Sunday, September 25, 2011

Barefoot (sort of) Running

Just like everyone else, I have been reading Born to Run by Christopher McDougall. It is an interesting read. Though the book drags a bit at times, and can be preachy and a little loose with the correlation-causation relationships, I am enjoying a new look at my favorite sport. And since I never met a bandwagon I didn't like, I decided to give it a try in a pair of New Balance WT10 Minimus Trail Running Shoes. If anything, I can wear them around and strengthen my footsies. Plus they are light and packable for traveling in the event I need more than flip flops for a trip somewhere warm.

I already run in what is probably a step above racing flats. This is because; a) I don't need to spend $140+ on a pair of running shoes, and b) I don't have any real injuries, aside from an occasionally achy right knee after long or fast runs. I thought I would take to these shoes in an unusually over-achievingly quick way. Never mind that they say start with 5 minutes a day, the next week 10 minutes, and so on. I'll head out for a 5 miler on the country roads by the house.

What happened next is so shockingly predictable. To be fair, this is the kind of thing we all have stories or have heard stories about: I tried a new bike seat/gel/running shoes/jog bra/energy bar/etc. during a race, and it went terribly wrong. I barfed, bonked, bled, whatever....... Yah, this story is so common, it is comical. So you can imagine where this is going. Ah yes - an easy, flat five miles in my new shoes.

The shoes actually quite comfortable and all was great until the last mile where my calves were cramping and the plantar-facsiitis (thankfully dormant for the last 5 years) in my right foot started acting up, NOOOOOOO. Oh and I had a blister on my heel. I am a dumbass. The next morning I had a very sore right foot and tight calves. Lesson learned.

So I will keep you updated on my future forays into barefoot running. I will plan to do only 5 minutes per day next week while in Poland.......awesome.

Thursday, September 22, 2011

October Travel Craziness - Get Ready

Fasten your seatbelts, or in Dave's case don't (he has this weird thing going where he shows the airlines who is boss and refuses to wear his seatbelt - it is really embarrassing when he gets caught now and then). October is going to be quite a ride. We are headed to Wroclaw for a week, then long weekends in Copenhagen, Budapest, and Paris. Three new countries for both of us (Poland, Denmark, and Hungary), and one classic return to France. It sounds more daunting than it really is, I mean all of these cities are about a 1-hour flight from London.

So let's update, thus far we have been to:

#1 - UK
#2 - Ireland
#3 - Amsterdam

I will be leaving the Midwest on Sunday. Not much more to report on this trip. I have just been doing some bike rides, cooking weird veggies for the fam (such as escarole and beets), and generally being quite lazy. I am really looking forward to returning to London. I have a giant list of restaurants, museums, and bars still to visit!

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Mr. Mom


You know those movies where the wife goes away and the father is left in charge of the house and the children and all hell breaks loose painting the picture that men are morons? Keep in mind that as a liberated male specimen in the new century these movies irritate me. Perhaps they are meant to show the "fish out of water" hilarity or specifically designed by men in secret to ensure that women will do housework in our stead (let's be honest men hate doing it and women seem to derive some sense of satisfaction in telling us we are doing it wrong). Both theories aside, I do like to cook, clean things (that interest me in being clean and that I care about) and most of all understand the house doesn't run it's self. I help out, I'm not incompetent. Just because I don't and never will understand the point of "cleaning the house up cause the maid is coming" or "guests are coming over so let's polish the marble floor before a BBQ where 5 min after is starts you won't be able to tell what color the floor was in the first place, let alone know if it was clean before 97% of the guests get there". I do get the point of a clean toilet, clean linens and a general state of order. These things are important and do reflect on the house you keep. I'm getting off track. My point is after doing my own laundry for 20 years I made one of those Mr. Mom moments. I washed my shit with a two bit flea market scarf Amie bought likely in Nepal giving back to the village people.
Towel on right - natural state. Towel on left, after the washing.
Tally:
5 pairs of underwear a nice shade of deep blue mystery - at least you can't see my pee stains anymore.
1 Towel that no longer has a brother.
3 - Pairs of socks that look well, different - can't say they're ruined?
1 - Pair of Khakis that looks sort of aqua marine - I've been wearing them to work anyway. People either like them or they are being nice.
A bunch of other shit that doesn't affect me - Amie's stuff - her fault - moving on.

