20.4.14

Runner's log—somewhere in the not-so-distant future: Failure

As of today, it has been 354 days since I last posted anything on this blog (frankly, I could calculate it down to exact hours and seconds, but accurate recording would require hitting the back button that would edge me closer to the rabbit hole precipice that threatens to ensure I will never actually finish this post, thank you pinterest). As for the runner's log, it's been easily longer than that, by at least a few months. In both categories of interest—running and other things—I would like to say that I've been unceasingly productive... in the case of the latter, I have indeed been slaving over word processing and digital design programs (see my design blog), creating theses and portfolio projects and education plans, oh my! But in regards to the former, I'll refer you to a quote from my very first runner's log:

I hate running.  Nine months of this cyclical start and stop, physical and mental bludgeoning in pursuit of self-betterment has taught me that. But my better, non-guilt-driven side feels there's something inherently good about the potential of all of this, so I want to like it, or at least be at ease with it.  So I've decided to start over, start small for real.  No goals, no playlists, no apps, no schedule restrictions, no judgement, no punishment.  Just me and my two legs.  We'll see how it goes.

Swap out nine months for (gasp!) two years, and exactly nothing has changed. Which, I suppose, is a credible excuse for why I haven't written, although, my better conscience would argue, not entirely accurate. I still keep trying, and I still keep letting time slide by with my butt in a chair and a computer on my lap, convincing myself, mid-solitaire break (yep, it's a crucial part of research), that I can't possibly spare a wee little hour to lace up my shoes and hit the road. It's not like I'm inactive; I walk to catch the bus or ride my bicycle to campus and take evening strolls and rides... ditched the cable a long time ago, so there's no food network marathons to steal my hours away (although the interwebz with its kittehs and Ted talks does a significant job of that all on its own). And yet, I still manage to not have time for running when I'm not obligated to do so, as demonstrated by the fact that I've spent the past few months training with some friends for an upcoming fun run and on only two occasions have I ventured out on my own.

The second of these occasions happened to be a few hours ago. I've been reading Christopher McDougall's Born to Run, a journalistic narrative about his quest to find the hidden secret of the world's top, and mostly unknown runners—ultramarathoning mountain goat runners who zip gleefully up and down treacherous trails at impossible elevation grades in unfathomable conditions. The secret, it seems, is to simply run for the love of running. To be unencumbered by the performance science de rigueur, and to drop obligatory notions of getting faster, going farther, edging out the competition, fitting into the skinny jeans, or whatever reason it was that got you started in the first place. He recounts the idea that we have forgotten what it's like to be a kid; to just run at top speed for as long as you can just for the hell of it... not even thinking about running, just pure, zealous play. Needless to say, I was inspired (it's a good read, even if you're not a fan of running, which, as I'll discuss momentarily, is a preference that I haven't been able to shake). I put down my book mid-chapter, crawled out of bed (hey, it's summer break... there's no shame lazing about reading a book all damned day), and jogged right out the front door. No route in mind, no timer in hand, no headphones, no goal. I just wanted to run. If these people could run 135 miles in Death Valley, surely I could do a couple around the neighborhood. In fact, I didn't even commit myself to that tiny goal. My new goal was to run until I felt like I was done.

The lifetime channel ending of this story is that I trotted along happily to find that I had completely outdone myself, pleasantly surprised at learning what I could do if I just let loose. The first part of that actually did happen. For about ten minutes. After I pressed my legs through their initial contentious achiness, I strode easily, falling into a rhythm between my breath and the padding of my feet on the asphalt. But soon enough I found myself pushing, my pace was no longer a glide so much as a weighted clopping, and I struggled to be mindfully appreciative of the occasional cool breeze or patch of shade. And then the true bludgeoning began. The "surely I can go a couple of miles" optimism chanted by the angel on my left became "seriously, you can't even go two fucking miles? You're a joke," taunted by the devil on my right. I tried to shield myself with the reminder that I started with no goals and there was no shame, no failed expectations if I needed to stop. So I pressed myself to the next stopping point and passed it, taking a little pride in my Lilliputian demonstration of tenacity and focused on recalling the blithe, light moments of my youth. And in that moment, my legs stopped cold, holding fast on the concrete like a mule at the back of a pack line. I don't actually remember doing much at full speed when I was a child. In fact, I was the dawdler, reluctant, analytical, and ponderous, always a good ten paces behind everyone else. Me? Run? What a waste. I walked sluggishly back to my house, entering as a hunched shadow where I had hopped out bright and hopeful only minutes before.

