Song of Songs

A segment of Sunday’s lesson will refer to Song of Songs.  Along that line, my time online led me to this…

Sandwich Secret

I was making my lunch for work, and it turned out looking beautiful.  Good enough to eat, for sure.  Then it dawned on me… the secret to a great sandwich.  After years of faulty technique, I’ve corrected the error.

I used to put the mayo on the bottom piece of bread, then cover it with the veggies, meat, cheese, and mustard, in that order.  But in a moment of enlightenment (or laziness), I just slapped both mayo and mustard together on top of the pile.

That, my friends, is the secret.

Mark this down: Mustard and mayo must mingle.

(Note: If you don’t like mustard and/or mayo on your sandwich, then I can’t guarantee you’ll ever have a good one.)

As I pointed out my brilliant observation to my lovely wife, she turned to me and said, “You should blog about that.”

That was apparently her way of saying, “That’s a great idea, Honey.  Go tell the world.”  It also could have been her way of saying, “Thanks for nothing, Dumbo.  Go tell someone who cares.”  But I’m going to go with the first theory.

Now you know.  You are most welcome.

You Want Loud?

A funny bit from Rod Pedersen’s blog this morning…

Immediately after returning from Vancouver on Saturday, I found myself pinballing between school gyms at Ruth M. Buck and Winston Knoll Collegiate watching junior girls volleyball.

I’ll tell you something….

Last weekend I was in Commonwealth Stadium with over 60,000 fans and this Friday I was in B.C. Place with over 31,000.

But NOTHING is as flipping loud as a gym full of teenaged girls cheering their teams on in a volleyball game.

JEEPERS! I almost ran out to get ear plugs. These kids made the ACDC concert sound like a librarians convention.

Only funny because it’s true!

A Conscious Commitment to the Important

Steve posted this Covey quote today.  Chew on it all day, and it won’t be nearly long enough.

Anything less than a conscious commitment to the important is an unconscious commitment to the unimportant.”