short takes (pretty random)
I found this rant
about Usenet interesting. And not solely applicable
to Usenet. Thanks to
autographedcat for the link.
Template for a badly-written poll: "Does X change your opinion of Y?" Sure it can, but neither "yes" nor "no" actually tells you anything else useful. If what you mean is "does X make you less inclined toward Y?", say that. (A current instance of this is a CNN poll, where Y is Schwarzenegger and X is his comments about Hitler.)
We had a very good On the Mark practice Wednesday. Robert, Kathy, and I will be performing at Darkover (without Ray, who can't make it), so we've been juggling some things around to make them work with just three people. We've also added a couple new pieces that we can just plan for three from the start. Things are sounding good, and we've still got more than a month and a half to practice. Kathy's been taking voice lessons and that's paying off, too.
I got a call from Tree of Life yesterday -- their cantor is sick and could I do services tonight? Normally I'd jump at it, of course, but I always spend Shabbat Shuva (the Shabbat between Rosh Hashana and Yom Kippur) in my own congregation. Among things, it's when my grandfather's yahrzeit [1] is commemorated and I prefer to be there for that. I don't wish their cantor ill or anything, but maybe I'll get another opportunity some other time. (Hey, people take vacations, maybe.)
I'm leading the Torah service, and reading Torah, tomorrow morning. The Torah reading is in good shape; it's a short and easy parsha and I've had a while to work on it. Leading the service should go ok; this is the only part of the Shabbat morning service I've never led [2], but it should be fine. It's not as if I haven't heard it bunches of times. If I can learn the Yom Kippur haftarah blessing for Monday, which isn't exactly familiar territory, I can lead a Torah service.
Caffeine intake is down to two cans/day. I should be ok for Yom Kippur. But I am so breaking the fast with a liter of Diet Coke!
Footnotes:
[1] Anniversary of someone's death. Ok, properly the anniversary of a Jew's death, and my grandfather wasn't Jewish, but since the ritual is for the living I don't have a problem with having his name read on the list. I don't do anything else blatant, like sponsoring meals in his honor or stuff like that.
[2] I've also never led Musaf, but Reform congregations don't do Musaf so this is rarely an issue.
no subject
In addition, I didn't really know the Shabbat haftarah blessing to begin with; we've only recently started doing haftarah on a regular basis (another consequence of the schedule change), and I didn't learn it as a kid.
(So as it turns out, a nusach change wouldn't have hurt me all that much, but I'm in a weird situation.)
no subject