My own game

The last post was from Ze Frank's blog, and so I thought I might start my own fun interactive blog game thingie.  So here goes.  The game I play most often with my youth group is called acrophobia.  (We just call it Acro for short)  I got the idea from an online game I played in the mid-90s. Here's how it works.

I will give you a few letters, and you create acrostics from them.  The acrostics don't have to make sense, but it's better if they do.  Sometimes I may announce a theme and sometimes it will be whatever randomness you can think of.  We may or may not develop a system of declaring a winner, but it should be fun anyway.

Here are today's letters for your acrosticifying pleasure.  These are 2 separate acros.  I think the theme is implied

M C C A I N

O B A M A

I know most of you never comment.  But this is your chance to actually make my blog better.  Try it, you may enjoy yourself.

Have fun

Stolen post

I stole the content for this post from another blog.  Be warned there is nothing original here.  I was originally going to put this in best web junk, but by then it loses all its timeliness. Yesterday Ze Frank asked for political haikus.  I read them so you don't have to.  Here are my favorites...

In the serious category:

The line is so long But I know that it's worth it I'm calling in sick

I vote my world view I won't vote color or age Don't get distracted

In the humorous category:

What does the loser do with all his balloons? Is there still a party?

In the humorous but also serious category:

it's nearly over thank god the ads will end soon and we can move on

In the poignant political statement category:

When you don't reside in a swing state, it all seems so very distant.

In the completely jaded at such an early age category:

Stop bothering me About this dumb election I am not 18

And my personal favorite:

Local middle school Your gym holds our tomorrow Yet smells like fish Sticks

In the very good but not a haiku category.  (come on it's 5-7-5 people):

There goes another Perfectly good billion Dollars down the drain

Living in a swing state Suddenly my vote matters much more than before!

Does the word matter?

I think in the eyes of many Americans, tomorrow's second biggest vote is on California's proposition 8.  Prop 8 is a law to define marriage as between one man and one woman.  Regardless of which way the vote goes tomorrow, there is no doubt that California will have some sort of legal union for same-sex couples.  Civil unions amount to essentially the same thing as a marriage in the eyes of the state.  But there is one huge difference; it is not called marriage.  My question tonight is about this title.  What I'm asking is this, if the civil union legally gives all the same rights and protections to couples as a marriage, then why fight over the word?  I'll throw it to my readers, do you think the title "marriage" is important?  I do think it is important.  And obviously the opponents who have donated millions to see prop 8 fail think it's important.  Feel free to vote and to let me know in the comments why you hold your opinion. [polldaddy poll=1073365]

I considered writing an entire post about how I think the state should not be in the marriage business.  Marriage is a church function and should be handled by churches.  That would be futile, however, since the state is inextricably linked to marriage and is involved in nearly every aspect of it.  There is no question that the state has to have a clear definition of what it is and is not and therefore must be involved.

What You People Come Here For (October edition)

Here are the searches that brought people to my blog in October.  Enjoy this eclectic list.  I think it's awesome how stuff from different posts gets combined to bring people to the site.  Of course there were probably another 75 searches for "what's the baby using?"

  • i used to sing
  • medical fantasy football team name
  • schwab creepy animated commercials (they are creepy)
  • exploding bird poo (so glad that search brings people to my blog)
  • catchy church commercials
  • when i was 12 en espanol
  • christianity and a glass of wine a day
  • i used to sing
  • weirdest fishing adventures
  • young peach tree
  • bells palsey 1 year
  • rc boat forum go motor jeremy
  • atheist review of wild goose chase
  • wild bookin
  • loud noise bells palsy
  • baptiste volkswagen commercial
  • web junk hamster
  • should one suffering from bells palsey s (I would like to see what the rest of this is)
  • can a christian drink beer or wine
  • videos of how to grow a peach tree
  • do peaches harm?

