Fall Leaves, Carlyle, IL

Published On: November 1, 2005  09:47, filed in Flora
click photo for larger version
Fall Leaves, Carlyle, IL
f/2.8, 1/100, 35mm
I went on a camping trip a week or so back, and had the chance to take some Fall specific type of photos. I like this one. Its prototypical of the kind of photos you find during this season. Not terribly original, but fun regardless... 
Tags: photography autumn nature illinois flora

Rain

Published On: November 1, 2005  07:00, filed in Verse
I went on a camping trip a week or so back, and had the chance to take some Fall specific type of photos. I like this one. Its prototypical of the kind of photos you find during this season. Not terribly original, but fun regardless... 
Tags: poetry short verse english haiku rhyme

Wet Stone, Carlyle Lake, Carlyle, IL

Published On: November 2, 2005  07:00, filed in Flora
click photo for larger version
Wet Stone, Carlyle Lake, Carlyle, IL
f/2.8, 1/320, 35mm
A stone laying next to the shore of the Lake Carlyle. I like the texture, and expecially the way the water brings out the patterns in the stone. 
Tags: photography illinois nature flora

Driftwood, Lake Carlyle, Carlyle, IL

Published On: November 3, 2005  07:00, filed in Flora
click photo for larger version
Driftwood, Lake Carlyle, Carlyle, IL
f/2.8, 1/80, 35mm
An old rotting tree beside the lake. I like driftwood. It reminds me of old things and nature.  
Tags: photography flora illinois nature flora

Javascript Bible Reference Parsing Object: Update

Published On: November 4, 2005  13:46, filed in Technology
I updated the regex expressions for Javascript Bible Reference Parsing Object to reflect some of the common abbreviations. Thanks to the Folks at the GNPCB.org for posting common book queries. Thanks also to Jeremy for helping me simplify my regex expressions. 
Tags: javascript bible coding technology

Wood Texture, Lake Carlyle, Carlyle, IL

Published On: November 4, 2005  07:00, filed in Flora
click photo for larger version
Wood Texture, Lake Carlyle, Carlyle, IL
f/2.8, 1/125, 35mm
I updated the regex expressions for Javascript Bible Reference Parsing Object to reflect some of the common abbreviations. Thanks to the Folks at the GNPCB.org for posting common book queries. Thanks also to Jeremy for helping me simplify my regex expressions. 
Tags: photography flora illinois nature flora

Balancing the Blade, Lake Carlyle, Carlyle, IL

Published On: November 5, 2005  07:00, filed in People
click photo for larger version
Balancing the Blade, Lake Carlyle, Carlyle, IL
f/2.8, 1/80, 16mm
This photo was taken by Addison, and is of me carvinga piece of driftwood I was planning to use as a walking stick. A walking stick is an important part of any camping trip and is one of the first things I look for after establishing a camp site. 
Tags: photography illinois people people

Heron, Lake Carlyle, Carlyle, IL

Published On: November 6, 2005  07:00, filed in Fauna
click photo for larger version
Heron, Lake Carlyle, Carlyle, IL
f/4, 1/60, 200mm
I loke Herons and Egrets. This bird is Heron, I think. If you know better, then feel free to correct me. I've not yet been able to capture a really good photo of one in the wild, but I'm going to some day. 
Tags: photography heron landscape illinois fauna

Madonna and Two Children

Published On: November 7, 2005  13:41, filed in Sculpture
click photo for larger version
Madonna and Two Children
f/4, 1/160, 159mm
We visited the Bellefontaine Cemetery last friday. I couldn't bring myself to convert this next set of photos to black and white. The colors of Fall have been gorgeous. 
Tags: photography cemetery bellefontaine saint louis city sculpture sculpture

Cherub, Bellefontaine Cemetery, Saint Louis, MO

Published On: November 8, 2005  07:00, filed in Sculpture
click photo for larger version
Cherub, Bellefontaine Cemetery, Saint Louis, MO
f/4, 1/160, 60mm
These kind of images are, by far, the most affecting for me. There is something about the worn and weathered look of a face that speaks of care and long suffering. 
Tags: photography angel cherub cemetery bellefontaine saint louis city sculpture sculpture

