I got a BoM from some very nice missionaries who came to visit a few months after I moved here. I read about the first 50 or 60 pages, flipped through some other parts and then got distracted. :o
I spent some time, not long before I joined here actually, as a Christian ('bout 2 years or so, I...
I can't seem to remember where the option is to do it in XP, and it's something totally different in Vista (damn you Microsoft!!). You said you had tried to revert before, right? I think it should default to the last saved state, but there should also be an option to go back earlier
Are you using XP, or something? I'm pretty sure that XP has an option to revert to an earlier state.
I just don't know where off the top of my head. I'll find out though
It depends largely on which subset of Paganism we're talking about, though orthopraxis is usually more applicable to more reconstructionalist oriented paths, but I can see how it can apply to Wicca as well.
Sorry if that answer was chintzy, I promise I'll come back and add something better...
Haha!
Wait...what's moxie? I feel so...uninitiated :cover:
Do the Vermonters get the directions thing from you Mainers, or the other way around? I swear I can't get directions there without someone saying "If I were trying to get there, I wouldn't start from here"
Ok, I'll go bake you a pie and sew you a new shirt while you're busy :D
Hmm...I wonder if the meeting of the two is being a drunken Rhodes scholar? :angel2:
One thing I've often noticed about the differences in Paganism when contrasted to other faiths (of course, mainly of the Judeo-Christian variety) is the difference in focus - Paganism, more often than not, focuses on Orthopraxis (for the uninitiated, "Orthopraxis" means "right practice" and...
I definately agree with you on that last bit.
And, I don't think you're a nerd :D At least, not in a bad way. Nerds, geeks, and dorks these days are "taking it back".
I predict that most people will feel the same way. I'm reasonably certain that most intellectual women don't go for the "man cave" types. :)
I do have one friend who married a guy like that, and most of us don't really care for him. But that's because he's a racist pig, not because he likes...
The common idea of a "typical" man seems to involve a love of sports, beer, women, cards, and possibly power tools.
Is it a stereotype, or are most men actually like that?
The playing cards thread actually got me thinking how few men I know that are what you would consider "typical": My husband and most of the men I know/that my friends are dating are intellectual and philisophical types. They go hiking and read books instead of watching sports and having poker...