Tuesday, March 1, 2011

Please visit Steve Mcvey

I have found many writers who have influenced my faith in a possitve way.

I enjoy reading Brian Mclaren, Myles Munroe, Philip Yancey, John Maxwell.

One person who is not as well known as these other gentlemen is Steve Mcvey and yet his writing has had a profound influence on my life. I have added a link to his blog.


Steve Mcvey
 His views are not always going to be exactly what you hear from most pulpits. He majors on grace!
Yet somehow I think that Jesus majored on grace. I think grace is what seperates followers of Jesus from every other faith in the world. And, sadly I think that many christians display very little grace towards people who are not like them and people from other faiths.

If I am not mistaken this was the cause of many conflicts between Jesus and the religious establishment of his day. In fact, you could say that this was the reason why they crucified him.


I remember being stuck by the fact of Gods' grace towards me when reading these words from Colossians 1

 21 Once you were alienated from God and were enemies in your minds because of] your evil behavior. 22 But now he has reconciled you by Christ’s physical body through death to present you holy in his sight, without blemish and free from accusation

To think that my emnity with God was always just in my mind. His attitude towards me was always LOVE and always GRACE, and because of this grace he calls me holy and without blemish, free from accusation.


Life Changing Book!

Wow, wow, wow. I live my life in self accusation. Satan is continually accusing me and reminding me of my faults and weaknesses and yet God is not. God is perfect - he could hold me accountable for so much and yet 2000 years before I was even born he had sorted out every failure and weakness of mine so that I could come into fellowship with him by Grace.

It is only when I accept this grace and live in it that I am able to ignore the accusations of my past failures and weaknesses. This gives me freedom to have victory over new temptations and to live a better life. To know God's grace allows us to Know God.

One day in a Christian bookstore I came across a book called Grace Walk. It was on special and I bought it. When I read it I was reminded time and again of the Grace that I had experienced when reading Colossians 1.
 Please make a visit to Steve Mcveys blog.
The more you do it the more you will be blessed and convinced of the grace of God.

As an example here is one of his posts.

God Is For You!

God is for me.” Can you make that statement with a deep sense of certainty? He is, you know. When things are going the way you want, God is for you. When life seems to be falling apart, God is for you. When the Philistines chased David down in Gath, he wrote, “This I know, that God is for me” (Psalm 56:9). What a time to make a declaration like that!

Many of us have found ourselves in a place similar to David’s situation at times. Life is closing in . . . the enemy seems to have us cornered and there appears to be no way out. Pleasant circumstances disappear before our eyes and the world turns dark.

At times like that, we may be tempted to cry out, “Why is God against me?” Not David. He assured himself with the truth, “God is for me.” He didn’t say, “This I feel, that God is for me.” There are many times in life that we don’t feel like God is for us. No, he said, “This I know, that God is for me.

Will you affirm this truth in your own life? God really is for you. Nothing can ever change His mind or heart toward you. If you are His child, His lovingkindness toward you will last forever. (Read Psalm 136 sometime!)

Circumstances may be suffocating you at times, but God is for you! Negative feelings may seem to be strangling you, but God is for you! Life may not make sense at a given moment, but God is for you! Trust Him. When you feel like you’re drowning in an ocean of problems, cling to your Heavenly Father. He will prove Himself strong in your life by assuring you of His love.

Your circumstances may or may not turn out like you want, but He will hold you in His loving and sovereign arms and gently whisper His love to you again and again. Sit in quietness for a moment and listen to his loving voice assure you of that fact until, like the Psalmist, you may say, “This is know, God is for me!”

Monday, February 28, 2011

Its all up in the air. - An Open Letter to the PDGA

I am a huge fan of disc golf. I play disc golf. I dream disc golf.

I am frustrated.
What a game!