Modern Day Christian Persecution

Published On: November 9, 2005  11:12, filed in Religion
Chinese get prison time for Bible delivery, says the Washington Times. All they did was hand out Bibles, and for that they get three years of prison. God bless them. 
Tags: christianity persecution bible religion

Madonna and the Cross, Bellefontaine Cemetery, Saint Louis, MO

Published On: November 9, 2005  09:52, filed in Sculpture
click photo for larger version
Madonna and the Cross, Bellefontaine Cemetery, Saint Louis, MO
f/4, 1/800, 200mm
Chinese get prison time for Bible delivery, says the Washington Times. All they did was hand out Bibles, and for that they get three years of prison. God bless them. 
Tags: photography cross cemetery bellefontaine saint louis city sculpture sculpture

Bible References for each Strongs Number

Published On: November 10, 2005  10:18, filed in Technology
It took my poor laptop 18 hours to parse out the OT, and about 6 hours to parse out the NT, but the Bible References for each Strongs Greek and Hebrew Number is finally done. This should enable me to add cross references to the strongs definitions in the AJAX Bible
Tags: bible ajax technology

Young Girl in Mourning, Bellefontaine Cemetery, Saint Louis, MO

Published On: November 10, 2005  07:00, filed in Sculpture
click photo for larger version
Young Girl in Mourning, Bellefontaine Cemetery, Saint Louis, MO
f/4, 1/800, 200mm
It took my poor laptop 18 hours to parse out the OT, and about 6 hours to parse out the NT, but the Bible References for each Strongs Greek and Hebrew Number is finally done. This should enable me to add cross references to the strongs definitions in the AJAX Bible
Tags: photography cemetery bellefontaine saint louis city sculpture sculpture

From a Comment on Chromasia:

Published On: November 11, 2005  10:32, filed in Photography
Chromasia posted a pleasure doing business / 10 November, 2005 and John from Shots Photography started a discussion. I'm not sure what the heart of the discussion was about, but I posted some thought about photography and the medium that I felt were interesting enough to repost here.



I'm terribly confused about what the debate going here actually is. Anyone care to sum it up?

While I'm waiting for that I'll throw my random two cents in, because heck, I'm always up to talking about the medium.

Personally, I think the photoblog has limitations as a medium. I'm not putting the photoblog down, man, I love my photoblog. But the way you display images and the context you put them in is as much a part of the editorial process as photoshopping the image to turn the raw data into the picture you wanted.

Sometimes I get frustrated a little with the linear nature of the photoblog format. I used to post whole galleries at one time and put up a notification. When you do that, it makes more sense to view images not as distict wholes, but as parts of a bigger picture or idea.

I've pondered on starting a photography/literary magazine just so I would have a place to publish a different kind of photoset. Maybe I will someday, when I have time. ;-)

****************************************

I'll also chime in with John on the issue of how it becomes difficult to try new things when you become accomplished. I think part of the reason for that is because there are less new things to try. I don't want to continue doing things that I know don't work, and so tend to avoid a lot of techniques with serious flaws. The challenge as a photographer, as you learn the craft and what goes on and a more fundamental level, is to take that increased understanding and use it to create something new and perhaps better.

I can see the benefit of forcing yourself to engage in something random occasionally, just to startle yourself out of the norm. But I think you will be better off in focusing your experiments. Createa scenario or a challenge and try to solve the problem. Set up controlled experiments like, how many ways can I present the same subject? or how many different way can I light the same scene without changing the angle or lens on my camera. I think those are better ways of breaking out of the mold than simply doing things at random.

************************************************

Well, that was a long rambling response. Dave, I like both todays and yesterday's images. My reasons are simple. The subjects in both were caught in moments of genuine emotion. Regardless of how the model's may have actually felt, their expressions are true. I find that little window into the heart of humanity interesting.
 
Tags: photography quotes photo tech

Cherub on Pedestal, Bellefontaine Cemetery, Saint Louis, MO

Published On: November 11, 2005  07:00, filed in Sculpture
click photo for larger version
Cherub on Pedestal, Bellefontaine Cemetery, Saint Louis, MO
f/4, 1/250, 70mm
Chromasia posted a pleasure doing business / 10 November, 2005 and John from Shots Photography started a discussion. I'm not sure what the heart of the discussion was about, but I posted some thought about photography and the medium that I felt were interesting enough to repost here.