Best Web Junk (October 31)

This is probably the best headline I've ever seen If you click through and look at these 2 photos, you will never want to board an airplane, ever.  (Unless you are very proud of your body)

This fail is really a grafitti win - best vandalism ever

One of the many reasons I don't drink is because alcohol makes you dumber, and I never met anybody who needed to get dumber

I really don't understand advertising for atheism.

It's Halloween, so you might as well play this. (It takes like a minute)

The Final Countdown on KazooKeylele - found at Jawbone Radio

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XAg5KjnAhuU]

And since it's halloween, here is Mary Poppins as a horror film

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2T5_0AGdFic]

October is Pastor Appreciation Month

Adam did a post like this yesterday, and I am nothing if not unoriginal, so here goes. I appreciate my pastor.

Pastor Weeks in his Duke hat

I have been on staff at LaGrange for nearly 4 years, and Pastor Weeks has been a wonderful pastor to me.  I have had the opportunity to get to know him both personally and obviously as my co-worker and boss.  I could not ask for more from a pastor or a friend.

I can be quite critical and rarely point out what I appreciate in others which is why I am taking this opportunity to express my appreciation even though he will likely never see it.

He loves the Bible and the church.  He does his best to communicate God's message to us weekly.  And any member of our church with a need can count on his prayers and a visit.

More than any other pastor I have ever had, he is dedicated to missions.  He wants to see the Gospel spread throughout the world.  He tells us all if we are not willing to Go then we should give, and we should all pray.  There is a reason that a church in the bottom half our association by size leads in giving to Annie Armstrong, and is in the top few of giving to Lottie Moon.

Thanks for allowing me to ramp & rave :-)

This clip is worth your time

Maybe this explains why I didn't watch the third debate - I had heard it all before. Seriously, whoever put this together demonstrates the ridiculousness of our political system in America, in the course of 3 minutes.  Does anybody think you couldn't do this with any 3 debates of any 2 candidates since the advent of CNN?

[vodpod id=ExternalVideo.735475&w=425&h=350&fv=]

Update - I can't get the controls to work with this, so I had to click on it to watch it on the original site.

One Week

And it will be over.  Commercials will be on TV that are about products, not just candidates.  The news will have something new to talk about.  And we will have a new president-elect. I am personally of the opinion that, however the election goes, we get what we deserve.  Maybe I'm overly pessimistic about politics (I am after all truly thankful to live in a democracy) but I do not see anything substantial changing, regardless of who is elected.  Our country is set up in such a way that no one really has all that much power.  In truth, who you vote for for governor makes much more difference than who you vote for president.

That is not to say your vote doesn't matter.  As Christians we absolutely have a duty to vote, and to vote according to the Bible.  To do anything else would be irresponsible, poor stewardship, and make us bad citizens.

Please vote.  Pray, read your Bible, and vote.

Here's a list of all my political polls from this blog's history

[polldaddy poll=1052412][polldaddy poll=929433][polldaddy poll=946871]

A Mystery

What is this thing I saw this sticker on a car Friday, and I have no idea what it might be.  We were sitting at light so I snapped a picture of it.  Sorry for the lack of clarity.  It's tough to take a picture in traffic.

At the time I was thinking it was a Christian fish with a  lasso.  But now that I see it and it's not moving, I'm pretty sure I'm wrong about that.  The heart portion of the symbol looks like it made of barbed wire, or maybe it's a map symbol for railroad tracks.

Your assignment is to tell me what the heck this might be.  I'll take your best guess, or if any of my genius readers know the truth I would love to know.

Some context clues that might help - I saw it on a Toyota, on Ft. Bragg (so possibly it has something to do with the military) the other side of the car had a sticker of Mary or one of the saints. (so maybe it is a religious symbol)  I'll take your best guess in the comments

Best Web Junk (October 24)

I really enjoyed Dr Horrible.  And I enjoyed all of these videos of villains applying to the evil league of evil I added this site to my RSS reader this week

If this is completely serious, then I need to write a new has the world gone crazy post

A fun game that I have been addicted to the last 3 days.  I have beaten every level except Awash, Tube, & Unpossible.  If you play this make sure to go back and look at some other player's designs.  the 5 star ones are always impressive.

