Friday, May 05, 2006

Breakin' Out

I know...It's crazy. I'm writing again well before the deadline. But sometimes you just got to type. <>I just can't believe the nerve some Webmaster have. I mean, are there really that many idiots that like to find a page full of old search engine results pretending to be fresh and valuable content??? I think that's the biggest challenge with the internet today. All the dorks that just cram it full of trash. Page after page of useless garbage and they make dynamic garbage too! They'll serve up a freshly made page, just for you, of useless information. The next best thing is the same content served out to thousands of websites as a 'service' to the end user. < /rant > So, it's a great day. I get to spend some time with my children as my wife is out of town. I can't even begin to describe how great they are. I just feel lucky that I was blessed with them. It is a constant battle to stay focused on the most important things in life. Some what related to that...I was listening to Michael Savage on the radio as I was waiting for my daughter to finish soccer practice yesterday, and he was just rambling about a book he read when he was 18. And he paraphrased the author about life and how those that take casually what everyone else focuses on constantly do better or something like that. It started me thinking about how stressing out about things never seems to make them better. Not to say that not taking care of business is a solution, but rather taking care of business and not stressing about it is way more productive. I'm not going to look it up right now by Christ said that you can't change the color of your hair by worrying about it. I've always took that to mean that worry and stress don't effect change, rather action and faith (and I suppose that's redundant being that faith is belief mixed with action) combined bring about results. Yet, even knowing that, I still find my self constantly fighting against worry and stress. Funny how that works. Everything seems to naturally flow to decay without the constant tending to maintenance.