I'm terribly confused about what the debate going here actually is. Anyone care to sum it up?

While I'm waiting for that I'll throw my random two cents in, because heck, I'm always up to talking about the medium.

Personally, I think the photoblog has limitations as a medium. I'm not putting the photoblog down, man, I love my photoblog. But the way you display images and the context you put them in is as much a part of the editorial process as photoshopping the image to turn the raw data into the picture you wanted.

Sometimes I get frustrated a little with the linear nature of the photoblog format. I used to post whole galleries at one time and put up a notification. When you do that, it makes more sense to view images not as distict wholes, but as parts of a bigger picture or idea.

I've pondered on starting a photography/literary magazine just so I would have a place to publish a different kind of photoset. Maybe I will someday, when I have time. ;-)

****************************************

I'll also chime in with John on the issue of how it becomes difficult to try new things when you become accomplished. I think part of the reason for that is because there are less new things to try. I don't want to continue doing things that I know don't work, and so tend to avoid a lot of techniques with serious flaws. The challenge as a photographer, as you learn the craft and what goes on and a more fundamental level, is to take that increased understanding and use it to create something new and perhaps better.

I can see the benefit of forcing yourself to engage in something random occasionally, just to startle yourself out of the norm. But I think you will be better off in focusing your experiments. Createa scenario or a challenge and try to solve the problem. Set up controlled experiments like, how many ways can I present the same subject? or how many different way can I light the same scene without changing the angle or lens on my camera. I think those are better ways of breaking out of the mold than simply doing things at random.

************************************************

Well, that was a long rambling response. Dave, I like both todays and yesterday's images. My reasons are simple. The subjects in both were caught in moments of genuine emotion. Regardless of how the model's may have actually felt, their expressions are true. I find that little window into the heart of humanity interesting.
 
Tags: photography angel cherub cemetery bellefontaine saint louis city sculpture sculpture

Girl in Repose, Bellefontaine Cemetery, Saint Louis, MO

Published On: November 12, 2005  07:00, filed in Sculpture
click photo for larger version
Girl in Repose, Bellefontaine Cemetery, Saint Louis, MO
f/4, 1/400, 200mm
If I had more time I would compose a poem to compliment this image. Alas, I am too busy. I like the way the trees frame her figure, and the way the stature leans slightly forward. I think it may need cropping a little, to center the image, but I'm not sure. 
Tags: photography cemetery bellefontaine saint louis city sculpture sculpture

Angel Gaurding the Tomb, Bellefontaine Cemetery, Saint Louis, MO

Published On: November 13, 2005  07:00, filed in Sculpture
click photo for larger version
Angel Gaurding the Tomb, Bellefontaine Cemetery, Saint Louis, MO
f/4, 1/400, 70mm
 
Tags: photography angel cemetery bellefontaine saint louis city sculpture sculpture

Greek Bible at Zhubert.com/Bible

Published On: November 14, 2005  13:17, filed in Religion
Wycliff pointed this greek bible out to me. It looks really useful if you are a student of greek. It shows the meaning of each word in a javascript title tag and allows you to see a lot of meta data about the words usage. 
Tags: greek bible religion

Cherub, Bellefontaine Cemetery, Saint Louis, MO

Published On: November 14, 2005  07:00, filed in Sculpture
click photo for larger version
Cherub, Bellefontaine Cemetery, Saint Louis, MO
f/4, 1/250, 70mm
Wycliff pointed this greek bible out to me. It looks really useful if you are a student of greek. It shows the meaning of each word in a javascript title tag and allows you to see a lot of meta data about the words usage. 
Tags: photography angel cherub cemetery bellefontaine saint louis city sculpture sculpture

Angel in Repose, Bellefontaine Cemetery, Saint Louis, MO

Published On: November 15, 2005  07:00, filed in Sculpture
click photo for larger version
Angel in Repose, Bellefontaine Cemetery, Saint Louis, MO
f/4, 1/400, 200mm
A close up of the photo posted on the 13th. My favorite of this figure. 
Tags: photography angel cemetery bellefontaine saint louis city sculpture sculpture

