of the whippoorwill. Even in the still part of the night that place was full of an orchestra of wildlife sounds. It made an impression on me as a child. It was as hauntingly beautiful, and even when I lived and worked in the urban world of Northern Indiana, I remembered that sound. I wrote a song about it many years later, its lyrics speak of solitude and peace.

Shane and I lived for about six years in one of the most rural parts of Virginia, back in the wilderness. I used to tell people to go to the ‘boonies,’ turn left, drive for thirty minutes until they got to ‘middle of nowhere.’ Turn left, drive another thirty minutes and you’d find us. We rented a place on a 300 acre horse ranch. We were the last ones at the top of a mile long lane. There was no need for curtains on the windows and the view from our little patch of the ridge was amazing. There was no privacy fence around the hot tub and skinny dipping under the stars was a treat for the senses. We loved the wildlife for the most part, except for the spiders and the skunks. Our dogs each only got sprayed twice each, though they played with the skunks rather often.

That land got down deep into my soul, and of all the places I’ve ever lived, I’ve never loved any place so intently. I loved looking out to see what mood the mountains were in each morning from the eight east facing windows the length of our bed. The display was different each morning. Fog, rain, sunshine or snow… it’s all beautiful from out there. I remember a particular thunder storm with hail was a spectacular and violent display that wrapped me up in its wildness. I still miss the wild beauty of that place that breaks your heart and mends it, all at the same time.

The Shenandoah Moon story follows families displaced by the building of Skyline Drive in Virginia back in 1933. It explores those themes of loving the land, of having roots and a sense of home, only to have it all taken away by the government and assisted by poverty. There’s some defiance and anger in the tale and hints of profound sadness and grieving. I can identify with loving the land like those people did. No matter where I’ve been since, nothing has seemed quite as beautiful in comparison.
This photo is how I imagine the character I'm playing, Molly Shifflett and her husband Jesse.

As I was finishing up my shopping trip/muse I began to see one man a little too often. I dubbed him “Mr. Creepy” and kept an eye out for this man who didn’t seem to be really shopping but rather just watching. As I was gathering up some cheese I overheard the Manager and two employees talking about some product that had turned up missing. I made eye contact with the manager and we both just shook our heads over it. Silly humans! Oh, and there’s Mr. Creepy again.

I shared interest in spoons with an elderly couple. The old gent suggested that I keep a tight watch on my purse because there had been some thefts that they were aware of. I joked that a thief might be disappointed with the contents of my purse but still, it would be a hassle. The tall slender woman was a bit stooped with deep smile lines and snow white hair. She told me not to worry, they were targeting old women. I told her she should be safe then also. They both crinkled into grins and moved on their slow shuffling way.

And as I left the store I passed Mr. Creepy sitting on the bench in the entrance. It was a good reminder of why people don’t make eye contact in the store here. I missed the wilderness of Virginia just then. Not for long though. Because within ten minutes I was home putting away my groceries. Yes, civilization has its perks such as a quick drive home. But I miss living that intimately with the mountains. Yes, I do.


Catching Up on Friday


Catching Up With...the Progression of a Program

Last week, I brought up some numbers about how players have performed under pressure, bringing up the stat of 3-2 matches and who was successful in those matches. I'm sure that it didn't go unnoticed that our current class of seniors didn't have unbelievable records in those sort of matches (with some exceptions). You might have also noticed that several of the better players on previous teams (Joel King, Michael Steury, and Jordan Kauffman) had really good records in 3-2 matches. This week we're going to look into that.

The reason they had better records is directly linked to how good the team was. The record in 3-2 matches is not necessarily only an indication of how clutch a player is (partly that is involved) but also the quality of the opponent one is facing.

Let me tell you what I mean by comparing two seasons, 2008 and 2005. In 2008 we played 6 matches where the final score was 3-2, either in our favor or in our opponents favor. In 2005, we played in 5 3-2 matches. Here are a list of the opponents in those two seasons.

2008 -------------------------------- 2005
Northridge ------------------------- Fremont
Concord ---------------------------- Triton
NorthWood ------------------------ NorthWood
Westview --------------------------- Bremen
Fairfield ---------------------------- Tippecanoe Valley
East Noble

Notice anything about the quality of opponents that we were having 3-2 matches with. And 2005 was the pinnacle of the Joel King, Michael Steury, Jordan Kauffman years. Those guys were great players, but were pulling out their 3-2 wins in matches where their opponents were not as capable.

Putting this comparison another way, the winning percentage of the opponents in 3-2 matches:
2008 ---------------------- 2005
71.5% --------------------- 48.8%

So the teams we were playing close to, competing with in 2008 were much better than the teams we were close to in 2005.

