Friday, October 31, 2014

Annie Edison

So this week my community reference is less of a reference to a specific instance and more of a reference to a whole character. This character is Annie Edison.


Annie Edison is a character who views school and grades as the most important thing. She sets a really high bar for herself academically and in high school it led to a brief pill addiction. All that being said I am going to talk about academic pressures that youth today face.

For me going through middle and high school, academics were the farthest thing from my mind. I was happy with a solid B and I didn't really worry about it that much. Looking back I regret not applying myself more but hindsight is 20/20.

However, when it comes to the average teen there is a lot of stress and pressure that comes along with academics.

In the article posted below it stated that academic pressure does not start in college. It is very prevalent in the younger ages.

http://www.pamf.org/teen/life/stress/academicpressure.html

There are internal and external effects to the student when it comes to academics and it can have very real negative effects.

The article goes on to say that it important for a student to have a strong support network to fall back onto to stay upbeat.

I think, as leaders, this is where we can come in. Although trying to juggle a relationship with Christ, family, school, and all the other things, having a strong leadership support team that can bring biblically solutions and encouragement is vital to helping students through these tough teen years and preventing them form gaining a pill addiction.

God Bless,

Blake Anthony

Saturday, October 25, 2014

Greendale Human Being


This is the Greendale Human Being. It is the official mascot for all Greendale's sports teams.

This blog is centered around how society has made sports into the thing that the "popular" people do. If a guy isn't athletic he isn't a "real man" and if a girl isn't athletic she is seen quite differently. I was reading a post about this (http://menscenter.org/counseling-therapy/sports-culture-masculinity/) and it talked about how sports have changed teens views on what it means to be accepted and strong.

As an unathletic person myself, I can say that there was a time when I was quite ashamed to be a part of the all the choirs and the school musicals because it thought it made me less cool to the jocks and I simply didn't want to be associated with it.

I think that this is am increasingly common thought process among young teens. This is really unfortunate because it is completely untrue.

God has given each individual a particular set of skills (Just like Liam Neeson!!!) and he has created us individually to be the person he wants us to be.

We can't be held back with societies ideas of what is cool or even productive to do. We need to see ourselves as a wonderfully made human being with gifts and talents that can be used to bring glory to God.

Lets all be Liam Neeson's in our own rights!!

God Bless,

Blake Anthony

Saturday, October 18, 2014

A leprechaun took our clothes

In an episode of Community Abed walks in on Jeff and Britta just after sex and they try and convince him that a leprechaun took their clothes.



So today I will be talking about sex. I was reading a really interesting article from relevant magazine about sex which kind of sparked my interest. http://www.relevantmagazine.com/life/relationships/christians-are-not-called-have-amazing-sex

I truly believe that the church is too scared to talk about what it means to have a healthy biblical sexual relationship. The articles above touches on that a little because what the church does talk about can give a very skewed idea about sex.

I think that the church takes hollywoods ideas of sex and simply stamps the no premarital sex rule onto it. Its not fair for young Christians because it begins to seem like a rule that the church is just trying to make us follow.

We are told that if we wait that sex within arraign will be amazing!!! Like the article says though we could possibly marry someone that we are sexually incompatible with.

So I propose that the church teaches why sex is so important within marriage, but also that marriage isn't about sex because it really could end up not being the greatest sexual relationships.

Saturday, October 11, 2014

I don't want to be your father.

From the title it is pretty obvious what I am talking about, which would be family pressure and issues, but that won't stop the reference!!

I want to talk specifically about the issue part of the topic. I wanted to talk about the issues because it something that is very personal to me.

Divorce is a very common issue these days, as can be seen according these divorce statistics: http://www.divorcestatistics.org

Now my parents are still together, but the issue that is personal to me is the fact that their relationship has never been a great one. There is constant tension and fighting and it has definitely taken a toll on myself and my siblings.

My relationship with my father is almost non-existent, unlike Abeds father mine would like to have a relationship with me but he is not very good at connecting on a personal level.

These types of things are not uncommon among the youths of today and it is something that can stir up emotions and students can turn their anger towards their parents and even towards God.

We need to start to take students who are struggling with these issues under our wing and show them that although the situation at home may seem dire, there is always hope in Christ for the students personally and there is always hope for some form of restoration in the issues that are being faced.

We can not let students take this pain all by themselves because no matter what pain is happening no one has to go through it alone.

God Bless,

Blake Anthony

Saturday, October 4, 2014

I am Hilda, I live in the village.

This blog post I will be talking about video games!!!


In this episode of Community, the study group must play an 8-bit video-game to help Pierce Hawthorne gain his inheritance. That was simply a synopsis of the episode and has very little to do with what I am talking about, but it should show you that this show is all kinds of awesome and you should watch it...

I was reading an article about virtual reality, which is right here: http://www.theverge.com/a/virtual-reality, and it got me thinking about what it means for gaming and what kind of affect it will have on this upcoming generation.

Video games have always been a part of culture ever since I was born. I have never been a huge video game person but I have always been intrigued at the exponential growth in technology and consumerism.

Video games, along with television and movies, have always been a form of escapism. Escapism is some form of distraction away from daily life and reality. Television and movies have always been a shorter form of this, with the exceptions of binge-watching or a Peter Jackson film. Video-games on the other hand tend to take up a larger amount of time, taking up a larger amount of reality.

I have no problem with video games. They can be fun, recreational and even educational tool. The problem I see, is that with this rise of virtual reality I think people will become addicted to the idea of being able to escape this reality for long periods of time. It may even escalate into an inception situation where people can't determine what is virtual and what is real.

This is obviously a hypothesis made with no scientific data to back it up, but I think the question we need to ask ourselves is why would someone prefer a virtual reality over what is real and tangible?

Is reality that bad that someone would want to completely escape it? For some people it is and I see this as a huge problem.

Whatever issues a person might be having might cause them to think that virtual reality is a lot easier to deal with. We need to awaken people to the real and tangible love of Christ and the beauty of the reality that God has created so that they don't have to be fulfilled with some some one's and zero's.

Just a thought.

God Bless,

Blake Anthony