Angel and Cross, Bellefontaine Cemetery, Saint Louis, MO

Published On: November 15, 2005  07:00, filed in Sculpture
click photo for larger version
Angel and Cross, Bellefontaine Cemetery, Saint Louis, MO
f/4, 1/200, 81mm
A close up of the photo posted on the 13th. My favorite of this figure. 
Tags: photography angel cross cemetery bellefontaine saint louis city sculpture sculpture

Angel in Repose (closeup), Bellefontaine Cemetery, Saint Louis, MO

Published On: November 16, 2005  07:00, filed in Sculpture
click photo for larger version
Angel in Repose (closeup), Bellefontaine Cemetery, Saint Louis, MO
f/4, 1/1250, 200mm
Redux. 
Tags: photography angel cemetery bellefontaine saint louis city sculpture sculpture

Warning: Graphic Descriptions of Martrdom

Published On: November 17, 2005  09:18, filed in Religion
Christians still die for their faith. The New York Sun report that Korean Reds and Targeting Christians. I found this excerpt exceptionally moving.

The 20 parishioners were detained near their clergy, and watched, along with the assembled audience, as the five Christian leaders were told they could escape death if they denied their faith and pledged to serve only Kim Jong Il and his father, the first dictator of communist Korea, Kim Il Sung. According to the eyewitness, the clergy remained silent.

For their steadfast belief, the Christians were executed. According to the report, "Some of the fellow parishioners assembled to watch the execution cried, screamed out, or fainted when the skulls made a popping sound as they were crushed beneath the steamroller."


Rest assured, those Christians have their reward, and doubtless, so will their murderers. 
Tags: christianity martrs china religion

Angel Before the Cross, Bellefontaine Cemetery, Saint Louis, MO

Published On: November 17, 2005  07:00, filed in Sculpture
click photo for larger version
Angel Before the Cross, Bellefontaine Cemetery, Saint Louis, MO
f/4, 1/250, 200mm
Christians still die for their faith. The New York Sun report that Korean Reds and Targeting Christians. I found this excerpt exceptionally moving.

The 20 parishioners were detained near their clergy, and watched, along with the assembled audience, as the five Christian leaders were told they could escape death if they denied their faith and pledged to serve only Kim Jong Il and his father, the first dictator of communist Korea, Kim Il Sung. According to the eyewitness, the clergy remained silent.

For their steadfast belief, the Christians were executed. According to the report, "Some of the fellow parishioners assembled to watch the execution cried, screamed out, or fainted when the skulls made a popping sound as they were crushed beneath the steamroller."


Rest assured, those Christians have their reward, and doubtless, so will their murderers. 
Tags: photography angel cemetery bellefontaine saint louis city sculpture sculpture

Lessons in Spiritual Warfare

Published On: November 18, 2005  12:30, filed in Religion

Strategy #1 - Avoidance

Don't let your mind think about it. The moment it pops in your head, frantically think of something else... anything else. I call this avoidance... and cite Phil. 4:8-9 as scriptural reference. Avoidance works best if you combine it with Strategy #2.

Strategy #2 - Turning the Tables

This strategy is really just a derivation of Avoidance. But when you are accosted by thoughts or desires for sinful things, sometimes the source of these actions come from outside yourself. To turn the tables, you follow the Avoidance strategy. When a temptation pops into your head, immediately revert to some sort of spiritual activity, i.e. Meditation or Prayer. This takes the Avoidance Strategy and gives it a beneficial twist. Two things may then happen. First, if the temptation is coming from outside yourself, then whatever the demon had hoped to accomplish will be avoided, and your action will provoke a favorable spiritual response, making it dangerous for him to tempt you again for fear that it will only make you pray or meditate harder, and the last thing Satan wants for you to do is pray and meditate on God's word.

Strategy #3 - Counting the Costs

Sometimes you don't have the will to practice avoidance and turning the tables. Often I find myself in the position of wanting to dwell on the sinful habit/thought and can't stop thinking about it. This leads inevitably to purposing to commit the action. When this happens you're in a tight spot. Few things at this point will turn you back. In this case, you might try Counting the Costs.