I am frustrated by a lack of information and news. I live in South Africa and disc golf is never in the news and so I rely on the web to keep me up to date with the news. The PDGA does a good job of keeping track of events schedules, world rankings and tournament results, but where is the soul, passion and personality in that?
Ball golf is a billion dollar industry. Players earn millions in endorsements and advertising. Prize money is enormous and every day ball golf is in the papers and on television. The reason for the money is because ball golf is news friendly. It is a sport that plays out like a soap opera.

Tiger the man who rose from nowhere.
Tiger against the odds.
Is Tiger the greatest?
A Tiger in my bed.
Can Tiger recover?
Will Phil make no1?

It is in the news. Sure some of it is cheap tabloid fare, but people read it and love it. Disc golf does not have to do the whole who-is-sleeping-with-who story, but there are still countless untold stories out there.

Let me illustrate this by sharing some of the things that I would like to know.

Is the champ still playing this year?
Is Doss gatting married?
Fire or ice - Locastro or Feldberg?
Can Avery rule this year?
Can a part timer be no1 again?
What is the future of David Wiggins JR?
Which is the grand slam?
When will Japan, Europe and U.S. opens be big every year?
Who is swopping sponsors and why?
Will Europe ever dominate? Why? Why not?
How good are the young guns?
Schusterick or Lizzotte? Or even oscar stenfeldt ?
Tell us who you think will win in 2020?
What if Stanhope went full time?
Is Paige Pierce going full time?
Dave and Melody?
Personality clashes?
Is Philo going to make the big time?
Will we see 1100 or even 1200 rating?
Eric McCabe, can he do it again?
Val & Nate - Innova & Discraft?
Is latitude 64 the next big thing?
Is Aussie open the next major?

I think you get the picture. Stats and facts are the skeleton of what builds fans, but this continual discussion and insight into the world of disc golf. The personalities, predictions, pains and struggles, life on the road. This is what I want to know. I could search the web all day - but why should I have to, I am your future customer. I am the investor in your business. you should be bringing this to me.

I am not trying to be overly critical, but i want to see our sport grow. I would love to see scores of full time pros playing in glamour tournaments with millions watching every throw and millions of young fans aspiring to be the next Climo.

Please PDGA let's get our sport on the front pages. If it takes personalities and drama to do it, well then lets do it.

Swinburne - Disc Golf & Ultimate

Wow what a day. It was fun, the location beautiful, the people awesome, the ultimate punishing and exhilirating, the disc golf rewarding, the Heritage kids amazing, the sunburn ouch.

We have now got our own disc golf basket. The difference between having a basket or just a target is not huge. I had a few bounce off the basket and two go through the chains and while that is frustrating, the sweet sound of Ching is all the reward you could want.

My addiction to disc golf just grows and grows. and I never want to be cured.

Imagine playing the sport that you love in this environment.

What more could you want for a great day?

Review of Drakes flames

Matt Drake is one funny man. Some of you who know that I am a strong Christian will be wondering how I can say that. Even Matt himself describes his blog as "Crassly opinionated Game reviews (and occasional bathroom humor)"

However, if you take the time to read Matts' reviews you will find a committed family man who appreciates his wife and makes a lot of effort to be a good father.


If you like board games or even just to read about board games then Drakes Flames is for you.
It was a very pleasant surprize for me to read that my favourite reviewer had done a review of my favourite sport.

This is Matt's review of Disc Golf

My kids are teenagers. For those of you not familiar with this malady, one of the main side effects of being a teenager is a secure knowledge that your parents are idiots. So are most adults, with the exception of A) extremely popular musicians, B) any extraordinarily attractive member of the opposite sex (as long as they don't know your parents), and C) the homeless guy who tells stories about Vietnam and carries a knife he made out of a discarded hubcap. This condition leads to a series of unpleasant symptoms, including unpleasant sneers, casual disrespect, and treating your parents and any other authority figures with the contempt other people reserve for microbial fungus.