I'm posting this because I've seen it everywhere this week.  I personally think it's fake, but even so, it's interesting.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tAyC05g0tMA]

Owner of a Lonely Heart & Smooth Criminal on violin.  This is really impressive

[vodpod id=ExternalVideo.724496&w=425&h=350&fv=clip_id%3D1749057%26autostart%3Dfalse%26fullscreen%3D1]

Stuff you won't do, just because everyone else does

I rarely write these kinds of posts, where I'm essentially asking for comments, but I'm curious if I'm just odd among the readers of my blog.  Or do lots of people have these sorts of quirks. A couple of weeks ago I saw this post about things that you will never watch despite everyone you know having seen it.  The blogger of the post I linked to said, "I suspect we're all playing this irrational, stubborn game with something." And after some thought, I'm inclined to agree.  I also think we feel some odd sense of pride because of these things.

I began to think about this and realized that there are some things like this in my life.   There's probably something else, but I cant think of any more just now.

  • I never played Legend of Zelda as a kid, despite all my friends telling me that it was the absolute best game ever.  I have since extended this to all Zelda games.  I have never played one second of Link in any game ever.
  • I refuse to ever watch Dancing With the Stars, even if everybody I know over the age of 40 watches it as if it was the greatest thing ever on TV.  (I have to admit seeing clips of it on Sportscenter, since athletes apparently do pretty well.)

The question to you, my readers, is this; is there anything you refuse to watch/play/listen to, & do you feel some strange sense of pride because of it?

My comments have been way down lately, so chime in let you voice be heard on this totally pointless topic.

Best Web Junk (October 17)

The scariest fish story of all time.  (BTW:  There's no way I'm ever eating this kind of catfish (Not that I would eat anything that came out of a river full of dead bodies)) A messed up fail

I actually know some people who are predicting this.  But I hope it's just pessimism.

A great scene from last week's office, if you like BSG (and I do) this is awesome.  (Dumbledore Calrissian ftw)

I don't know who thought of this but they deserve some sort of nobel Prize for awesomeness

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cEbyrSvxf7U]

Bell's Palsy - 1 Year later

Immediately after I developed Bell's palsy I made a video so my family could see what I looked like. [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rxl4KoiBTEc]

that video has been viewed some 1300 times, and I still occasionally get messages that people send to me from youtube.  So I thought I'd update everyone on my condition.

I basically have no trace of Bell's Palsy.

I'll briefly go through the symptoms and give an update

The 2 symptoms that remain:

Watery eye – My right eye still waters a lot.  It is intermittent, but when allergies get bad or when I eat spicy food, tears fill my right eye.  My optometrist wasn't concerned.  In fact she said she would never know I had it if I hadn't told her.

Facial soreness – At first, my face was quite sore to the touch.  That has mostly gone, but it still has moments when it is sore.  Of course all on the right side.  Not a daily occurrence, but weekly.

The symptoms that are no more:

Headache - By far the worst part of Bell's palsy for me was the headache.  Most of the time it wasn't severe, though it was occasionally.  What it was, was neverending.  No matter what I took it stayed.  When I woke up I had a headache, when I went to bed I had a headache.  It was the same exact headache for 24 days.  (I think I had a few hours without it one day toward the end, but it came back for a few more days.)  A year later, I occasionally feel just a twinge of that headache, and I have flashbacks.  I have this fear that it will come back and it is a terrible feeling.  But it's gone

Dizziness / Lightheadedness – For the first 2 weeks or so I was very lightheaded.  (By that I mean that when I get up or turn around quickly I would feel sort of dizzy.)  And a couple of days, I was completely dizzy.  (By that I mean that even when I close my eyes and lay down the world was spinning.)  Totally gone.