Tell yourself that you are going to do it, but that you want to try a hypothetical first (I tell myself that I'm going to do it to deflect myself from coming up with reasons to not do the cost/benefit analysis). Mentally do a cost/benefit analysis of the action. List all the benefits, and be honest. Then list all the costs, being honest. The goal here isn't to avoid the sin, and this is key. The goal of this excercise is to understand fully what it is going to cost. The decision to not follow through is simply a byproduct of the fact that sin always take you farther than you want to go, keeps you longer than you want to stay, and costs more than you want to pay.

In my personal experiences, I've found that once I've gone through the costs, I don't feel inclined to do said action as much. The key here is activating the conscious mind and dull the memory. Emotions will tend to overwhelm logical thought, but an active mind will push the body in the background giving you room to make decisions with the will instead of your flesh.


Strategy #4 - Living in the Present

This strategy works very well with Counting the Costs. You might think the two titles would indicate that they are antithetical and opposites, but its not true.

Too often we become overwhelmed by how hard something appears to be. A task, and in the specific context, refusing temptation, is always harder when viewed from the begining. We tend to not look at refusing a single temptation but try to look out and gauge how hard it would be to refuse all the temptations for the rest of our life. Of course, that's really hard, or seems to be when you're looking at it from now.

The trick here is to stop borrowing trouble from tomorrow and simply deal with the trouble that faces you right at this moment. Living in the Present means not becoming depressed at what has happened in the past (you've been forgiving those sins) or becoming proud in past accomplishements (Christ enabled you anyway and deserves the glory), nor does it mean becoming discouraged at what may happen in the future (God has that under control, it isn't your problem). Living in the Present means dealing with just what you need to deal with to get through the next 5 minutes.

A note: This strategy dosn't mean you should make plans for the future, or prepare taking into consideration the past. These are important parts of counting the costs, and being wise with resources. What it does mean is not dwelling on the past or future. Deal with the present.

Observations on the Enemy's Battle Strategy

Here is the problem. Sin is devastatingly expensive. But the costs are rarely presented up front. Basically, Sin has really good marketing and Satan has been at the game for a very long time. If you look at the costs and benefits of sin vs. sacrifice, sacrifice will beat out sin every time. But that analysis is rarely performed. In the middle of temptation, sin appeals very strongly to your emotions. It knows how to key your body up to make your emotions volatile. It uses this volatile emotional state to skew your perception of reality, making the prospect of sacrifice so difficult and so hard that it seems impossible.

Sin uses two basic emotions to get at you, Fear and Desire. Desire is familiar, it uses this to make its product look better, enlarging the pleasures to exaggerated proportions. But fear is the more dangerous. Sin uses fear to keep you from experimenting or trying something new. Fear tells you that it may not be worth the sacrifice to maintain purity. Fear says, "its hard", and this is true and lends credence to what comes next, Fear then tells you that, "the reward isn't worth it, and takes to long to get here". And that is where the lie is. Truth is, the reward is so great it isn't even worthy to be compared to what will come, and no wait is too long. But we can't see it because we are blinded by desire and fear.

Broader Strategies For Maintaining Freedom

Sin is always easiest to avoid if it unknown. In this, fear works for you, because is general, the human mind is most comfortable in the places it knows best. This means that the best way to avoid addiction is to never get involved with addicting substances or actions.

When you get caught up in an addiction, getting free means doing some work. When you fall into addiction, certain lies get embedded in your soul. The lies work themselves into all parts of your thinking. We call these lies strongholds. If you picture your soul as a country, then an addiction stands like an enemy’s castle inside your borders. Its hard to defend against his attacks because he attacks from within. The solution to the problem is to run him out of his castle. But this is only half the solution, because he might come back, and he might bring friends, and the ensuing battle you fight next will be much harder than the first. No, you have to run him and, then tear down his castle, and build one of your own to take its place. We call these new bases of strength, Towers of Truth. Towers of Truth are specific truths that you have studied, applied and setup to combat specific dangers in your life. They are a great asset and are vital parts of wisdom.