What this speaks to is the development of a program. In 2005 we had 3 or 4 guys who were serious about winning as tennis players, and for the most part they were rewarded but the team still suffered. By 2008, I'd say we had 10-12 players who were serious about winning matches and putting in the work that was necessary. Because of this, we jumped to a completely higher level of play. We were playing close matches with Sectional competitors across the board. Every one of our losses this past season were to either Regional champions, Sectional champions, or to Sectional runners-up. This couldn't have been said in previous seasons. No wonder we were able to compete and win our own Sectional.

Another way of judging the development of the whole program is the JV. In 2005, the JV struggled to a 7-6 record. Luke Hostetter led the team with an 8-3 record at #1 singles JV. Johnny and Jeremy played #1 doubles JV most of the season and were only 5-3-1. As those guys stepped up to varsity they were able to pull off winning seasons in their first years on the varsity level (Luke went 13-6, Johnny went 11-8 and Jeremy went 12-7). This past season, JV was 16-0, beat 2 varsity teams, and was led by 3 undefeated players, and several more with only one loss.

The program is obviously developing and more and more people are serious about tennis, and winning, and working hard. This must continue if we want to stay on the same path. We need 10-12 people serious about tennis throughout the spring and summer. I know of several, I hope the rest of you are ready to committ to the further development of this program!

Wednesday Opponent Overview: Fairfield


Last Season Review
Last season, the Falcons dealt with losing six seniors from the 2007 team that had an outstanding season. The only player returning to last year's team was Wyatt Stutzman, who had played #2 doubles as a freshman and moved all the way up to #1 singles for his sophomore season. Despite the varsity inexperience of the team, they were able to put together a solid season, going 8-8 and finishing third in the NECC behind Angola and Westview. Then they played an amazing match in the first round of Sectionals, and I mean this, my hats off to the Falcons. They played incredible tennis against us in the first round of the Sectionals. So, despite not winning a crown last year, the Falcons did exactly what a coach would want from a young team: they played hard, they competed with good teams, and they continued to improve throughout the season.

Returning Varsity Players
Wyatt Stutzman - Transitioning to #1 singles this year, Stutzman had a solid season, but nothing spectacular. For last year, that would be how I would describe his game as well. Really solid, but nothing that got him over the top and allowed him to win big points. He certainly had the ability to hold his own in matches against Luke and Jared, but never was able to really get a foothold in the match. He'd win points impressively, with passing shots or beautifully placed backhands. But then he would lose points by simply dropping the return in the net. He's going to be an outstanding player, as he continues to iron out the little kinks in his game.

Malachi Randolph - Malachi really impressed me in both of his matches against us. Playing Matthew, I thought that his whole game was solid, and had a hard time finding a place for Matthew to attack. Against Jonny, it was like he believed in himself wholeheartedly, and there was a conviction about his match that was really intense. He finished third in his conference tourney, and I would say was one of the tougher #3 singles matchups in the area by the end of the season.

Josh Beck/Derick Troeger - This was the surprise of the Fairfield team for me. These guys were really good as a doubles combination. They made all-conference in the NECC, only falling behind Westview's excellent combo, and beat us in the Sectional match because they were playing so well. And so aggressively. They were a doubles team that I enjoyed watching play because they wouldn't just sit at the baseline and hope, but they would move and fire and all sorts of things. We will need to meet this aggression as we take them on this coming season.

Derek Thwaits - It's hard to get a read on Thwaits. Last year, playing #2 doubles, Johnny and Jeremy won rather easily but then Thwaits and partner Jordan Garber pushed Mikey and Daniel to the limit. Not a hard striker of the ball, Thwaits success came with letting Mikey and Daniel struggle to get back to lobs and put away winners. The question also next year will be who will pair with Thwaits since Garber has graduated.

Other Possible Varsity Contributors
Trent Kauffman - lost to Mikey Kelly, 9-7
Josh Mullett - lost to Seth Krabill, 8-3
Nate Kropf/Brad Shipley - lost to Russell Klassen/Kyle Miller, 8-4

Outlook
Returning 5 players to a team that was getting better rapidly at the end of the season? Yea, Fairfield will be one of the top threats to win our Sectional next year, if not the favorite. They return experience at the top of the lineup, and will probably be bringing in just a #3 singles player and a #2 doubles player. Trent Kauffman was a good matchup for Mikey and could easily slide into the #3 singles spot and perform at a high level. This team will have a lot going for it in the 2009 season, and we will have to prepare diligently in order to compete.