So when I try to think of things to do with my kids, it's a challenge. This weekend, I tried to think of something we could do outside, something active that might tire them out so that they would fall asleep early and not bother me while I watched late-night TV. It was a beautiful weekend, and I wanted to go to the park, but my kids don't want to go to the park unless either Justin Bieber or Megan Fox is there (and that's specific, depending on the kid - my son would like to drop-kick Justin Bieber, and my daughter thinks Megan Fox is slutty and does not understand that this is precisely why my son and I like Megan Fox). Thinking about the park reminded me of my halcyon college days, when we would play Frisbee golf, and then I thought that it would be awesome to share this experience with my kids.

Of course, I would have to edit it from how we did it in college. See, we just picked up a case of beer and a couple Frisbees and went down to the park. We did our level best to hide our consumption of alcohol, so we were never asked to leave, but we also didn't have a ton of manual dexterity. Plus our Frisbees were cheap, lopsided pieces of crap, so between the piss-poor tools and the fact that we were piss drunk, we kind of sucked at it. But it was a fun way to blow a day.

For my Frisbee golf experience, I just went to Target and bought a bunch of Frisbees. They were three bucks each, so we could afford to knock them around a little, and just to recreate the fun times from my youth, I also managed to buy lopsided, crappy Frisbees. Then I took my kids out to the local park, and we threw our Frisbees at trees in a sort of course we made up as we went along.

This was fun, but unfortunately, I was playing with teenagers. They quickly grew bored, which lead in short order to grumbled complaints and generally sullen dispositions. It didn't help that our Frisbees would not fly further than twenty feet before crashing to the ground, or that my daughter could not get her Frisbee to fly at all, mostly because her interpretation of a Frisbee toss looks more like a blind man chucking a shot put at the Special Olympics. We played three matches, and then decided to head back home. Gorgeous day or not, we were just not feeling it.

But I am one persistent bastard, able to work past moody teens and shoddy construction alike. I went online and found that my city has a very large disc golf course. I determined that we would take our three-dollar Frisbees to the park, and I would show my kids how much fun could be had when we played on an actual course.

I distinctly remember my Frisbee golf outings being very casual affairs. We laughed, we threw Frisbees, we became inebriated, and we never kept score. If we had crappy Frisbees, then so be it, because the point of the outing was to enjoy a nice day with some friends. My memory did me a massive disservice.

It turns out that disc golf (it's called that now, because nobody uses Frisbees any more) is quite a bit more serious than I remember. Now people have gym bags full of discs in different sizes and weights. You may have to throw your disc (not a Frisbee) hundreds of yards to get from the start to the finish. But the most shocking thing of all - now this game has rules.

Of course, this is all information we found out after I started playing Frisbee golf in public with my teenage kids. We walked right through the middle of the range, unaware that people were waiting to throw their flying guillotines right where we were strolling. We carried our crappy Frisbees and wandered around, looking casually around for a nice spot to start throwing. To draw an analogy, this was like wandering onto a professional golf course with a Wiffle ball and a tire iron, standing in the middle of the putting green and teeing off backwards at the ninth hole.

It did not take us long to figure out how horribly wrong we had gone. A group of guys asked us very politely to get out of the way as we tromped up the hill toward the launching point. They didn't have to be polite. I doubt I would have been. We watched them throw their cybernetically enhanced discs the length of two football fields. They took running starts and everything, then picked up their bags full of disc golf materials and walked off.

I told my kids that by God, we had come this far, we were playing at least one hole. So we bravely chucked our wobbly plastic pool toys down the hill, and as we did, another group of disc golfers came up behind us. My daughter was nearing a complete nervous breakdown at the sheer embarrassment of being wrong in public (this is a leading cause of early mental illness in teenagers, second only to the horrifying embarrassment of showing up at school in a blouse that doesn't match your shoes). But we bravely soldiered on, and happily, the group waiting behind us was just as cool as the first guys about letting us finish (though I am fairly certain they were laughing at us).