"Hey, you should be proud that at least you got out there." It's what I would have told any of my friends who were struggling, and I would have meant it. But applied to my own wounds, it seemed a trite and complacent remedy, a band-aid over a bruise. It dawned on me as I was walking that I was too ready to accept failure, or at least what I thought of as failure. I've spent all of this time thinking that failure pushes me to do what I need. Sometimes I push forward in fear that it will catch me, and other times I turn to battle it.
 ***
Sometimes, even, I quit in the midst of my own determined consideration... as in then, however many months ago (over 6, mind you), that I began this post. I remember being tired of my own complaining, thinking that nobody would care. Now, reading in retrospect, it seems all at once trivial and rebuking. I haven't put on my running shoes perhaps more than 3 times since then, and I'm guessing most of those were when I couldn't find my slip-ons to make a quick errand to the store.

I guess the point is that I'm not here to kid anyone, especially myself, but sometimes it happens anyway. Mostly, I guess in some ironic opposition to the definition of failure, I succeed by deceiving myself into thinking that I can't do it. So I give up. But then, sometimes straggling and defeated, exhausted and emotionally starved, I give in to that little nagging voice. I always come back. Always. As for the running? I'm sure I'll start again someday. And have to restart again some day after that.

For now, I should probably go back to whatever serious work it is that I've been avoiding.

Typetrigger: Garnet

"It's all in the wavelength," she paraphrased, staring down at the book. "What our brain perceives as color depends completely on the condition of the phenomena that enters the eye." Her hand ran over the familiar spectral grid, pausing to scratch at a speck of mystery gunk that has a tendency to dry on the interior pages of hand-me-down texts. "A simple shift can change the way you see."

"What do you see now?" her studio partner asked hesitantly. She intimidated him in every way imaginable. Her company was never comfortable, and yet he could hardly deny his curiosity the chance to satiate itself on the glut of her enigmatic tendencies.

"This." She nodded, and without looking down grasped two tubes of acrylic paint and squeezed them forcefully onto the table between them. Her gaze locked onto his widening eyes as she grabbed his right hand, pushing it into the cold, viscous puddle, sliding it vigorously over the wood grain.

He breathed in sharp shock at the sensation, and looked down to see that the black and red pigments had emulsified into a biologically alarming hue. It sloshed over his fingers, flooding into the valleys of his hand; the immediate aftermath of an invisible injury from which he tried instinctively to retract, but her grasp held firm.

"What do you see?" She mocked in a girlish tone of apparent self-amusement. She pressed his left hand to the table and slid his stiff fingers between and around each other, tittering subtly at the sucking noises of the slowly drying liquid. Suddenly, she lifted his palms toward her face, examining them for a moment.

"This is what I see," she announced seriously, turning his hands to slap them across his eyes and mouth. "Hold on, I need to get my camera." - See more at: http://typetrigger.com/trigger/garnet#sthash.vrT0Xwsp.dpuf

30.7.12

Typetrigger: The entertainment


“Did you see this shit?!”  Maggie broadcast her disgust to anyone within earshot as she ripped a screaming yellow poster off of the bulletin board in the breezeway.  The newly loosened shingles in the cache of “roommate wanted”s flapped their disapproval as she stormed by.

