Our Wii has been a source of endless fun for our family — and for our church community, as evidenced by the Wii-nited (Wii+United=Woohoo!) Mario Kart party we had a couple weeks ago.  The graphic is below:

In addition to the fun of Cooking Mama and the Wii Fit (our daughter is surprisingly agile with the ski jump event), now we can add great customer service to our list of reasons why we love our Wii!

We noticed some random pixelation on various games, but didn’t think much of it until a friend mentioned it on theirs as well.  I looked it up on the Wii website and found out that it could be repaired free of charge under the warranty — 15 months instead of just 12.  They said it could take up to 16 business days to repair, but we got ours back in five days!  It looks great… and I’m back on the Mario Kart racetrack!

I just found out Dallas Willard will be in SD from October 9-11, 2008 delivering a series of lectures and Bible studies on spiritual formation. [h/t: the Ecclesia Collective]

Dr. Willard’s work has been profoundly influential for me.  I’m really hoping we can bring members from our church community to hear him speak during this Spiritual Renewal Conference.  So much of what he writes about in The Great Omission, Renovation of the Heart and The Divine Conspiracy describe the kind of heart we want to build in our community.  Plus, it’s free!

I knew it was getting bad last week when the coach of Appalachian State University, who upset U of M in last year’s opening shocker, was talking smack about the Wolverines — and they weren’t even playing them this season.  Check out this quote from the App State coach after losing to LSU last weekend:

“They (LSU) are so athletic. It just wore on us,” Appalachian State coach Jerry Moore said. “They didn’t play like Michigan. They played like LSU.”

Ouch.

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And for free!

Indie heroes, +/- (with their clever domain hack website address), have a new album coming out soon.  +/- make good, honest indie rock (which is a breath of fresh air in today’s hypercommercialized, schock-rock, screamy/weepy scene).  You can listen to (and download!) their new song, Snowblind over at Stereogum.

Perhaps signaling a new musical direction, Kanye West is streaming his new song, Love Lockdown over at his blog.  Can’t say I’m the biggest hip hop fan (my tastes tend to be kind of stuck in the 90s… A Tribe Called Quest, De La Soul, Guru, etc… which probably explains why I like The Cool Kids so much), but I really like Kanye’s work.

And, just for good measure, you can find a new Deerhoof track, Offend Maggie, at My Old Kentucky Blog.  As always, expect the eclectic from Deerhoof.  After listening to it, I kind of feel like riverdancing.  Go figure.

It’s hard to believe it’s been seven years since September 11, 2001.  Since then, we’ve had a child who has grown into a full-fledged kindergartner, and our family has moved across the country; 3,000 miles and what seems like a lifetime away.

Today, though, I am struck by how raw the memories of 9/11 and the weeks that followed still remain.  It’s strange: I feel foolish even saying that out loud or typing it onto this page because, unlike so many in our community in northern Jersey, I did not lose any loved ones on that day. And, yet, we were all there, somehow.

In the madness of that day, while frantically searching for my brother-in-law who was in the city at the time, we saw the wreckage of the towers.  It was like a smoldering monster, dark and seething.  Later that week, I remember walking through the city and seeing poster after poster of the disappeared — endless rows of people smiling, holding kittens, posing in front of landmarks, arm around a friend — strangely serene in the midst of people wandering in a daze, desperately trying to find loved ones or, at least, some information.

I remember the feeling of bracing myself over and over: Would there be another attack?  Were the reports that there could be survivors trapped in “pockets” in the rubble true? If so, would they be rescued in time and could I help?  How would I communicate trust in God in ways that didn’t blindly ignore the overwhelming reality of our feelings or reduce that tragic day to some pithy sermon illustration?

While I’m sure there are Big Truths to be learned from that day, what speaks to me are always the stories of particular people.  Rich Lee has posted the eulogy he read for his friend Andy Kim, who was going to be the best man in a friend’s wedding later that week, lost on 9/11.  NPR has a moving story about the mother of a flight attendant who died that day on United 93Eugene Cho has asked people to share their own 9/11 stories at his blog.