We finally managed to throw our discs into the basket that indicated we had finished the first hole. I then immediately gave in to the increasingly loud protestations coming from my progeny, and we headed home. But on the way out, some incredibly friendly disc golfers handed us some well-used discs and told us where we could go to buy some more. We chatted for a few minutes, and I learned a lot more about the game from them.

First, it seems there is a whole organization devoted to the sport of disc golf. It's not just drunk co-eds with Frisbees any more. The Professional Disc Golf Association (PDGA) is kind of a big deal, even if I have an incredibly difficult time taking it the least bit seriously. I mean, this was a game that we played drunk, for crying out loud. And now there are people who do it for a living!

Second, there are rules. Lots of them. There are rules about marking your discs, about playing with cracked discs, and about using mini markers (I still don't get that one). The official rules include stuff about 'marking the lie' or 'provisional throws' or 'tee pads'. That last one makes me giggle a little. Tee pads. Heh.

And the thing that really amazed me was the sheer quantity of stuff these guys were carrying. I thought we were weighed down because we had a water bottle. These cats have bags full of discs, in different colors and weights. There are drivers and putters and mid-range discs. Not one of these discs resembled our crappy plastic beach toys, either.

My experiment in disc golf has made me want to play a lot more. It's free, it's good exercise, and it's actually really cool to see how far you can throw one of these things. No matter the weather, you can go out and have a good time. It's obviously a different game if you're playing in the rain, but I think it would be a hoot anyway. In fact, I'm planning on heading out and buying some discs.

Assuming, of course, I can get either of my kids back to the park. I'm pretty sure my daughter would stab me in my sleep to get out of having to do that again. But she got to spend some time with ol' Dad, and even if she does hate me just a little bit more than she did before, at least she got some exercise. And my son won't wear shorts to save his life (they wouldn't look cool enough), so I may have to wait until we have snow on the ground.

SummaryPros:Great exercise
Fun and casual sport
People tend to be far friendlier than I would expect
Actual golf discs are wicked cool, and fly a really long ways

Cons:Not hard to feel stupid if you just go out and start playing
A lot more serious than I remember
Those discs can take out an eye
If you want to get more official info on disc golf, check out the PDGA site. Keep in mind, however, that your local park probably looks like mine, meaning it's covered with weeds, dry grass and discarded condoms.
http://www.pdga.com/

Please support Matt and if you are going to buy a board game, buy it from his sponsors because I want to keep reading his reviews. I hope he writes about disc golf again.

Friday, February 25, 2011

Baskets for the first time.

Tomorrow I will Get to play disc golf into real target baskets for the first time. Trees, poles, bins and other targets have served me well for my first few years of playing, but now I am going to experience "The Real Thing"I have tried to research what differences I will experience.

It seems to be the consensus that it is much more difficult, but that the rewards of hearing the chains is worth it. It is also the first time I will be playing against people who have experience at a level that is beyond what we play. I expect we will have a steep learning curve.


It is also a wonderful opportunity to share team spirit with our learners. As you may know from my blog, I believe Play is a wonderful teachable opportunity and this entire trip is being conducted in a spirit of play.
It is a chance to share and communicate with our boys and reach their hearts.

When you share a time of Play, the learners are more likely to take you seriously when you want to share a word of truth in their lives.

I will report next week on how the trip went.


David

Thursday, February 24, 2011

Worldwide growth of Disc Golf

This is not originally my posting, but it is about the popularity of Disc Golf worldwide.


Modified Frisbees Soar at Thousands of Disc Golf Courses Globally

From one California course in the mid-70s, disc golf has grown dramatically, providing fun, fitness and competition to thousands of players internationally.