Lemon's - lemonade sure, I'm rolling with it.
My fault - No. How would I know some Paki would use a whole box of Rit to dye some two bit scarf that would stain metal.

Point - I don't know but two things are true. I don't like men being portrayed as bumbling idiots in the female role at home (and neither should you for reasons stated above). The other, people wall off what they want to control in a tit for tat environment so who am I to disturb the cold war raging between men and women since.....

Monday, September 19, 2011

Updates & Americans Abroad

I haven't chimed in on Amie's blog lately so I thought I'd give you a few updates in no specific order or importance.

Alaska - Alaska deserves it's own post so I'll not do that here but it was amazing and we will do a full update with pictures and witty commentary.

Eye-Ball - If you've been reading this blog for a while you'll remember my near blind experience. While in the Bay Area after Alaska I flew to Utah to "see" my Eye Doctor real quick. Happy to report that my right eye "the good one" is still, well, good. My left eye, from my own diagnosis, hadn't gotten any worse and I estimated that if anything had improved only marginally. After the bright light blinding scans and scopes the doctor confirmed that my eye, still is recovering nicely and the "fluid pocket" causing my distorted vision and blind spot has receded by 25%. Hopefully be end of year it will have improved enough so that I can actually read using that eye. No complaints however, the prior diagnosis would have meant this was permanent.

Family - While in Utah I saw my family. Family is family which means they are simultaneously awesome as well as infuriating. Two cases in point.

1. My sister and her family are awesome. Always happy to see me, shows pictures of me and talks about me enough that my little niece and nephew remember me when I come and they let me jack up their children pretty much unabated (last visit taught 2 year old how to run with sparklers in each hand). Right after my eye appointment was over I called my sister to see if I could "drop by" to see Dexter (my nephew) today on his birthday. I don't think she even knew I was in town before the call but invitation to lunch with them and I'm on my way. Stopped by the toy store to get the most awesomely cool thing that he'd like that would simultaneously drive his parents crazy. Nerf like bow and arrow thing later and we're in full "ninja mode" systematically taking out items of value all over the house. Thanks for including me in the big day and letting me around your children despite the court order.

2. Mothers and pet peeves. I know they say that you can tell a lot about a person by how they treat their mother. Let's be fair here, I love my mother. I am the man I am today because of her (no, the good stuff). I treat my mother very well to her face and since she'll never read this I can say what I want here. Anyway let me back up here. Amie has learned the hard way that I don't respond well to people eating of my plate. If you want a bite, great fine, ask for a bite and I'll be happy to load up your fork or push my plate closer to you so you can do it your self. What I don't like is this un-invited encroachment on what is my personal food stash. Now this may sound a bit heavy handed but....you need to understand that this stems from, well my mother. For years growing up my mother did something that still doesn't make a lot of sense to me. She likes to sample everything everyone else is eating but won't get her own. There IS a difference between tasting and grazing. If you have a bowl of cereal, she'll walk to the drawer, get a spoon out and come and start "eating your cereal" right along with you. Have a plate of mac and cheese, fork on in. Have some sort of finger food, fingers diving right* in. No warning or otherwise reason for this behavior, she's clearly had cereal before and understand that it takes maybe 30 seconds to make a small bowl for yourself so why get into my personal space to eat my food right in my face? When confronted with this feature of my mother including the disgusted pushing food away from me and saying "here you finish it" the response is always the same. "No, I just wanted a bite", as she's now 4 bites in and has irrevocably tainted* my food and put me off to whatever I'm eating. Needless to say, Amie's been at the receiving end of my vitriol for acceptable versions of this simply due to the build up of resentment I have over this from my mother, who despite being told for years to stop doing this, did anyway.

15 years later on my latest trip to Utah my mother is still at it. I took this picture as she reached over my lap and proceeded to re-image my greatest pet peeve directly attributable to my mother. Mom, if you ever somehow find this blog and read this, I love you and I'm not sorry I wrote this.

