Thursday, June 6, 2013

Student Solutions: Shopping

Since becoming a student, I have realized that money is TIGHT. It's hard! It's tough! And I don't get to have the luxuries I used to have. One of these luxuries is shopping.

Oh, how I have missed it.

I won't lie, I still splurge from time to time, in fact, I splurge frequently! But how do I prevent myself from going overboard? Avoiding the dip into money for tuition and books?

The thing that has helped me probably most is Pinterest. When I first discovered Pinterest, I didn't understand why people liked it so much. Then I stopped having money to buy clothes that I wanted or other things I wanted to decorate my room or desk. And I finally understood Pinterest's purpose for me. It honestly stops me from spending my money. If I really like something, I will PUT DOWN THE CREDIT CARD and pin instead. It's amazing. DO IT!


Someone else described Pinterest in this way:
In the meantime, I’ve taken up — what I can only refer to as my new hobby — pinning. What’s pinning? Well, it’s not blogging, and it’s not quite social networking. It’s actually kind of just a way of “liking” things and “collecting” them the way that the Little Mermaid (Ariel) did in her bedroom (that part where she sings ‘I want more’).
Oh. That is real my friends. And I constantly scour through Pinterest looking for the more. I can't stop!

The thing I love most is that I can pin from any website! If I find something that I want to buy outside of Pinterest (for example: Withings Scale, approximately $160) I simply pin it to a board to buy later, when I'm not in school anymore.

The other thing I have done is created a budget, but more on that another time.

Crush that shopping craving with pins. Follow me on Pinterest here, and see what I'm talking about.

How do you hold off on spending all of your money on a pair of shoes?


Wednesday, May 1, 2013

A few little changes...

I have decided to make a change to my blog! 

As you can see, my URL is now jaybeesbucket.blogspot.ca

When I finished my 1001 days were up in November of last year, I felt like my blog was losing purpose, as I no longer had any goals to post about. While there are about 50 posts I never wrote about my 101 list, I knew that there were a lot more goals coming to the surface for my future. I'm starting to create a bucket list! 



It's mostly, at this point, taking the goals from my first list that I didn't get to complete and putting it into a lifelong list rather than limiting myself to a mere 1001 days. 

I also liked the "bucket" phrase as I tend to throw a bunch of miscellaneous other things on this blog that are completely unrelated to any list. (See Funny Fridays...) The new name also works for just a bucket full of random, but awesome things. Haha. Hopefully, you think they're awesome too. 

In honor of this change, I have changed my URL and revamped my layout. There will be more changes to come as I'm having a hard time with some of my little gadgets now that I have changed my link. Frustrating does not even begin to describe...

Stay tuned for more posts! School is out for the summer! Yay!


Sunday, April 21, 2013

Faith in all things; Including science

I wrote this for an elective course in college. It is a philosophy course, disguised as a history course. Hahaha. However, the first few weeks of the class we talked about evolution incessantly. Our professor asked us what stuck out about the course, so I let him know.

This was the result of that assignment.

Small disclaimer: This is merely my own speculation and should be reflected upon as such. 

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There was a time that I felt extremely conflicted when presented with the idea of evolution. It seemed from a young age, that I feared facing this internal conflict for my entire life. It was logical to me that evolution could be the explanation of how the earth came to be. However, the conflict came from my own heart and my faith, which told me that God created the earth in His plan for us. Science and history classes taught me that the globe itself formed from some miraculous coincidence. Jared Diamond (1997) is one of the many that propose that we, as humans, emerged from apes and chimps. How could God and those around me expect me to hold true to the feelings of my heart while still listening to the logic in my head? It seemed that the two ideas were incessantly at war with one another.

I once had a discussion with an individual about my confusion on the topic. He suggested that perhaps evolution was simply the explanation of how the earth was created, but that God was why it happened. Perhaps the 7 days that are portrayed in our scriptures were only creative periods, as the measurement of time was not invented by God, but by humans. Perhaps, what was written in many religious texts were tailor made for the people of that time. Could it be that the writers of these creation myths were inspired in this way, for the purpose of the people who would hear it first, so that they could receive it in their hearts and understand it in their minds?

The suggestion was shocking and was an idea that I found to be perplexing. I had never thought that maybe, faith and science could peacefully coexist. I then read in a religious text, “[God] will tell you in your mind and in your heart.” (Doctrine & Covenants 8:2) This passage brought peace to the war that I found myself in on a regular basis.

With this thought of congruity in mind, it would be absolutely illogical to me that God created human beings in the blink of an eye. It would also be illogical to me to think that the world generated itself and all of its inhabitants by opportune happenstance.

Something that I have struggled with since adopting this perspective is how other people of faith do not share this idea of balance between reason and faith. It is confounding to me that individuals can rely solely on faith or solely on reason. While I see the appeal to a strictly science diet, there are still things that have yet to be explained. There are still miracles today, because they are inexplicable to us, even after our vast scientific discoveries that have transpired over the past thousand years.

Nonetheless, I see the appeal in a strictly faith diet, but some of the once inexplicable happenstances have been explained through experimentation and scientific evidence. This evidence does not make your faith or beliefs in a deity any less real. Faith’s purpose is to bridge the gap between these occurrences that we cannot explain and that our limited, human minds cannot comprehend. Faith can be used to help us come to appreciate the sophistication of the evolution theory. The evolution theory can help us appreciate the complexity of the workings of God.

I have realized through my participation in this class, that while I do identify as a devout Christian, I have begun to consider that the theory of evolution may be a possible explanation as to how the earth came to fruition.



What are your thoughts?


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