Using a set of molded plastic discs -- smaller in diameter and heavier than Frisbees -- disc golfers play using rules based on traditional golf. Participants tee off from a designated spot, often a small rectangle of concrete that provides solid footing. Using a disc golf driver, the heaviest and most streamlined disc, by adjusting their angle of release they launch straight, arching, or dramatically curved shots, depending on the layout of the hole.
The next shot is played from where the original toss landed, usually using a lighter approach disc. Once near the disc golf target, or Pole Hole, players choose a blunter-edged putting disc. A hole is complete when the disc comes to rest in the disc golf basket.
Holes are all considered par-threes for scoring, but range in length from just 200 feet to a whopping 600 plus. As in golf, the object is to make it around the course in the fewest number of shots. Unlike golf, with its pricy greens fees, most disc golf courses are free to play.
Disc golf discs retail for around R120 to R200. Manufacturers like Innova Champion and Discraft sell discs on their own web sites. Golf discs, disc golf bags, disc golf baskets, and other accessories and equipment also are available from online retailers. Discs are sold at some courses, at select sporting goods retailers, and used from second-hand sporting goods shops.
While competitive players may carry a disc golf bag holding up to 20 specialized discs, a casual recreational round can be played with just one. In fact, as you would expect from a sport born of a late-50's toy, casual and laid back is the prevailing attitude of the disc golf crowd. Outdoor recreation and fitness is as big a draw as competition. Sure, a brisk walk in the park or woods is good for cardiovascular health, but why not work on your agility, hand-eye coordination and upper-body conditioning while you're at it? Anyone who can stroll and flip a disc can play, but the fun and challenge of improving their skills is addictive to many players and keeps them coming back.
This is why I love it!

Disc Golf Growth
This is illustrated by the sheer number of players flocking to the game, and the growth of disc golf internationally. According the Professional Disc Golf Association web site, PDGA.COM, its membership has grown from around 4,000 players in 1996 to some 13,000 in 2008. Of those, 26 percent were classified as professionals, 69 percent as amateurs, and 5 percent as juniors. Of course, there are thousands more players who don't belong to the PDGA.
Since the first official course in 1974, disc golf course openings have been exponential. According to the PDGA, there are now 2,748 sanctioned courses worldwide. The United States boasts 2,354 courses, while Canada is home to 89. Scandinavia has164 courses, the rest of Europe 78, Japan 36 and Australia and New Zealand combined have 24. South Africa has a handful of course and there is even one in Tanzania. For information on disc golf in South Africa please contact SADGA.
To buy disc golf products in South Africa please contact http://www.disc-golf.co.za/ or if you are in KZN you could give me a call. I have some wonderful Ching Legacy discs. They are very versatile and are easy to manipulate and I believe they are an idea disc for beginners. The Legacy is a balanced and stable disc that can follow your lines left, right and straight. and has nice glide.


Disc Golf History
Inventive gamers have undoubtedly been throwing plastic platters at trees, trash cans and lamp posts since even before Wham-O trademarked the Frisbee in 1959. Sometimes known as Folf, early incarnations of the game were played with actual Frisbees. But disc golf got its true start in modern form in 1974, when Wham-O toy designer and disc golf pioneer Ed Hedrick laid out the course at Oak Grove Park in La Canada, California, near Los Angeles.
The PDGA was formed in 1981. By 1996, it was hosting 235 events that offered just under $370,000 in prize money; in 2008 it sanctioned 994 tournaments with a combined purse of more than $2 million.

A Nature Walk With Golf Discs and Waterproof Socks
Of course, you don't have to be a money-winning professional disc golfer to become addicted to disc golf. Even recreational players can quickly become fanatical, loading up on golf discs and logo-laden disc golf apparel from their favorite disc maker. The fact that one disc golf retail web site offers waterproof socks says something about players' willingness to endure even inclement weather to participate in their sport.
Weather conditions aside, one of the great aspects of disc golf is that it gets players outside and into nature. Most disc golf courses are at public parks. Some are deeply wooded, with tightly laid out holes threading through the trees. Others offer a picturesque stroll past streams, lakes or ponds that become water hazards on one or more holes. So wherever they play disc golf, participants are getting some great exercise with fresh air and a view -- no matter what score they shoot.