Sam - On a brighter note I also got to see Sam, my Ex-Dog while at my sisters. Sam is doing well, he sleeps all day and tolerates the kids. He of course was very happy to see me and launched a "flying hurachi" at me when I got there with accompanying whine. He's staked out a futon downstairs, uses the doggy door, rolls around in the grass and walks the kids to the bus stop. I think he's eased into his "retirement" as Grand dog to my nephews very well. Amie obviously misses him and is in denial (see picture) as she tired to walk a bus stop ad dog in SF and believes that she'll get him back in 2013.


Walking around on Sunday I got to see the final few laps of the Tour of Britain (UK's version of the Tour de France). It was cool to see and although Amie would have enjoyed it much more than I. It made me think that watching the Tour de France would be best done in the country side on a hill so you could see it much closer and slower to enjoy. See video here to see what you wait 17 minutes per lap to see.


Americans - Now that I've been in London for a whopping two months and can "blend in" (not really) I've started to notice more about my countrymen. Americans are obnoxious. Why is it we can't help but be loud, obvious and uneducated looking or sounding? Two cases in point. I went out to dinner Friday with a UK (ok he is actually Irish but he's lived in the UK long enough) friend and while at the bar he simply says, "when you get a chance look to your nine o'clock". We continue to drink and chat and roughly a minute later I glance over when adjusting my sitting stance anyway. Gordon Ramsey is sitting there with some other dude my friend knew but I didn't recognize. Tact decorum and discretion all ruled the event....until an American saw him. I understand why celebrities don't go out in public.

Second case in point. I walked over the one large sports bar in all of London to watch the NFL on Sunday. Let's just say this. When I got there all the British Soccer fans were there watching Man U vs. Chelsea (Man U 3 Chelsea 1) , they were rowdy but fun and I wouldn't call them the most behaved people but they don't constantly and pervasively display levels of simultaneous ignorance and over bearing self importance. American's on the other hand (and this is just a collection of the things I saw and overheard in the Sports bar from a collection of Americans).

Guy wearing a Dallas Cowboys polo, perfectly creased chinos, cowboy boots, blue belt with US flags all the way round, blue hat with US flag plastered on the front as he stomped around the bar in his boots, grabbing his crotch endlessly while speaking loudly on his cell phone in a Texas accent saying such things as, "Bobby did you see my boy play this mornin, he was on fire and I can't tell you how much I love to see that boy run".

Guy from San Jose (at least he was a Niner fan), saying in contempt that larger TV room had European Basketball (Finland vs.Croatia) on instead of the 49er / Dallas game. Let's keep in mind two things here - there were 8 of us watching the 49ers game. There were 60 watching the European basketball finals (a game the US invented mind you) and this asshole thinks that the bar should put on what he believes is the only possible choice for a TV in a bar in London?

And finally the relatively plump unattractive up state New Yorker who simply gave her opinion on everything under the sun (by my estimate about 40% of what she said was factually inaccurate, but that didn't stop her from sharing) while simultaneously hitting on anything that moved as she slowly made her way around the bar like Jabba the Hut looking for snacks.

Punch line - People are amazing, both good and bad and while a few weeks ago I ripped the British a new one I've found that context matters a lot. One day you are looking down your nose at somebody and the next you realize somebody else was looking down their nose at you. We are all part of the problem and I guess all I ask is a little self reflection and humor on the world will go a long way.

Small reminder - our stay is 10% over. If you don't make arrangements to visit us soon we'll be home by the time you get your shit together. Way to go A&J who have made the first confirmed commitment to join us in Europe. Austria and Scotland!

* If you noticed the asterisk in the section about my mother and you've read this far here you go. Instead of simply eating over your shoulder (the proximity to my face while she did this was only half the problem). The other is that my mom did something else that made this experience untenable. When using either a fork/spoon or her fingers to share in my food bounty she would "clean" her implements by licking them clean in between session of food plundering. So if the simple act of sharing my food is what you think bothered me so much now you really know why this set me off. Even though Amie, nor anyone else I know does this, the damage is done. Sorry to Amie who has to experience the aftershocks of this behavior to modern day. We've come up with a very cordial way to share food in our relationships to avoid conflict and flashbacks. PS. "the offender" can be seen in the background of my nephew picture.



