About Court

This is Courtney Vallentyne's blog.

Vallentyne Boys Septic Hilarity

I love the way that life shapes our kids.  Forget all the parenting crap you ever read, all of the tactics and approaches you try.  In the end, the biggest influence on your kids will be their lives and experiences.  Sure you can hope that the experiences are positive, but even if they aren’t, they can prove to be useful in learning.  A good example would be the fact that we have had a poop composter in our backyard for a couple of years now, the guys are very used to that.  In addition to that, some close friends recently replaced their septic system, so needless to say they have lots of septic-related experience recently.  Sure, not really experience that would really make or break their success maybe, but who knows, it might come in handy someday.

For instance, the other day there was a big windstorm at our place, and it happened to be the night before our garbage pickup day.  As the boys and I were walking to the bus in the morning there was a garbage can lid laying on the grass near the edge of the road at the park next to us, blown off somebody’s garbage can.  Cael noticed it and said “Geez, I never noticed the septic system there before?”  I chuckled, and then Quinn jumped right in with all of the swagger and authority of an older brother and scoffing he said “No Cael, it’s a poop hole.”  I loved the fact that my two kids immediately and unquestioningly believed that this garbage can lid could be either of those two things, and in fact they have had direct experience with both things recently, and both are equally valid possibilities in their world.  It also leads me to take great heart in the fact that I am completely messing with their realities, and that years from now they will both reflect back and say to each other “What the heck was with Dad and those poop holes?  Man, that was messed up.

Yep, happy to be the guy doing this to my kids.

The Thrilling Buffalo-Filled Conclusion

The brilliant Guy on a Buffalo series reaches the thrilling conclusion in a two-part finale.

Part 1

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L55dKrjxcCY

Part 2

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WXtpNm_a4Us

 

Incidentally, the guys behind this ridiculous, awesome and touching web series (Seriously, it has touched me, but not in an inappropriate way, more like the way your Spanish wrestling coach touches you.  Is that inappropriate too? Oh.) are a Texas-based bluegrass band called The Possum Posse.  Bluegrass isn’t always my thing, but from their website this sounds a lot like a band I could get behind.  I highly suggest you head over and check out their Kickstarter project to get their first album made.  Nice work fellas.  If anyone is looking for a gift idea for little old me, I can really see myself wearing one of those Guy on a Buffalo t-shirts.  Just sayin’.

Empire Strikes Back Indeed

Watch as this child learns pretty much the biggest cinematic secret (that matters) in the world.

It makes me mad that I didn’t think to do the same for the guys, but I must say that this kid’s reaction pretty much sums it up.

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZbV5hn_ET0U

That’s a reaction to make any geekdad’s heart grow 12 sizes.

Saw this on Boing Boing.

Guy on a Buffalo

There is no introduction needed for the Guy on a Buffalo, but I will say that watching this video cured my gout, and restored my skin to it’s regular pallor.  Wow.  Don’t miss episode two, either.

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iJ4T9CQA0UM&NR=1

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v5Lmkm5EF5E&NR=1

Hey what’s this in the weeds? It’s a baby? Awesome!

The Catholic Church from a Business Perspective

I’m about to break my own rule of blogging here. I never write about controversial things, I usually take a very very soft touch here, because I find as a rule that if you can’t say anything nice, don’t say anything at all. That usually works really well, and since I rarely have an axe to grind (this one in particular is a notable exception, and look where that got me) things on the blog are rarely all that busy.

So, here’s me breaking this rule by stating that the Catholic Church is doing a lousy job of running itself. I definitely don’t consider myself a “believer” in any way, but it seems to me that if we consider the church as any business they are doing a fine job of alienating their customers. The church wants butts in the seats on Sunday, that’s their measure of success. The more butts in seats they get, the healthier the bottom line is and the more likely the church will be around next year, same as any other business. These days it seems to me that churches are not doing so well, so in any market downturn a business would be wise to keep its existing customers happy, ride out the downturn and hopefully be ready for the next upswing in fortunes. That doesn’t seem to be the case, or at least at my community church. In recent years the church decided to take over the preparations for the first communion rite, which used to be largely done by the schools. The biggest change is the amount of pressure placed on parents to participate in this process. We experienced this for Quinn two years ago, multiple weeknights logging attendance at parent-only sessions, in addition to a couple of weekend afternoons that (at least) included the children receiving the rite. The sessions were long, had little to do with the actual rite of communion, and in fact were mandatory. The extra special sauce was the sessions are run by volunteers from the community who make Dolores Umbridge look downright relaxed.  I understand the need to have the process as clear as possible, but come on people, when you are talking to a room full of adults perhaps you could avoid using your teacher voice?  If you miss attending a session you risk having your child denied the rite of communion.  Wait, what?

This whole process is a strange thing to ask of parents in my mind. I would think that the church would make receiving these rites as painless as possible for everyone involved. The church itself needs people to attend services, I would think that making sure everyone experienced the full service would be a priority. Instead, they have chosen to make this (almost) free, voluntary act as PAINFUL as it can possibly be. They are making it more difficult to become a full member of the church, which is a crazy business plan for a struggling business.

Now we are starting the whole process over again for our third child, and it seems that the sessions contain EXACTLY the same information as they contained two years ago. Right down to the videos made 20 years ago. As any busy parent will tell you, sitting through the same pointless information not once, but TWICE makes a fella kinda stabby. Forget that the parent sessions are held on weeknights, at exactly the best time of the day for snuggling and reading together. So attending these things is actually reducing the amount of quality time I have with my kids. I love that.

The questions that followed the first session cemented what I already suspected: that attendance is mandatory, even for parents of multiple children, and even though parents HAVE NOTHING TO DO with the rite in question. Essentially our job is to make sure our kids colour the book we pay for. Yes, it’s exactly this kind of rigid pointless inflexibility that really endears a business to its customers. Why on earth would they require us to sit through these sessions once, let alone twice? The best part is they essentially hold the actual rite as a sort of hostage so that you will attend. If you don’t show, your kid doesn’t have communion. Yep, that’s how I want to be treated as a customer.

If they make it hard, people won’t come, fewer kids get communion. You can bet that a large percentage of kids that don’t have first communion in grade two will never bother to go back and get it later. Add to that disillusioned parents that just stop going to church because of crap like this, and they are working themselves right out of business. In a few generations they are in really big trouble.

Some footnotes on this: I know nothing about churches, and know nothing about the Catholic church even though my kids are baptized and attend Catholic school. My comments are based on my own observations, and are meant as a helpful critique from what the church should see as a potential customer. If they don’t listen to their customers, my feeling is that in the free market of many other churches and many other religions, they will lose.

Sigh, ok now I have that off my chest.  I feel better.  Like a confession.  Oops.

Toronto Neighbourhood Attempts to be Child-Free

Here’s a link to a CBC Radio program that has an interview with a childless couple from the downtown neighbourhood of Liberty Village that is trying to get a bylaw passed that would prevent couples from buying a home in the 4 block area immediately surrounding their own home.  I wish them luck in their efforts to rid themselves of screaming rugrats.

 Toronto Neighbourhood tries to ban children

 

Note that the program is completely satirical, making fun of cold ridiculous yuppie snobs.  It’s done pretty well, the comments are about 50% between people who get it and people who really don’t. Also, good for you for zooming in to read this.