Muted sense of Taste – You know how your tongue feels after you burn it?  It has that dead spot right where the burn is.  My whole tongue felt like that…kinda fuzzy and with a very muted sense of taste.  This worked out well for me, because I lost at least 7 pounds during this period of my bizarre illness.  My sense of taste, as well as any weight I may have lost, has fully returned.

Loud noises are extremely loud – For at least three weeks, when there was a loud noise, like my dog barking or if I would yell at someone, it was extremely loud.  My ear would ring.  Gone

Heartburn – In addition to all the above I had heartburn regularly during this period.  I blame that on taking 3200 mgs of Motrin every day.  I just added a Pepcid to the mix of pills I was taking and it went away.  Gone

33 days after Bells Palsy

367 Days after Bells Palsy

Facial paralysis -My face works completely.  I can even whistle as well as I could before the palsy.  I do notice that when I laaugh my right eye often closes, and I have one eye open further in pictures.  But It's pretty well gone

Classic Blog Post - Still My Favorite Post Ever

One year ago today I was stricken with a very odd (but scary at the time) affliction.  I wrote a blog post about it on myspace (this was before I even considered this awesome wordpress blog), and I decided to repost it today on the anniversary of the event.  I only did a minimal amount of editing to correct the gross errors from before.  I was entertained as I reread it, and my regular readers probably will be too.  For many of you it will even be new.  Tomorrow I'll give an update on what It is like a full year later.

The Adventures of Jeremy in the Emergency Room: The world’s longest blog post

Prologue:  How I got to the ER

On Tuesday October 9th 2007 I developed a headache while crappie fishing with Jack Pate. It seemed like a sinus headache at the time. I took Advil cold & sinus like always, but it didn't go away. I also rode my exercise bike that night, because I've been doing that a lot lately, trying to drop a few lb's since I've never been fatter. The headache never went away. Wednesday I still had it.  I worked out like crazy hoping that would make the headache go away, it didn't help. Then on Wednesday night after church I helped this guy move, making for even more exercise. I made a comment about my head hurting and Jack said, "You were complaining about that yesterday." I told him that it is exactly the same headache. On Thursday, I was beginning to get concerned about having the exact same headache for 3 days. Plus, it was worse on Thursday. It is completely localized behind my right ear. Thursday I took a variety of medicines and drank a lot of Mello Yello for the caffeine and tried to sleep it away.  (Really I was just sleeping to try to hide from the hurting of my head.) The headache is not that severe, but it is relentless. It's there when I go to bed and when I wake up. Sometimes it throbs and sometimes it is dull. I made up my mind that if I woke up with it on Friday, I would go the doctor.

I don't have a regular doctor so on Friday morning I went to the express care of the Cape Fear Valley Hospital. It opens at noon I was there at 10 till, and was the second one to sign in. I thought I had a sinus infection and that he would give me antibiotics and help me feel better soon, but the PA who saw me said that there was nothing wrong with me, he gave me a shot of Tordol and a prescription for Fioricet and treated me as if I had migraines. He asked me if I was under stress I said no, he continued his course of migraine treatment anyway. He also scheduled me for a head CT on Thursday.

This is the first time I began to freak out a little. I truly considered every horrible possibility, from brain tumor to aneurysm. In case you wondered, I am still fully confident in my salvation in Christ. Even though I seriously considered death I was only reassured of my belief in Him and not the slightest bit afraid of my slightly less hypothetical impending death. Being hypothetically disabled was much more disconcerting.

