

There are only three things you need to know about electronics.  Next year  they will be faster, smaller, do more, and cost less.  Sorry, four.  And this  knowledge has been invaluable to me over the years.  Take microwaves, for  instance.
 My GS750  had a flat tire, and I needed a way to get it to the shop.  I  called Jack Baillio, who I went to church with and talked him into letting me  use one of his delivery trucks.  He was one of the seven Baillio brothers, all  whose first name started with J-Johnny, Jack, Jimmie, Jeffery, etc... who owned  Baillio's, the largest electronics store in New Mexico.  He finally relented,  and told me to go see Jimmie, and when the first truck came in, I could borrow  it.  I went down, and waiting with Jimmie for a truck, he offered me some hot  chocolate.  Faster than I could pick up a remote to change channels, he handed  me a Styrofoam cup with steaming hot water.  I was amazed at how fast this  microwave had not only heated the water, but not melted the cup.  Some day, I'm  going to have one.  But right now, it didn't fit my budget or riding style.   Besides, my roommate Bob and I had all the appliances we could handle.  The  toaster oven that didn't, and a pot for boiling hot dogs, a pan for grilling  them, and a refrigerator.  For keeping the mustard, ketchup, and relish cold,  along with the milk for the cereal.  We ate a lot Lucky Charms, Trix, and Rice  Krispies in those pre-Golden Graham days.  And all these items were squeezed in  due to the fact the top shelf had been lowered to accommodate two framed, 8x10  glossies of my high school sweetheart.  Which mysteriously disappeared when I  met Theresa.  A mystery, unsolved to this very day.
 But after marrying her, and moving to Durango, I figured to help her  cooking progress along, she wasn't quite the All Conference Cooking Champ yet, I  would buy her a microwave.  With the closest Baillio's one state and 250 miles  away, I went to Montgomery Wards, and bought a floor model on my store card.   Reduced to only $659, I had bought motorcycles for less, and this was almost the  amount of our rent for the next five months.  It was big, portable only in the  fact that two men could place it where you wanted it, and her cooking skills  improved quickly.  After the micro waved fried chicken incident, which is  another story for another time.  And I was impressed how this beach level,  California girl could learn to cook so fast.  Even more impressed because we  lived at 6500', and where water boiled at 212 for you flatlanders, it boiled at  177 for us, which took things longer to cook.  I was even more impressed when I  found out she had read and followed the directions on the boxes for high  altitude cooking.
 To put this vintage microwave in perspective, when we moved to our cabin,  we had nowhere to put it, at least not close enough to a plug.  So we sat it on  the counter between the kitchen and the dining room.  The darkened glass front  facing the kitchen, with the trendy, dark walnut appliqué covering the sides,  and the bare back facing the dining room.  To add some style to the back, I put  a Castrol sticker on the back, just like the ones we all had on our vans and  tool boxes, and like the one my friend Joe, a tuner for Cal Rayborn, had on his  wooden leg.  It definitely did more for his leg-trust me.  Some things do go out  of style.   But Theresa's cooking got better, to great, and we all learned that  reading directions was good, but following them was better.
 I was a part time student going full time at UNM before I got married, and  took a course called history of Christianity, in which I was not the only one  misled.  It was really the history of religion, and taught by two men.  The  first, an Irish Catholic, so conservative even his skin was gray to match his  clothing and salt and pepper hair, who talked so fast we thought he was on  speed, and never answered questions.  His co-professor was the perfect  compliment.  A Mormon, who with his long beard looked like a 100 year old  Brigham Young, or a comatose Santa.  And didn't talk, and never answered  questions.  For the final exam, I was ready.  And the exam was, Describe in  detail the three most important events in Christianity.  For almost three blue  books, my 18 month old Christian brain exploded, telling of the immaculate  conception and birth, the death, and the resurrection of Jesus Christ.  An A  paper if there ever was one.  But unfortunately that was not what they had  taught, they wanted things like the birth of Mormonism, Constantine's divine  revelation, and the Martin Luther story.  And so I got a D!  And the rest of us  who were Christians did too, except for Florabelle's Pastor Sam, who did well.   He gave them what they wanted, and although we questioned his doctrines-his  denomination denied the deity of Jesus, he got an A because he had listened and  followed directions.
 Just like Nicodemus did with Jesus.  when Jesus told him he must be born  again, he questioned it.  And then this powerful, both rich and religiously man,  risked it all when he gave his life to Jesus, and became Born Again.  He not  only heard the directions, he followed them.
 Are you a follower of Jesus?  Or do you just go along with a denomination,  or a family tradition?  It is not enough to read and know what to do, but to do  it.  There is a difference in reading the instructions, and following them.   From microwaves, to final exams, follow the directions.  Your final exam will  some day be, who do you say Jesus is?  Only as a follower will you know for  sure.  
 love with compassion,
 Mike
 matthew25biker.blogspot.com