“Seriously, look.”  She grabbed my arm and thrust the cheap copy in my face.  I grinned.

“If you put as much time into rehearsal as you do into practicing your model pout, we’d be on posh tour bus somewhere in France by now.”

“Do you ever get tired of being such a bitch?”  The fake snarl barely covered her amusement. “Besides, that’s not what I’m talking about…… This.”  She stabbed her finger emphatically at a blurry byline.

“And more,”  I read out loud and immediately clamped my mouth shut.  It would have been better to feign ignorance and duck into the nearest life drawing class.  Naked people are always a good diversion.  Instead I asked the dumbest question in the world: “So...?”

“SO!?”  Her perfectly lined eyes and always-glossy mouth stayed fixed in the roundness of the vowel sound for what seemed like an interminable amount of time until her built-up store of contempt was exhausted.  

When she finally snapped out of her plastic form, the stabby finger had found a new target on my shoulder.

“Come on, Elly, I thought you helped organize this whole festival thing.  And yet somehow we get tucked into a teeny thumbnail in the bottom corner where the only attention we’re going to get is a staple through the face?”

“It’s a fundraiser, not a festival.  We’re there just to look pretty and croon sweet, cash-jerking siren songs.”

“Jeezus, again?  Do we at least get a tip jar?”

"Don't hold your breath."

24.7.12

Typetrigger: wish it were


I wonder what it’s like
to wish things were different,
to have turned so wrong
somewhere
or be turned so wrong
by someone,
by something.
I wonder what it’s like
to stop pretending that life,
unedited,
shouldn’t include regret,
or sorrow,
or guilt,
or fear.
         because everything has gone
according to plan.
I wonder what it’s like
when everything has gone.
When you’ve spent too much
time wishing what could have been
instead of living what is.

6.7.12

Can someone please pull the plug on the loudspeaker?

I am a Christian.  That statement may come not come to you as a surprise, or maybe it does.  In either case, my guess is that it provoked a reaction from you, dear reader friend, as it does in me every time I hear it, and every time I say it.  The C-word carries a lot of weight in our society, an extra tonnage of pounds that many people would like to shed.  And most Christians are aware of the growing trend of resentment, even embracing a Biblical foretelling that we would be known as the "scum of the earth" as a badge of prophetic honor (the reference is in I Corinthians Chapter 4 for anyone who is curious).  Although it seems to me, given humanity's broad propensity for taking all things out of context, that not enough people have stopped to wonder if the title is one that has been earned for less righteous actions than those that were originally prescribed.

Case in point: Whites-only Christian gathering riles some Alabama neighbors.  I cringe any time I see the word Christian in a headline, and I really don't think I even need to explain why, but I will.  These kinds of stories shine a blinding spotlight in the willfully ignored corners of our society where all kinds of bigotry, hatred and fear are climbing the walls, looking for any crack in which to take hold.  And there is a perceptually overwhelming frequency with which the name of Christianity is associated with this type of mentality.  This disturbs me greatly.  It would be easy to ignore the headlines and dismiss the behavior as extremism and rest my conscience comfortably within the truth that this is not who I am.  It would also be easy to disavow the sullied image by blaming the media for artificially inflating the judgment that Christians are all backward, hateful, fearmongers who bite the heads off small puppies and dance the secret serpent cha cha to the bongo rhythm of the palm tree forests......                                ahem.

The point is that either one of those responses completely overlook the bigger problem here.  The people who belong to the "whites-only" organization in the aforementioned article are real.  Their beliefs about people of white European descent being the chosen ones of God are real.  The destructive potential of those beliefs about righteous superiority is real, as demonstrated by horrific and condemned events throughout history.  The fact that they are doing this all in the name of Christianity and cowering behind the protection of freedom of speech is very real.