Part One:  Why I went to the ER

The headache medicine that the PA gave me didn't help at all. It made me throw up, but didn't help with the headache. When I kept it down it made me extremely tired. But I was going to just tough it out until my CT on Thursday. Well things changed on Sunday morning. I got up early to make pancakes for the Baptist Men's Breakfast, and at breakfast I noticed that my mouth was weak. It felt like my eggs were going to fall right out as I chewed. By 1 pm I noticed that I couldn't smile fully. The right side of my mouth wouldn't raise all the way. I took a nap, went back to church and taught DT. The youth laughed at my inability to whistle. At the conclusion of church, the pastor named me as a prayer request, and a group of ladies prayed over me as soon as we dismissed. I truly felt loved and ministered to. That feeling was only beginning. After church I was watching TV and playing with my new X-box (an awesome gift I got for pastor appreciation month) and took a break to go to the bathroom. I smiled at myself in the mirror and noticed that my mouth was worse. This was the most nervous I'd been. So I took a picture of myself, sent it to Mom over yahoo messenger, and asked her should I go the the emergency room, cause I can only smile like this. (Just as a quick aside, can you imagine what this would have been like 10 years ago before digital cameras or instant messengers. The internet is awesome sometimes.) This is the pic I took. Mom said to call her, she said I should go the the ER because, "Your face shouldn't be drooping."

Part Two:  The Trip and the Waiting Room

I went through a mental list of who should take me to the ER, because I knew I shouldn't drive myself. I decided on Frank Acevedo. Frank is new to our church and will be here for about a year. He was the best candidate because he lives close and his family is back in Tennessee. He said he'd be here in 10 minutes. I got myself ready loaded my pockets with the prescriptions and my phone charger and stuff, and was just about ready when he arrived. On the way to the hospital I called Mom, Granny, Jarred, Pastor Weeks and Brent Highfil. Dad was in Mexico so I didn't even attempt to call him.

When I arrived at the hospital, I went to the check-in desk and told them, "I've have had a headache since Tuesday, and when I smile I look like this." They wrote down "facial drooping." Me and Frank took what seemed like the last 2 seats in the waiting room, and began the long wait. About 20 minutes later, the Pastor arrived and he stayed there nearly all night as well. I was called into the preliminary diagnosis room, and answered a bunch of questions. They took my blood pressure, weighed me, (I reeealy have to lose a lot of weight) <--update-->(I still really need to lose a lot of weight) <--update--> and asked me a bunch of questions. One of the questions they asked was rate your pain on a scale from 1 to 10. All I could think of was this. (The line comes at the 2 minute mark) Which is so funny you have to watch it…now before you continue reading this. What are you waiting for, go ahead watch it. (I just didn't want to get attacked by the guys from the femur ward.) They sent me back to the chairs. We arrived at about 9:45, and slowly watched the room empty out. At 1:15 or so they called me back. Apparently 3½ hours is not all that long to wait at the emergency room. If it had been a stroke, who knows what would have happened.

Part Three: The Exam

They called me back and told me to put on the hospital gown. It was the first time in my life that I've worn one of those. I asked the nurse if I could go to the bathroom before I changed, and she told me to pee in a cup if I was going, "just in case." It's always awkward peeing in a cup, you don't know how much to put in the cup and you don't really have enough hands for the whole operation to go smoothly. But I came out of the bathroom with a cup of pee and changed into the gown with no back in it.

Then came the IV. The IV nurse stabbed the crap out of my left hand, then moved on to my right forearm. She was able to get one syringe of blood, then she moved to my left arm. The left arm hurt the most, but the right arm is much more bruised. She never did get an acceptable stab in, just as another nurse was about to give it a shot, I was moved. A girl was coming in and needed my room for an exam. She was writhing and crying in her bed, I was glad to give her the room. I didn't really want to walk down the hall with my backside hanging out, so they wrapped another gown around me like a cape and I walked down the hall following a nurse who had all my clothes in a yellow bag. They moved me to a trauma room and hooked me to all the machines.