Lesotho

At our school "Heritage Academy" we often take our learners on missions to various parts of the world where we try to fulfil our school vision
"To fulfil the purposes of God and reflect Christs' love"

My favorite place to go is to the Kingdom of Lesotho . Apart from the country itself being very mountainous and beautiful, the people are very friendly and kindhearted.

I will never forget the generosity of people who own almost nothing and live in a very harsh climate, sharing with us food that they have planted, cared for, reaped, processed and cooked. They have so little and yet they share all they have with 20 strangers who come to their village.

I would love to be able to share more with them they they have with me. I share with them the Love of Jesus and we fellowship and are able to laugh and smile together.

I wonder if these people are aware of just how rare it is to live in such a beautiful setting.

I can't help but believe when I am in the company of people who live a life that is so communal, that their way of life is much closer to the Koinonia or fellowship that Jesus spoke about. Perhaps in the advantages we have gained in the western world we have lost a rare jewel of the true meaning of being part of humanity.

Lesotho reminds me of this.
Most people in the west would be devastated to own so little and would doubt their own value in the world, and yet these people share, and smile and sing and love and live in a land that is natural and beautiful.

Lesotho is a country dominated by desperate poverty. Development is rare and when it does come it often has other motives of taking and using the people and resources of Lesotho and not about benefiting the people themselves.

I know that God has got special plans for Lesotho. A life of faith and knowledge of God is part of what can add hope to these people. The church owes these people to make a difference. I remember the words of Jesus about the sheep and the goats, when the people complained that they had never seen him naked or hungry or in need and refused to help and he reminded them that what we do "for the least of these" we are actually doing for Him.
I am heading back to Lesotho just before Easter. We are trying to build a Jungle Gym in the playground of a school we visit in Mokhotlong. We managed to be part of a program that enabled them to build classrooms and the school is doing very well.

If anybody would like more information or is able to assist in any way, please contact Heritage Academy at principal@heritageacademy.co.za. It would really made a difference.

Please also pray for the people of Lesotho.

The picture on the bottom is of the inside of one of the huts. This lady owns so little. Note the plank against the wall to keep out the cold. Yet this lady caught and donated us a chicken as a gift when we visited her.

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Board Game Spymaster - a sneak peek

I though I would give you a sneak peek at my new game Spymaster.





 

Spy-master is a game about the intriguing and devious world of international espionage and counter espionage.
"The act of obtaining, delivering, transmitting, communicating,
Or receiving information about the national defense with an
Intent, or reason to believe, that the information may be used
To the disadvantage of our nation or to the advantage of
 any foreign nation.”

It is a game where every move you make has to be considered very cautiously so as to avoid revealing your strategy to the enemy and resulting in the failure of your mission.  At the same time you are gathering information about the activities of enemy agents because if their own devious mission succeeds it would spell the end for your own nation. As your mission involves deception, you are encouraged to use the conversation around the board to try and increase the confusion of the opponent. The stakes are high. It is not only a question of national security, but even worldwide peace hangs in the balance. Only one team can now prevent a major international disaster.

The cold war may well be in the past, but the present brings danger that is nerve-racking, highly volatile and extremely incendiary. To succeed will require nerves of steel and a mind as sharp as a razor.
You are the Spy-master and you lead an elite team of highly trained agents on a top secret mission to bring some very sensitive information from the headquarters of the enemy’s intelligence organisation to your own in order to prevent their plans to overrun your country from becoming a reality. At the same time you learn that they plan to steal some top secret information about your countries defence system and you must stop them at all costs from getting that information to their intelligence h.q. your mission is therefore a delicate balance of defence and attack.