Thursday, September 15, 2011

A Little More Morris


They say that traveling makes you appreciate your own backyard. I totally agree with that. The best thing about living in London is that everything and everyplace is new and interesting. Even better, when I come home - be it to San Francisco, Palo Alto, or Morris - I look at things just a little differently. I see details that I might have otherwise missed or taken for granted. As such, I took a little jog/ride around Morris this morning and took my camera. It was the most beautiful day and I had a very Zen experience, perhaps it was just endorphins. In any case, enjoy this little taste of the Midwest.


My ride, I must look like I am a special ed student pedaling around the city on this -
absolutely no offense to special ed students!



Dave, we are getting one of these.


This is some sort of farm-related something. I thought it looked cool.


My favorite tree.


Whole lotta nothing on my run.


Even more nothing.

Monday, September 12, 2011

San Francisco to Morris

It was quite a whirlwind week in SF. I feel like I barely took a breath all week. We stayed at the glorious Fairmont for 6 nights, but didn't really get to enjoy it because we were just so all over the place the whole time. (OK - that is a bit of a lie, I did enjoy the Fairmont immensely since we normally stay at crapholes.)

We managed to fit in a few great dinners, spent some time catching up with friends, and reacquainted ourselves with our respective U.S.-based workplaces. Point is, we had a great time but I need to sleep for about 4 days to make up for it. I feel like we tried to jam 20 lbs. of activities and friends into a 10 lb. bag - or however that expression goes. I wish we would have had more time to see our beautiful friends and hang with my super cool coworkers. After all, look at all the sweet post-it messages I got from my work peeps on Friday before I left for the day.

I feel so loved.

The following is a sad example of how over-scheduled the week was. I emailed one particularly lovely friend to see if we could arrange dinner together. I believe the conversation went something like this.

Me: Hey, lets get together on Wednesday or Friday.

Friend: Yeah either day is fine.

Me: Wait, I have bookclub on Wednesday. How about Friday?

Friend: OK.

Me: Actually I leave at 6:00 am on Saturday and need to go to finish a bunch of work on Friday night before I leave. I have to cancel Friday too.

Friend: ...........

I am an asshole.

I flew to Chicago yesterday and Dave went back to London. Today my sister and I ran the Chicago Half-marathon and our mommy ran the 5K. We all kicked some bootie and finished with smiles on our faces. After the race, we went and visited my brand new baby niece.

See, still smiling at the finish!


Me and my niece, crappy photo I know. I am not sure what my sister is doing over there in the corner.

I am now in Morris, Illinois. The next 2 weeks will consist primarily of Midwestern-ish adventures. Perhaps there will be a little Six Flags-Great America action, a trip along the IM Canal by bike, lots of cooking with the fam, cheap beer drinking, etc. More to come!

Tuesday, September 6, 2011

Back in the USA

The Alaska trip is over. Whoosh, that was a lot of traveling in a short amount of time. Overall I give the trip and the company (Innersea Discoveries) mixed reviews. More on that tomorrow when I feel like writing. Just note that no one ever needs to visit Wrangell, Alaska, do not be fooled by the awesomeness on the website.

For tonight, I am enjoying spoiling myself at the Fairmont SF, watching too much Travel Channel and trashy stuff on E (no TV at our flat in London), and laying low. I did buy a divine pair of skinny black jeans and washed our gross Alaska laundry, I am not entirely idle.

Kick-ass book I just finished and must mention, How To Be a Woman.


I love this woman. I am so going to stalk her when I get back to London.


The book is a HUGE hit in the UK and I just loved it. I laughed out loud (a lot) while reading this one, embarrassing Dave - but that is nothing new, I am often embarrassing. Man it was a welcome read after The Cellist of Serajevo, which was divine but I wanted to kill myself after reading it. WTF, how did I not know a thing about the Siege of Sarajevo. Oh wait 1992 to 1996, I was busy "studying" at UCSB. Good god.