Part Four:  My Diagnosis and Relief

A trauma room is exactly what you think of when you think of an emergency room. It is a large room with 3 "rooms" sort-of separated by a curtain. I was in trauma 2. First I'll talk about the diagnosis, then the fun part. Relatively quickly, remember I had been there for four hours already, the doctor came in and saw me. He looked in my ears and then asked me the same questions I'd already answered a hundred times, squeeze his fingers, when did it start, then he said smile, wrinkle your forehead. Then the words I was dying to hear. "You have Bell's Palsy. you haven't had a stroke or anything. We will get a CT to make sure everything is normal, but it will probably go away in a about two weeks. It is probably caused by the ear infection which seems to be pretty severe."

This was an incredible relief. If you have actually been reading this massive article you remember me saying in the prologue that I had considered everything horrible. Now I knew that the headache was actually an earache, and not my brain leaking out. At this point I could relax and enjoy the rest of my experience in the trauma room of the Cape Fear Valley Hospital. They took me next door for a CT, I nearly fell asleep during this part, laying down in a quiet room. But it only lasted about 10 minutes, and was kind of jerky once the machine kicked in. Apparently my CT was fine. You can read about the last part in part 6. Shortly after the head CT the pastor got to go home. Frank stayed around and drove me home.

Part Five:  Now Things Get Entertaining

This is the part you have all been waiting for. The trauma room is much more like ER the show than I ever expected. My roommates in trauma 1 & 3 consisted of a lady who had stabbed herself…wait for it...twice, and a man who accidentally shot himself.

First lets talk about Ms. Stabsalot. She was moaning periodically from the time I arrived. Then she would holler for a nurse and ask, "When will I get my pain meds?" The nurse would tell her that the film had to come back. Then at one point she decided that she wasn't going to get satisfaction. So she unplugged all her cables, wrapped up in her bed sheets like a dress and walked out of the room. She was quickly herded in by a nurse and told she couldn't leave because she was a psych patient. She decided then to only go to the bathroom, and came back to her bed, and returned to periodic moaning.

Then in comes Shooter in a wheelchair in real true pain, and clearly in shock. As the doctors questioned him they asked him his name, which I will leave out, and then they asked him where he was when it happened, (less than a mile from my house btw) and how he got shot. He said he dropped his gun (a .22 by the way, does that even count as packing heat?) and it went off. He also said he got rid of the gun, but he gave up his boys that he was with real quick. He was shot in the forearm. The police unwrapped it, and then the nurse pulled the curtain so that I couldn't see what was happening. I could still tell what was happening though because you can hear right through a curtain. They had some difficulty getting him to stay in the bed, and he was repeatedly saying, "I just want this out of me." The nurses wanted him to hold still so that they could give him an IV, pain meds and get an x-ray. They needed to see how the bullet was placed in his arm. As soon as he got the medicine he was a whole different guy, calm and cooperative. The doctor took the bullet out right there in the room.

When Ms. Stabsalot heard this she moaned really loud a few times, hoping to outmoan the shooter. Then the doctor started ripping into her. She said, "I've been waiting hours to get some pain meds and he just rolls right in and gets it."

"He's been shot," said the Dr.

She replied, "But I've been stabbed"

"You stabbed yourself," is the reply.

"So what, I've still been stabbed! Maybe I should have stabbed myself 3 times."

"You are a psych patient and I can't give you pain meds because they might interfere with your other symptoms. We are taking you to a mental institution for a better diagnosis."

This part of the night was truly entertaining and since I was not longer freaking out I just enjoyed the show.

Part Six:  Checking Out and Going Home

The doctor said the CT looked fine, he referred me to a neurologist for an MRI "just in case" and gave me antibiotics, antivirals, a roll of tape, instructions on using eye cream and taping my eye shut for bed, and a vicodin, to ease the pain of the earache and help me sleep. Here is me all taped up and ready for bed.

Went to the 24 hour CVS there near the hospital and filled all the scrips. Just as I was walking in the door of the house my alarm was going off, because I had to get up early the morning before. I took the first round of all the pills, ate some peanut butter on toast, took a shower, (but the vicodin was working good by then and I was staggering) taped up my eye and went to bed. Esau spent the first night of his life in the house alone, and seemed to survive it fine. I slept till about 10:30.