If you attack and kill their citizens you will suffer the loss of international approval and will be seen as the aggressor. If you act too slowly your own citizens will suffer. Failure is not an option. History will judge your actions.
As Spy-master you will need to be alert and focused. You will have to notice the smallest clues and you will need to take immense risks in order to flush out the enemy agents.
Make sure all your powers of scrutiny and deduction are as sharp as they can possibly be.
It will more than likely be the most innocent looking person on the street who slips through your detection and delivers the final nail in the coffin of your country. Or you may become paranoid and become vilified as a war criminal that has shot enemy citizens and diplomats.

The life of a Spymaster is never easy. There is no back up. It is just you and the team you pick. It is a match of your will, your courage and your intelligence against that of a highly trained enemy that will show you no mercy. When the history books are written, will your nation have stood the test? Will you have handled yourself with integrity or will you do anything to win? 
What kind of Spymaster do you want to be?
Each Spymaster hand picks his own chosen team of escorts to help the courier on the mission, some will even be civilians, but it is vital that their identity is kept secret for as long as possible. As team leader you will have forty three experts at your command to help you accomplish your mission. Your team includes the police, a swat team, homeland security agents, foreign service agents, snipers, assassins, special agents, field agents, border guards, civilians, diplomats, special ops officers, journalists, informants, a thief, an interrogator and even a double agent. There will be explosions and explosive situations. Without doubt numerous people on both sides will be called upon to sacrifice their lives. The question is simply who will be left with the information that will mean the difference between war and peace. This is a game of enormous concentration, courage and memory.
The action is fast, the challenge colossal.
Have you got what it takes to be a Spy-master?






Tuesday, February 22, 2011

The awesome power of Play.

I am a teacher. I passionately believe that teachers can make an enormous difference in the lives of young people. Sometimes this influence is good and sometimes it is negative.

Pentominoes - Fun to Play - Makes you think!
As one commentator said "Teaching & Learning are not even related."

I hope that my teaching is effective, but the measure of this is whether the children are
having their lives changed by what they do in my class.

When I went to my daughters parents meeting at preschool the teacher said something
 that struck me. She said
"At this age learning is play and play is learning."

What a powerful statement!

Then it struck me.  When does this change?
I think it changes when we stop children from playing.
How often do I say in class "Stop Playing around!" ?

Am I guilty of killing learning? Does learning have to be boring?

Surely it would be worthwile to research if we can't rediscover the way to make learning
fun. Can't we all play our way to learning.
I am begining to believe that there is a large amount of research data that concludes that
this is exactly what we should be doing.

I want to rediscover the path to making even high school learning childs play.
I want our teaching to reach the heart and not the head.
I want to change lives, and I want to do it by playing.

Please feel free to comment or to offer advice.

I would also love to do my masters on optimizing
the benefits of play in the high school classroom.
I may include the concept of "flow"

Please let me know what you think.

Monday, February 21, 2011

Abstract Strategy Board Game - Square Route

This is one of the games that I have designed. I will eventually put
them all on my blog. I have a fantastic game that I am developing
 called "SpyMaster" that is a cross between Stratego and Chess
that is going to create stress and anxiety in such a way that those
playing will realy feel that they are involved in the
 world of international espionage.

"By the way this is a short disclaimer to the NSA and the
boys in black. If you have tracked me doing many hours
 of research into your world; this is the reason why.
You can remove my name from your
suspicious activity list and
 allow my family to go back to normal."

If you love boardgames - you will love this one. Keep looking back for it.

Back to todays simpler game. it is called Square Route.


The amazing thing about this game is that at first getting squares is relatively easy. Sometimes for you and sometimes for your opponent a square just seems to appear as from nowhere.

As you get more experienced and are able to read the game you are better able to see and prevent squares, then the second element of the game comes into play. This is the race.

It is a real test of multi-tasking to be able to concentrate on both.


Can you do it? Can you cope with this deceptively simple game?
Let me know how it goes...

 The Rules:
1.        Square route is an exciting race game.
2.        From your start square race around your      
         square nugget around the centre star 
         and onto your finish square
3.        Each nugget may move one square in      
         any direction onto an empty square.
4.        You may not move onto the centre star.
5.        The other way to win is to place any four     
         of your nuggets to form any square.







