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About

My name is Eric Lee and I am married to the wonderful Tiana Reinhardt Lee.  We were married on May 20, 2006.  We have been living in San Diego since 97/98 when we arrived to start our undergraduate education.  We are members of the Church of the Nazarene in Mid-City for the past 5-6 years.

My first degree was a BA in Computer science at Point Loma Nazarene University (PLNU).  The summer before my senior year I started working as a Web Programmer at BlueHornet Networks, Inc., and remained there for a total of five years.

In January of 2006 I began an MA program in Religion with a concentration in Theology at PLNU, and am currently in the thesis-writing process, hoping to be finished by May 2008.

In August of 2006 I switched jobs and am currently a Systems Analyst at Point Loma Nazarene University in the IT department.  This has made the commute to classes much easier, although I intend to begin my PhD studies by the Fall of 2008 which would mean a shift to full-time studies.  At this point, we are still waiting to hear on funding to determine where this will be…

One Response to “About”

  1. Hello Eric,

    I doubt you remember, but I’ve posted some comments to previous posts on your blog, although I haven’t in a long time. I read your blog regularly however. I like your stuff. My original point of interest was learning you were originally from Merced. Since I grew up in Los Banos, as you might imagine, I spent a lot of time in Merced and, in fact, still have several friends there.

    Anyway, I am writing to see if you could share some wisdom with a fellow Central Valleyean. Almost on a lark, I submitted an abstract for a paper to be presented at the September conference (Reason and…something) in Spain. Well, I received an e-mail from Connor Cunningham today telling me my abstract had been accepted. I thought, “cool.” But then it dawned on me that I have no idea what that means or what I do now. He sent a link for some form to fill out, but they want credit card info and such. Do I have to pay to submit something? I just don’t get it. Any help would be greatly appreciated. Thank you.

    -Darrell

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