Epilogue:  Thank You

First of all let me say, when you are single and live 600 or more miles from where your family is, things like this could be extra scary. Then let me say thank you to my church. A major purpose of the church should be fellowship, and fellowship is more than eating together. Fellowship is having genuine concern for others. My church was awesome. I received prayer, and ministry galore. People have volunteered to drive me while I can't see and feed me. For all of you I say. Thank You! You have made it clear that everyone who loves me is not 600 miles away.

Finally, if you have read this whole manifesto-length blog post you deserve congratulations. You should at least comment it so I know I didn't totally waste my time. Also thank you to all the people who prayed for me and ministered to me through this ordeal.

Just in case you are wondering, this post is 2651 words.

Best Web Junk (October 10)

The 10 most confusing traffic signs in America - via Dave Barry Oh Yeah - this is a funny pic (It's possible some of my readers are not old enough to get this) - from myextralife.com

Regardless of your politics, this junk is funny.

How can we make hamburgers even more delicious?  Like this

Punchout for Wii looks so fun.  Man the music takes me back.  (I never lasted more than 2 punches with Tyson)

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ibFQ348YoW8]

Book Review: Wild Goose Chase

A while back Adam sent me a free copy of Wild Goose Chase by Mark Batterson.  Since Adam thought the book important enough to give away, I though I would respect that and write a review it for you all.  I just finished it last night so I'll review it while it's fresh on my mind

I'll start by saying that I've never heard of Mark Batterson before I got this book in the mail.  He is the pastor of National Community Church and he also wrote In a Pit with a Lion on a Snowy Day.

The thesis of Wild Goose Chase is that Christians (in the West, I assume) are not followers of the Holy Spirit, but rather we have told the Spirit to follow us. Therefore, we are bored in our Christianity. He then suggests six “cages” that limit, and keep Christians from following the Holy Spirit. The cages are responsibility, routine, assumptions, guilt failure and fear. The balance of the book is discussions of each cage, why it limits, and how to escape from the cage so that we feel free to be fully devoted followers of Christ.

About the title - the best way to explain that is just to quote from the first paragraph of the book:

The Celtic Christians had a name for the Holy Spirit that has always intrigued me. They called him An Geadh-Glas, or ‘the Wild Goose.’… The name hints at the mysterious nature of the Holy Spirit. Much like a wild goose, the Spirit of God cannot be tracked or tamed. An element of danger, and an air of unpredictability surround Him. And while the name may sound sacrilegious at first earshot, I cannot think of a better description of what it’s like to follow the Spirit’s leading through life than Wild Goose chase.

That’s the explanation, and throughout the balance of the book I don’t think he ever refers to the Holy Spirit again – only the Wild Goose. For me it was quite distracting. I believe with the explanation over, he defined his title and could simply call the Holy Spirit the Holy Spirit.

As far as the content of the book I would describe it as good. (How's that for vocabulary skills) For me it was nothing revolutionary but I believe he is on to a lot of truth and has probably rightly diagnosed the major woes of Western Christianity. I particularly agreed with the following quote from the chapter on the cage of routine. “If you’re in a spiritual slump, let me give you a prescription: Go on a mission trip. There is no better or sure way of coming out of the cage of routine.” (pg.50)

I was also very intrigued by his thoughts of vision as a cure for sin. He puts it this way.  "The way you stop sinning is by getting a God-sized vision that consumes all your time and energy." (pg 160-1)

I wrote approximately 10 notes throughout the margins of the book. (I do that to interact with the book.) Most of the notes were agreement or that I found a point interesting. That’s about once every 18 pages. Quite a lot less than I interacted with say Simple Church, but more than I often write.

If you find yourself bored in your Christianity or if you believe that you are particularly trapped in one of the cages I would recommend this book. It is easy to read, probably about a 3 hour book, clear and interesting.  It would be worth your time.