Those who have tried this simple game, please give me some feedback on your thoughts.

Saturday, February 19, 2011

A Beautiful Day!

Today is parents day at school. It is a wonderful opportunity to interact with the parents of our learners.

I think that God is guiding me to use this time to LISTEN to the parents and not to talk to them. I am here to represent them and they pay me to impact their childrens lives.

What greater sign of respect can we show then to listen to them, and how disrespectful it is when teachers are only interested in telling and dont find time to listen.

I will report back on the progress.

A Beautiful Day.
It was good to meet the parents. It is wonderful when parents care so much about their children that they come to school in order to find out how things are going.

It is also wonderful to be at a school where it is trully possible to say that we really do care about each one of our learners.

I have enjoyed my day. Impacting the lives of our future generations in a privelage. It is also a gift from God to play a role in the extension of His kingdom.

Friday, February 18, 2011

Today is


1.        TODAY IS THE ONLY DAY OF MY LIFE

                                       THE PAST HAS PAST AND THE FUTURE IS NEVER

2.       TODAY I WILL CHANGE THE WORLD

                           BY ENRICHING THE LIVES OF THOSE I MEET

3.      TODAY I WILL CHANGE MYSELF
                           BY LEARNING FROM EVERYTHING I CAN
4       TODAY I WILL DEVELOP MYSELF
                           BY PASSIONATE, PURPOSEFUL EFFORT TO BE PERFECT
     TODAY I WILL BE ME, MY TRUE SELF
                           WHO GOD CREATED ME TO BE    
                TODAY I WILL HAVE WEALTH OF SPIRIT
                           BUT NEVER HOLD ON TO STUFF
          TODAY I WILL LIVE GENEROUSLY
                           SHARING MY HEART, TIME AND MEANS
               TODAY I WILL BE RESPONSIBLE

                           BY MAKING THE MOST OF EVERY OPPORTUNITY

         TODAY I WILL HONESTLY EXPRESS WHAT I WANT

                                 WHILE ALWAYS UPHOLDING THE DIGNITY OF OTHERS

         TODAY I WILL CLAIM ALL REWARD THAT I DESERVE
                            AND WILL REWARD OTHERS ACCORDINGLY
1         TODAY I WILL CONTROL MY LIFE
                            AND LIVE OUT MY GREATEST DREAMS
         TODAY I WILL BE FULLY PRESENT IN EVERY MOMENT
                            AND AVAILABLE TO THOSE AROUND ME
         TODAY I WILL LEAD AND NEVER ABDICATE
                            AND I WILL MAKE THE TOUGH DECISIONS
         TODAY I WILL SPREAD LOVE AND OPTIMISM
                            CHOOSING MY ATTITUDES, THOUGHTS AND WORDS
         TODAY I WILL INVEST IN ALL MY TOMORROWS
                            AND NEVER STEAL FROM THEM
         TODAY I WILL MAKE FAILURE A TEACHER
                            AND LIFES EXPERIENCES INTO LESSONS
         TODAY I WILL PLAN AND TREASURE MY TIME
                            AND MAKE SURE I DO IT OR GET IT DONE
         TODAY I WILL BE HONEST AND CONSISTENT
                            AND LIVE TO MY HIGHEST STANDARD
         TODAY I WILL MAKE GOD PROUD OF ME
                            AND I WILL DO HIS WORK AND SERVE HIM
              TODAY I WILL LOVE GOD WITH ALL I AM
                            AND WORSHIP HIM BY MY LIFE
        TODAY I WILL LOVE ALL MANKIND
                            AND ACT OUT LOVE IN EVERYTHING I DO
        TODAY WILL BE MY BEST DAY EVER BECAUSE
                            I WILL BE THE BEST ME.




Samuel showing us how it is done.