Priya Dance Recital 2011 - Lollipop

Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Hamster, Fish and Dog

We successfully avoided getting a dog. Priya has been insistent on getting a dog like crazy for months. We went to the pet story just to look at types of dogs and on the way to the dog area she saw a hamster and fell in love with it. So this was my chance to deal down, so to speak, because a hamster is way easier than a dog (cheaper too).

So I told the kids that if we get a hamster then we can't get a dog and we have to do something with this our goldfish. We have a one pet rule in the house.... I thought the goldfish could be a sensitive topic because they cried when the first one died. So I asked Priya, "what about Pineapple (or Treasure depending on the day). What are we going to do with him?"

Priya looked at me and said without a hint of hesitation.... "Just get rid of him... flush him down the toilet.... or feed him to the tarantulas..."

I wasn't expecting that!

Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Grandma Eleanor Boldt's Ice Cream recipe

Vanilla Ice Cream: Using electric ice cream machine.

Put 5 eggs (slightly beaten),

2 tablespoons vanilla,

2 cups sugar into the container then

add 1 quart cream and the rest milk so it is 2 inches from the top of the container.

Start the machine. Put snow, ice, salt around the outer bucket to keep it freezing as it churns. Still have the old machine if anyone wants to use it.

Thursday, January 19, 2012

Priya the Psychologist

Priya told me about her friend that gives her some problems. Priya said, "Dad, I decided to write what I needed to say to in a letter and then read it to her. So I did and here is what I wrote:"

Dear [Name],
I want to be friends but I don't want to be your friend if you try to boss me around and be mean when you talk.

Her friend responds with, "Thanks for telling me that, I want to be friends."

It is actually quite profound, the truth spoken in love - I think children can teach us many things.

Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Tebow's Secret

How cool has this season been? Watching such an unorthodox style succeed in the NFL has created such a buzz. How can Tebow keep winning while throwing so poorly? That is really the question. I don't think it is as crazy as everyone thinks. Here is the secret... most good QB's need to complete 65% of their passes to win or to at least move the ball and score. So how is Tebow able to complete like only 48% of his passes and still win? The secret is that most NFL QB that throw a high percentage also throw a lot of short passes. Short passes tend to be high percentage and have essentially replaced a number of running attempts. But in Denver they have gone back to replacing short, high percentage, passes with runs. And having a QB that can read option run creates an advantage in the running game that makes it more effective. Then when called on to pass, Tebow often takes shots downfield which are not high percentage passes to begin with but are game breaking passes. Case in point was last week against Pittsburgh. Only 10 completions and 316 yds! That is nuts but it makes my point and shows what can happen when it is working right. You don't need to complete 65% of your passes when you have an effective running game and have big play passes. Ball control and low turnovers keep them in the game for Tebow-time at the end. When Tebow can't make downfield plays and the running game is shutdown, Denver loses.

We always think we know what can and cannot work, we are trapped by our assumptions. I love the fact that Tebow is challenging assumptions. He is changing the game. He may not win the super bowl or even be good next year. But you can win playing differently and it can create advantages for your team. I think you'll see more of it in the future. I love the offense Oregon runs and their move towards utility rather than just more specialization. Like they have multiple positions that need to run or throw, even kickers! I even saw a couple punters in the NFL try to pass this season because a WR was uncovered, it failed because the punter simply tanked the throw. But I think it's a good strategy, there is no reason punters could not learn to throw the ball 20 yards accurately to a wide open receiver. That would be a major advantage.