Blessing
We continue to pray that God will bless this team in many ways throughout this year.

Color Play

When I finally got some studio time today, I started by ironing out my freshly dyed colors. All that color, what’s not to love? And when you look up close they have a variety of patterns (this is dyed white on white fabric) plus with the wrinkles in the dye there is a lot to look at if you get up close.
I started building strip color ways… a bit tedious. But thankfully I had company in the studio today. Our exchange students were working next to me in my jewelry studio making fun things. It was fun to see how much they enjoyed making their necklaces and earrings. And who knows, maybe I’ll return to jewelry making when I get a moment. Ha ha!
I sliced them and diced them and this is how they looked. I have paired them with white and a pale taupe, I love the white, not so sure of the taupe. But with the taupe walls in my room, this seems like a reasonable choice.
Sandwich it between chunks of hand dyed fabric? Naaah… not lovin it. I shall have a better idea tomorrow. Right now I'm toast.

Tuesday Tennis Tip: Smaggressive Aggression


As I was writing about the boy's basketball Sectional on Monday, I was reminded of my continuing belief that under pressure, teams that are aggressive are rewarded. It got me thinking, what are the ways to be aggressive in tennis, and where is the line of being too aggressive. Here's what I came up with.

There are three basic ways to be aggressive:
1. Placement
You place the balls in aggressive areas, such as deep into the corners, using angles, drop shots, moving your opponent around and controlling the point.
2. Pace
You hit the ball hard and force your opponent to adjust to the pace of your shots.
3. Coming to the Net
You get forward at every opportunity and force your opponent to have to come up with big shots to win the points from you.

With those three strategies in mind. I thought about this:

Playing One of the Strategies at a Time = Smaggressive
If you use just one of those strategies, you are being smaggressive. Only using one of them at a time is a fairly safe way to play, but it still puts your opponent under pressure. It is also very achievable at a high school level to use one of these aggressive moves at a time without making too many mistakes. So, typically in our matches we would want to play one of these strategies on every point.

You can see this in the way I coach. I typically instruct singles players to focus on placement of the ball, and doubles players to focus on attacking the net. These are the ONE strategies that I want players to use in those situations. There may be times for a singles player to attack the net, and there may be times for a doubles player to blast the ball. Yet, in general, I want them to stick with just one aggressive type play to put pressure on the opponent. Because

Playing Two of the Strategies at a Time = Risky
Think about it. If you play two of these strategies at the same point, you are going to make many more mistakes. Going for power and placement, you are going to miss more. Pounding the ball and coming to the net, it's difficult to get that balance, and you often get ahead of yourself. Same thing with coming to net and placing the ball. Usually the desire to get to the net causes the placement to lack a bit, and then makes it easier to get passed. The double-mindedness can get messy.

That doesn't mean you can't do it. Putting two of these together makes for a really aggressive play. That can throw your opponent off and help you win a point or two. But if you stay with the combination for too long, mistakes begin to pile up, and so does frustration.

Playing All Three at the Same Time = Chaos
If you try to hit for pace, placement and to get to the net; that is too much going on for the average player within the average point. I mean, honestly, that is where most mistakes come from. Players think, "Oh, there's a short ball. I going to blast that deep into the corner and then come to the net to pound down an overhead." Well, that's awesome when it happens, but usually there's so much going on in their mind that they send the approach shot long, or wide, or get to the net and don't get their racket prepared so they beef the overhead.

So, with that in mind, we want to use one of these aggressive strategies at a time. Over time, over practice, our normal shots will contain more pace. We will recognize proper times to come forward, and they will become more natural parts of our games. We just don't want to force it.
Here’s a fast forward look at my day. Off to work and then home to our exchange students. The girls and I made soap, they picked their colors and fragrances and they turned out cute. That’s my massage bar at the top and the little heart bar we made for Miss G, one of the staff members at their boarding school.

Then I made stamps out of a potato and we used them to make some polka dots. That was fun.



Then I dyed some stuff. Yeah, that white on white fabric is a bear to get the color into, but the way the color reacts to the white printing is pretty cool in my opinion. But this time I was good and did not disturb the drying process.

I didn’t have time to… making dinner (roasted chicken was amazing!) and then off to play practice and then coming home to find them in the middle of “Little Women” which is a movie that makes me cry. It has been a good day.
Tomorrow a jewelry project with the girls and then I'm going to iron and maybe do some planning for my next quilt series - the sofa cushions.

