Good morning! It's been a busy morning. Michelle dropped the girls off and I took care of the boys' drop off. We're expecting the sprinklers to get purged today so I'm working from home today to be here when it happens.
Around noon Michelle and I went out for lunch at Cafe on the Oval. Once we got home she head over to Nashua Radiology. While she was out Anrik Irrigation came to blow out the sprinkler lines before the first hard frost comes. There's a procedure they don't worry about in the South! I have a few snapshots below of the "geysers" in my yard.
Wrapped up work around 5:15 and head over to Golds. Took tonight's Step 'n Abs class. After showering up I head over to St. Patricks where they had a Scriptural Rosary combined with Eucharistic adoration and benediction service. By now I am so hungry for a bite of dinner.
Just before lunch I found out friends had a miscarriage, their third. Now while I was out came the news that Steve Jobs has passed. iSad. His passing is just dominating the updates on social networks and weblogs.
Saw this in today's tech and business news via the Motley Fool: 5-Star Stocks Poised to Pop: Qualcomm
Just sitting in the parking lot waiting for Claire and Abby to finish up with Youth Group.
While I'm usually okay with the things the girls learn at Youth Group, once in a while... One of their talks today was evolution and creationism. Why do non-denom's obsess about this? When I go to Opus Dei meetings, we talk about things like abandonment, charity & chastity, divine filiation, plan of life, mortification, and hundreds of other topics you can see here for example. Evolution is the last thing that we worry ourselves about! Perhaps when you have a "Bible alone" - aka sola scriptura - mindset, it distorts you into a literalist.
One of the things I found out tonight was that Claire used some of her Subway income to buy a Milford cross country jacket. See two snapshots below.
Cool! The TWiT network has released a new podcast this month that I can get into: Tech History Today. Short 'n sweet, a look a technological developments that we probably now take for granted.