Chapman Kids Blog

"In the world ye shall have tribulation: but be of good cheer; I have overcome the world." –John 16:33

Switching to the NASB

Day 5 of 100 (9.9 of 41 pounds) 24.1%
This morning, I finished my latest read through the New Testament. This last pass, one time through the whole Bible and two times more through the New Testament was with the ESV. The next pass will be through the New American Standard Bible (NASB) version. I am still getting a lot out of it and enjoying it more and more. The plan is to follow the normal pattern and read through the whole Bible followed by two additional reads through the New Testament. I am going to try to do the entire Bible again in less than a single year, but using a more structured approach. For now, the plan is to read four chapters every day in the Old Testament and then slow down to three chapters per day when I get to the New Testament.

Deer and weight loss

Day 4 of 100 (8.6 of 41 pounds) 21.0%
This deer stood outside my office window about 10 feet away from me on the other side of the glass door. He (It seems like a he–I might be wrong, but that looks to be the start of some horns between his eyes and his ears) happily ate grass while I moved around and snapped a few photos. We see a lot of deer in the yard again after somewhat of a hiatus in the winter when we only saw a few.

It is hard to believe I am a little over 20% of the way to my weight loss goal. I know this whole deal will slow down pretty dramatically after this first jump, but it is nice to see some progress at the start. The first 100 day goal is not the final end of the plan. The final end is an additional 15 to 20 pounds after that. At least that much, but I need to see how I feel before I decide when to stop.

100 day weight loss plan

Day 3 of 100 (7.5 of 41 pounds) 18.3%
A few days ago, I tied my old record for fatness. I am a pretty short guy (5′ 7″) who should not be weighing 231 pounds. But that is where I was three days ago. So, I popped a note to Jon, my old weight loss buddy and 1955 birth year partner and fired up a new weight/calories/steps graph for us. Then I started back in on eating more healthy and walking. I looked back to the last time I weighed that much and calculated that I lost 40 pounds in 100 days. At that time it was without consistent walking. I have decided to give myself a 100 day kick start to get myself under 190 lbs. To do that, I will have to lose approximately 2.9 pounds per week for about 14.3 weeks. I like these kinds of things and plan to keep track here. I got a good jump on it the first few days, but that will slow down pretty dramatically. For the record, here are the first three days:

  • Day 1 of 100 (4.5 of 41 pounds): 10.9%
  • Day 2 of 100 (6.8 of 41 pounds): 16.6%
  • Day 3 of 100 (7.5 of 41 pounds): 18.3%

Working from Arizona

This is the fig tree in Christian’s kitchen. He has been nourishing it faithfully for a long time and now has some figs to show for it. It has been a bit of a struggle because he has to take it to the lab so one of his friends there can take care of it whenever he travels. It is nice to be able to work remotely from Arizona in February. This is the first time I have really taken advantage of the opportunity, but I am really glad to be able to do it.

Lorena gets reading glasses

It amazing how good it felt when I got my first pair of reading glasses and did not have to struggle to read anymore. It is a pain to have to always be looking for your glasses, but it is a much bigger pain to not be able to read. And with Lorena, there is the added benefit of making a fashion statement.

Changes in the works


We love our house here in Centralia. It would be a difficult thing to give up. Competing with our love for our house is that the very reason we moved back out west was to be closer to family. Now, Kelly is on the verge of moving away, probably to Maryland and Christian is probably less than six months away from graduating and we have no idea where he might land. In the meantime, Lorena is only a few classes away from finishing her Associate degree at the community college. We are hopeful that within a year or so we will have a sense for what will be our next step. We expect that, like just about everything other big move, we will be where God wants us to be. Sometimes we could only see that from hindsight, but it seems clear that was the case virtually every time.

Beansorter: Bean drop gets better


This is Gene’s last past at the bean sorter. He has made huge progress, but there is still a lot to go. He was able to take a few, not so satisfying pictures of dropping beans, but that was due to the weakness of my program, not his work. He has plenty to do, but now the ball is really back in my court.

Diego Velazquez one more time

Lorena is taking an Art Appreciation class online at Clackamas Community College this spring. It was a similar class Kelly and Christian took when they were at Wake Tech Community College in Raleigh that turned our family into big art museum fans. Long before that, we had read a book in our homeschool that turned us into Diego Velazquez fans.

So, when Lorena and Kelly were at the National Gallery in London, they were very excited to see their first real live painting by Velazquez. Now, Lorena is going to take a couple of the pictures she took of those paintings in a report in her Art Appreciation class.

More and more snow


It continues to snow hard here at the house. We have been stuck here since Friday and do not expect to get back to normal until at least Wednesday. Fortunately, we have everything we need to eat and keep warm and the electricity and internet have not failed (yet), so we can go along in a semi-normal mode of operation. I am able to work here like nothing happened. It is certainly beautiful.

Great snow of 2/2019

We had an amazing beautiful snow starting this afternoon. Right now there is about six inches on the ground and it is still coming down. Lorena took this picture from the upstairs window looking out at the entry. It is really beautiful. We really hope the electricity stays on. Our understanding is that more snow will fall in this storm than normal falls in Western Washington for the whole year. It is certainly beautiful at night, but we can hardly wait to see how it looks during the day. In the mean time we have started a fire in the wood stove and are just enjoying the view.