Monday Morning Match Memories


MMMM #12: My Favorite Howe Military Memories

It's a strange match that we have every year. Our JV team plays against the varsity of Howe Military. We usually follow it up with a raucous night of making tennis videos while I go find out who our Sectional opponent is. So today, in honor of this overlooked match, my 10 favorite Howe Military moments.

#10: People getting their first varsity wins.
We always play Howe's varsity with our JV players (a tradition that I enjoyed at Angola as well). Because of this, most of our players end up playing their first varsity match against Howe. It's always fun to look at the varsity records, near the bottom of the list and see all the 1-0 and 2-0 records because they've won against Howe.

#09: Padding our win-loss record in down years.
Some years, we have not had the maximum amount of matches allowed for a varsity program due to rain outs, or poor scheduling on our end, or teams that didn't have enough players, or teams that canceled tournaments without telling any of the other teams involved in the tournament (I'm looking at you Lakeland). Anyways, in those years I get to count the Howe win as one that goes on the varsity record, even though we play them with the jivvies. It always makes us look better than we actually are, kind of like saying the Michigan style would have made us 17-0-1 or whatever that was.

#08: Justin Gregor playing #2 singles on varsity!
That's right, in Gregor's sophomore year Howe Military didn't even have enough players to play 2 JV matches. So their coach made their #2 singles player play again. His lucky opponent. Justin Gregor and all of his tennis talents and abilities! After getting wiped out in his first match by Mikey Kelly (6-0, 6-1) he went back on the court and beat Justin (6-0). Weird day, but awesome opportunity for Justin.

#07: People winning their matches 6-0, 6-0.
6-0, 6-0 doesn't happen all that much over the course of a season. It's really a special scoreline and takes a ton of concentration and focus to complete, even against tragic opponents. I like players having the challenge of winning 6-0, 6-0. It tells me who can focus through times that are boring and uninteresting and still play their best. Those same people will then play their best under pressure as well, because they have the mental skills to concentrate and call on their best practices.

#06: Weston and Will Troyer playing together.
#2 doubles, on senior night, 2007. Weston got his first varsity match and the brothers played awesome together, picking up a win. It was fun to watch them play together, to dominate the net, to see their parents watching them together. Happy senior night for Weston too, I hope.

#05: Joe Friesen loses!
In 2004, we had a varsity match rescheduled for the same night as the Howe Military match. So the JV stayed here, and finished their match before I got back with the varsity. When I came inside to go to my mailbox where the scores had been left, I saw that Joe Friesen score was written as if he had lost. I automatically assumed it had been written wrong, and reported the score to the paper as 5-0 for us. However, the next day, it turned out Joe had lost for real. I was kind of shocked, as everyone else had won fairly easily.

#04: Austin Loucks unending set.
As we waited to go for Night Out, Austin played #3 singles and won his first set 6-2. Then his opponent played an excellent second set, taking the lead 6-5 at the end. Austin forced a tiebreak, and while we all waited around, the tiebreak went back and forth, back and forth. Everyone was anxious to leave, but we were all waiting on Austin. Finally, he won, 10-8 in the tiebreak. Everyone was mad at him for getting so nervous, and yet glad he had actually won without going to a third set.

#03: Justin Gregor and Evan Grimes wanting to finish their match in the rain.
Yea, this past year Justin and Evan were the last match on, and it started to get dark and rain a bit. We called everyone off the courts so that they wouldn't get hurt and so that Howe could head home. But no, Evan, Justin and their opponents had other ideas. Both teams agreed they'd keep playing through the rain. Finally, with the score 5-4 in favor of Bethany, we convinced them to stop. Since they were leading, I officially counted it as a win. So nice job, way to desire to finish it out.

#02: Joel's first serve against the girls.
In 2003 we didn't have enough players for a JV, so Joel King volunteered to play down against Howe. He played a regular varsity match in doubles with Jordan Kauffman, then played another doubles match against a Howe JV team. The second match was against two female players. They didn't much looked like they cared to be on the court. After warming up without hardly getting a racket on the ball, the girls said they were ready to start. Joel served first and hit a gentle second serve down the T. The Howe Military player didn't move at all, just watched it go by without moving a muscle, then said, "Ummm, yea, that was good." That pretty told the story of the match.

#01: My golden set in Sectional 1997.
#1 has nothing to do with Bethany. As a junior at Angola, we drew Howe Military in the first round of the Sectional. In my match, I was able to win the first set without losing a set. Actually, I was up 6-0, 3-0 before I lost a point. It was incredible and I don't even know if I could do that again now.

Anyways, just some thoughts on a different match than the others I've been writing about. Have fun reminiscing about your good old days playing our fun friends from the Military Institute.