My two favorite cartoons when I was growing up were the Flintstones and the Jetsons. The Flintstones used dinosaur powered machines, wrote by chiseling on tablets of stone, and rode in cars propelled by their feet. While the Jetsons had robot maids, video phones, and flying cars. I loved the way the Flintstones applied pre-historic life to modern living, and the Jetsons were simply light years ahead of the times. Real life in every age seems to be lived between the Flintstones and the Jetsons, where we adapt what has already been to present living while looking forward toward the future.
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There are lots of things about me that I would like to improve, but I’m not smart enough to say for sure that if I could change something about me what else would be changed as a result. it would be better or worse. This is the wisdom behind the Chinese proverb about the butterfly effect. I am far from perfect, but I do have a burning desire to be better. This has been a constant source of motivation for me since my teens. Life is lived on the sharp point of contentment without falling off to the left or the right from being distracted, sedated, or seduced by the status quo.
(Isaiah 45:8-10; Romans 12:1-2; Philippians 3:12-14; 1 Peter 5:6-11)