Broader strategies are preventative. The very basis and foundation of Christianity is the relationship a Christian has with his Father. Christ came to provide a way to relate to the Father and it is from that relationship that we gain all the reasons we have for obedience to God's wishes. We obey Him because we love Him. (we obey him because he first loved us) But relationships are dynamic things. Like a campfire they must be tended. God has provided four basic avenues for relating to us. Now, there are many derivations and variations on these themes, but these are the pillars and the basics and must be pursued. Without them, you will be weak, and your relationship with God will be anemic.

The first is His word. The memorization, meditation, study and reading of God's word is important because it is our best and clearest view into the mind and character of the Being we Worship. It is how we know what pleases Him. The second and equally important is prayer. Prayer has many forms, and should be constant. It is how we express what we want, and what pleases us and it is how we express our efforts to please Him. Fellowship with other believers serves several purposes. It binds us to God by giving us examples in miniature of God's character. It gives us a chance to demonstrate on earth the kinds of actions we would show to God if He were here. In many ways, the Body of Christ is the living representation of God today, and as such is the recipient of our efforts to please God because of our love for Him. (They shall know you by your love one for another, and we love because we were first loved.)

The last is the act of sharing our faith. Preaching the gospel should be a natural reaction to the fruits of our relationship with God, and by extension our relationship with other believers as representatives of God on earth. (Whatsoever you do unto the least of these my brethren, you do unto me). A vibrant Christian can no more hide his faith from those around him than a fire can be hid under a bushel. Because when you put things close to fire, they in turn catch flame and burn.
 
Tags: spirituality spiritual warfare christianity religion

Site News: Small Break in Photos

Published On: November 21, 2005  12:15, filed in Site Admin
I've got a tremendous amount of work to do in the next week. I've run out of photos ready to be posted, so there will be a short break of a few days before I'll be able to post photos again. I'll try to get them up over Thanksgiving weekend. 
Tags: site admin site admin

AJAX Bible Update: Now With Strongs Cross References

Published On: November 22, 2005  14:01, filed in Religion
I've updated the Ajax Bible. It now displays all the references where a Strongs number is used in the bible. 
Tags: ajax bible strongs religion

Bling! Bling! The Search Engine that Gives you Stuff

Published On: November 22, 2005  10:30, filed in Culture
I've updated the Ajax Bible. It now displays all the references where a Strongs number is used in the bible. 
Tags: search culture

Ajax Bible Bug Fix: Too Much Recursion

Published On: November 23, 2005  19:30, filed in Site Admin
My code was messy so I cleaned it up and found several errors, one of which was preventing a large number of passages from coming back. The "Too Much Recursion" error has been fixed. 
Tags: ajax bible site admin

Bricklayer Is a Perl Application Framework

Published On: November 23, 2005  01:58, filed in Technology
My code was messy so I cleaned it up and found several errors, one of which was preventing a large number of passages from coming back. The "Too Much Recursion" error has been fixed. 
Tags: perl coding family technology

Im Testing Some Stop Motion Animation Techniques

Published On: November 24, 2005  14:18, filed in Experiments
Its a short, 2 second test of stop motion animation using my Canon 10D and a common art figurine.

 
Tags: stop motion video experiments

Extrodinary Selfishness and Debasement of Life

Published On: November 29, 2005  12:09, filed in Society
From an article in the LA Times this little excerpt nearly bowled me over:
Sarah, 23, says it never occurred to her to use birth control, though she has been sexually active for six years. When she became pregnant this fall, Sarah, who works in real estate, was in the midst of planning her wedding. "I don't think my dress would have fit with a baby in there," she says.


I'm speechless. 
Tags: quotes abortion society

Another Ajax Bible Application

Published On: November 29, 2005  09:28, filed in Technology
From an article in the LA Times this little excerpt nearly bowled me over:
Sarah, 23, says it never occurred to her to use birth control, though she has been sexually active for six years. When she became pregnant this fall, Sarah, who works in real estate, was in the midst of planning her wedding. "I don't think my dress would have fit with a baby in there," she says.


I'm speechless. 
Tags: ajax bible technology

About Me

My name is Jason Wall. I live in Saint Louis, where I work for a large company doing web development. I photograph for fun and shoot weddings for profit. I write poetry when I feel like it, and post my opinions here on the blog. For more about me check out the About page.
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