Grandma Conchita: 73

It is Conchita’s 73rd birthday. She is Lorena’s mom and my mother-in-law. As I have said previously in this blog, she is the best mother-in-law in all history. She takes my side on virtually everything. She misses Grandpa Lauro a lot, but she is doing very well. We have plans to visit her very soon.

Centralia is beautiful

Lorena took this picture a couple of days ago after a fairly light snow. Every time I think about selling the place we have a new event that makes me thing we would be crazy to leave. It is GORGEOUS up here where we live. We have our fireplace going now–still learning how to use the thing properly and big plans for the house (still). We do not know what will happen in the future, but we do know the kids will not be in Washington or even anywhere close. We do know that we are going to have to make another move or even several more moves before this is all over. Maybe the move will be just to down-size, but probably the move will be to get closer to family, whether that be Lorena’s family in Mexico or Kelly and Christian up here in the US.

Apathy and malaise in the face of ease

We are now living a life of relative ease. For some reason that makes me uneasy. I have been talking to Kelly about this. It is not that we are depressed or anything, but just not so motivated to do much. Kelly is waiting to start a big new chapter in her life and, in a way, Lorena, Christian, and I are all in that same state. I am close to retirement with lots of interesting opportunities to do side stuff, but not enough to turn that into a real job yet. Christian is a few months away from Graduation as is Lorena. There are lots of things on which we can work, but it is hard to find the motivation. In the mean time, all of us (maybe not Christian) live in nice situations. I think I am going to try to push myself off center and start being motivated again. We will see how that goes.

Maintaining a wood stove fire on a snowy day

It is snowing lightly again here in Centralia and it is very cold (for this part of the world) so I am working on my wood stove fire maintenance skills. I am way past the “getting the fire started stage” and on to the more difficult skill of maximizing warmth while maximizing burn time and minimizing wood consumption.

Lorena and I have so much joy with our wood stove right now, we are considering a wood burning fireplace rather than a gas one. It smells good, it is easy to do once one gets the hang of it and it really is better once you get the hang of it. I cannot believe I am actually saying this, but we like it a LOT!

Seattle Museum of Art

Lorena drove up to Seattle on Friday so she and Kelly could go to the Seattle Museum of Art on Saturday to complete an assignment for her Art Appreciation class at Clackamas Community College. They had a super time. The museum is really not the same level of quality or experience as the NC Museum of Art in Raleigh nor the top three art museums in Dallas, but they felt it really was not too bad. What is especially great about this is that our family got started going to art museums in general when Kelly and Christian had to take a required visit to the North Carolina Museum of Art for their Art Appreciation class at Wake Technical Community College. It seemed like a chore before we went, but every since, we have been big, big fans of art museums and go to them whenever we get the chance.

Lorena’s next visit assignment is to go to a gallery rather than a museum.

Snow day in Centralia

The picture does not really do it justice, but it is a beautiful, snowy day in Centralia. The snow was not supposed to start until tomorrow, but right now it is actually coming down pretty hard. The temperature is five or so degrees above freezing so this is definitely not going to stick. I just looked at the forecast and now it says it should continue snowing through the night, but not get much colder the 33 degrees. That is a fine thing and means we will get the beauty of the snow, but not the hassle. This is the perfect weather for programming!

Kiwi getting older

Lorena took Kiwi down to PetSmart to get her shots and to get groomed. We have been very worried about her. Her fur was getting matted, did not groom herself, and was very lethargic. We thought she was at the end. After getting her shots, she is a new “person.” She cleans herself, has more energy, and has been playing and purring a lot more. She never quit purring but she did it with a lot let less energy. We think the shots she got defeated some kind of condition or bug she might have had. We are truly glad she is feeling better. We don’t like to think about not having her.

RealSense camera up and running

I started with a new project this week. I am helping a buddy on a three dimensional tracking, measuring, guidance problem. We each bought a RealSense 2d/3d camera. The bought a refurbished ThinkPad laptop with a USB 3.0 port with this project in mind. The USB 3.0 port provides for faster throughput of image data. It was really easy to get the thing up an running. It will be quite a bit more work to control the camera programmatically.

New office setup

With the office downstairs painted, I decided to rearrange the furniture so I could work a little more efficiently. The big screen on the right is connected to my main computer which only runs Linux. The screen on the left is connected to a computer I bought for $241 that runs both Linux Mint 19.1 and Windows 10. The Linux part is for the bean project and another project that uses a RealSense 3d imager. The Windows allows me to build programs without having to use a virtual machine to run Windows on my main Linux box. So far I like it really well. I am sure I will have to make some adjustments in the future, but it is a lot better than my previous, single computer setup.

First time with the basement wood stove

Now that the downstairs office is painted and we have our new lighting installed, we decided we would clean out the area around the wood stove and fire it up. I figured there was about a fifty percent chance we would fill the room with smoke and have to use the fire extinguisher to put out the fire, but it all worked perfectly. We plan to start using the wood stove more because it really heats up the whole room. It surely changes the atmosphere of the room to have a fire burning there.

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