Frankly, I'm getting tired of acts of hatred and social injustice being carried out under a belief system that, by name, I happen to share.  There are many of us in the Christian community who believe that no rights should be withheld from or bias made against any person, regardless of gender, race, sexual orientation, religious belief, political affiliation, or economic class, and furthermore, that it is our duty to stand up for the stewardship of our global and local communities and the environment we live in under the core belief that God's love is available to and accessible for all.  You don't hear from most of us for many reasons (which would require a whole other entry to explore), but there are times when it is appropriate and necessary to combat "protected" speech, not by restricting a person's right to say it, but by drowning it out with equally protected words of our own.

When gatherings are called for whites-only religious leaders, we need to say "This is wrong!"; or when messages of hate and condemnation against gays and immigrants are levied at funerals (or any other forum), we need to say "This is wrong!"  When they harass women in need of medical treatment, burn holy books, claim manifest destiny, and rewrite the texts of history, we need to stand up and say, "No more!  Not in my name!  This. Is. WRONG!"

So go ahead.  Speak up.

"Those who have the privilege to know, have the duty to act."
- Albert Einstein


16.6.12

Typetrigger: Future Plans

"Tell me about your 5 year plan." 

Such a strange prompt.  A skeezy motivational mantra picked up by some entrepreneurial ponytail yuppie at a financial empowerment convention that became the blazing signifier of the capitally ambitious.  The prime opportunity to demonstrate one's perfect application of strategy, drive, and confidence.  And the ultimate corporate Freud-probe designed to opportunistically sniff out the most opportunistic of candidates.   

Like most interview questions, it is not directed at gauging who you are truthfully as a candidate, it is more a measure of how cleverly you can structure your response to get the desired result.  All parties benefit from a little lie.  Too big, and you can't be trusted; planning on going to the moon shows your head is in the clouds.  Too small, and they can't feed off of your meager motives.  Too honest, and they don't believe you anyway. 

My favorite response? 

"Well, I plan to be alive in 5 years." 

Without fail, it sets off an alert that flashes from behind the panicked pupils of my would-be skill set parasite.  Either this woman hasn't the self-respect to set expectations, or she has no respect for the institutional order of success - either way she is out of control.  Who doesn't know what we want to hear? 

Then I laugh.  And he or she laughs, because we all want to communicate that we got the joke, even though we're not entirely sure we got the joke. 

And I say after a contented, drawn out sigh, "Really though, I see myself... (pausing for visionary effect) ...in a corner office, working out the details of a plan with my strongest team players to enhance productivity and encourage and reward buy-in from employees at all levels in the department." 

Because I want the job.   And a shower.

23.5.12

Runner's Blog - Certifiable

So this is gonna be a quickie.... inasmuch as I am actually capable of such things.  One week later = 3 weeks into the 30 day workout and a new crunch time goal for running training.  And by crunch time, I mean "stumbled on an entry slot for a race this Saturday" crunch time.  (look here, and you'll see in full color my sudden obsession with entering something official).  Yesterday, I just happened to mention off-hand that I was bummed about the sold-out status of the race, and my new baker friend Liz called me to the table as a replacement for someone with an unfortunate injury.  She didn't know I was bluffing, so I had to see her bet before she could call my hand, which means getting serious about doing some running so I don't make a complete ass out of myself in three days.

This is how I work best.

Most people around me would probably say that I am a very strategic, analytical, and deliberate thinker.  It's not that they would be wrong, it's just that for all the time I spend analyzing and strategizing, most of it goes out the window when it comes time for me to make the final call.  It seems as though a disproportionately huge amount of my active successes in life are achieved as the result of pushing myself to meet some unrealistic, ill-timed goal brought on by a gut instinct decision: DO IT, OR DON'T.  In this case, I'm doing it (provided that all the registration can be transferred over, blah blah boring stuff).  And to get prepped, I dropped the pretense, plugged in the tunes, fired up the training app, did the stretching and the timing, and even the "hardcore" workout, and then I went running.  4.5k.  And I feel pretty good.  What was all the fuss about again?