On the Path is the personal blog of C.A.Rushing (me).
If you are looking for my technical blog, this is not it. (You can
find that here).
The intention of this blog is to discuss, ponder and even
ruminate over the thoughts, issues and philosophies that drive my
everyday life. As a christian husband and a father of five I will
likely often discuss my philosophy on faith, family, child-rearing
as well as many deeper issues.
A Warning
This is a blatantly christian blog. If you are interested only
in my technical and business oriented topics please visit my
business blog at http://deeper.webangelo.net. You are, of
course, welcome to stay and see what makes me tick; in fact I
encourage it. It is because of my beliefs about God and family that
I make many of the decisions regarding business practices and
policies.
So why two blogs?
The reason for two blogs is simply that I expect to have two
different audiences. I don't expect those who are interested solely
in my coding and business tips to have to wade through my
philosophies about life to get to them. Conversely, those only
interested in the philosophy and theology aspects may quickly lose
interest if they have to wade through posts on coding techniques.
Given my diverse interests, this seemed best.
This doesn't mean that I consider these two separate worlds.
Quite on the contrary in fact. My personal beliefs drive my
business decisions to such a large extent that I cannot conceive of
actually trying to divide them.
Et Cetera, et cetera, et cetera...
Please be aware that this is a family oriented blog. I ask all
those who wish to add coments to be civil and use appropriate
language. I reserve all rights to remove any comments I deem to be
inappropriate, rude, off-topic or the like. On the other hand, I
welcome those with differing views than mine to express those in
comments in a logical and civil manner.
Please also understand something about my personality; I rarely
seek easy answers. I like to look at things I'm struggling
with from multiple angles. In fact I believe that beliefs are
tested not from their comfy centers, but the logical edges where we
are often uncomfortable. If my beliefs can't stand up to my
own critiques, how can they stand to anyone elses? I say this
only to warn folks that I may challenge you to think as well, so
please don't be offended.