Anyway.. I was looking at the referrals again, because it's just so amusing to me. I saw one from http://joyfulwife.blogspot.com/ Oh.. you know I just had to go look at that one. Sure enough, bat shit fucking crazy lady.
Check out a sample post;
whiskyYes - Catholics. Notice the aversion to knowledge. She's got a total mind fuck going on and doesn't even know it, and she's going to condemn her kids to a lifetime of therapy. It's sad.
One "curse" that our generation bears is the knowledge of all that is really out there in the world. (Compare this to life on Little House on the Priarie...) Like taking the kids with me to SuperWalmart... I think it's horrible for their minds just to see how much "stuff" is available to us.
So that being said, I almost hesitate to share this website with my hubby. I read about it in the Wall Street Journal. It's an old-fashioned whiskey distillery in Scotland that offers an "Academy" - a chance to come live with the owners for a week and learn the trade hands-on. It sounds like an absolute dream vacation for hubby, and I hate to tempt him, knowing that until our children are raised (ha ha ha) he will probably never have the opportunity to splurge on such a venture. As I often say to him... "Honey, in heaven you'll drive all sorts of new cars." And now I can add: "and honey, in heaven you can have your own whiskey distillery, okay?" And it'll be worth the wait.
You know what I like to hear? "Honey - I'll buy you a $135,000 sports car". Fuck that waiting for heaven shit.. Lets live in the real world, here and now, and have a good time.
Another post of hers;
This article clearly explains why Christians should NOT see the DaVinci Code move, even "just out of curiosity."Once again, so typical. If the movie is so off base, why fear it? If someone came to Jesus and said "you are false", would Jesus put his fingers in his ears and scream "la la la, I can't hear you"? I think Jesus would listen to what they had to say and rebutt them. Easy as that.
But not these Catholics. Again - money, wealth, power. They got millions of people so mind fucked that they freak out over the least bit of criticism.
Watching the Deconstruction of the FaithIslam, Christianity, it's all the same... living in a self-imposed delusional state and loving it. I really do feel bad that people live like that. I suspect very few people choose to go that insane. Somebody had to have done it to them at some point in their life.
Early this week, I began to receive numerous phone calls from my fellow Catholics wanting to know what could be done to combat the film — begging me to do something to defend our Lord and our Faith. After prayer, I decided that my friend’s offer was in fact an opportunity to review the film and critique it early on as a Catholic lawyer. Being able to see the film without any risk of financially supporting it or inducing others to go and see it were primary concerns. With those worries allayed, I saw the film on May 17th.
At the screening, many of the critics were giddy with excitement at the prospect of seeing the film. No time was wasted assailing the Catholic Church with open ridicule even before the lights went down. That was the atmosphere of the evening.
As the theater went dark, we were treated to the soaring score of Hans Zimmer, one of the best composers in Hollywood. On screen, an elderly man is seen running through the Grande Gallerie of the Louvre, trying in vain to escape the menacing monk stalking him — a man so pale in the face that death precedes his every step. The monk, as repeatedly advertised in previews, proceeds to murder his helpless victim in cold blood. That is how the film begins. This combination of intense action with a particularly striking score continues, scene upon scene.
At the end of 2½ hours, the lights came back on, and the reality settled into me: Never in the history of filmmaking has the memory of our Lord Jesus Christ and the faith of all Christians been so explicitly targeted, insulted and mocked on such a scale.
I wasn't very suprised to see this post on her blog;
Depressed?I'd imagine she has her lucid moments.. and the cloud of depression settles in on her.. suffocating.
I was listening to a tape of Fr. Benedict Groeschel today (another advantage of no tv!) and he said he advises really depressed/sad/suffering people to read Psalm 88. (To know that you're not the only one who has felt these universal feelings.) It was a small part of the talk, but I thought it was worth sharing.
You've chosen your own path.
** update **
Referrals are cool.. This blog is interesting.. http://food-forthought.blogspot.com/
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