General

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Lately I’ve been dealing with some respiratory issues which have been limiting my ability to run either very hard or for very long. It’s been frustrating, especially since I just recovered from an issue with my iliotibial band and was hoping to get back into running more frequently and for longer distances. I’m lucky if I get in 15 miles a week, which for some runners would not be nearly enough. Luckily I do not equate a high-mileage week with running success. I am one of those people who do a little or a lot and I’m just as happy either way. I’ve got more than enough to keep me busy otherwise so it is a testament to how much I really enjoy running that I make any time for it at all. That said, I do miss it when I can’t do it for several days in a row. I begin to feel restless and think, “I want to go for a run. No, I need to go for a run.”

So for the past couple weeks, even when I wanted to, I knew I wouldn’t have the lungs for it, and would end up feeling faint and breathless after only a mile or so. I’ve struggled through a few tough ones, just to get through them, and didn’t feel any better for having done it.  I had my first really good run in a while last night with both lungs and legs holding their own and not giving me much trouble. I did have a little inspiration, though.

I’m generally a very healthy person, and yes, I’m knocking on wood as I say this. I don’t fall ill too often, and when I do it always feels like the world is crashing in around me. When I feel poorly I always think, “how do people with chronic conditions cope?” and I feel very thankful for my health and the health of all my family. I spoke on the phone with my mother yesterday afternoon and after catching up a bit and telling her about how I’d been feeling, and her listening, being the ever sympathetic mom that she is, no doubt wishing she could do something to make me feel better. I ask her what’s happening on her end, then she pauses and asks me, “Has Katie called you yet?”

Kate is one of my older sisters. I don’t talk to her often, but not because we don’t get along or anything. We’re just not phone people and generally we can’t get a hold of each other even when we do want to talk, so we catch up whenever we get together. My mom proceeded to give me the low down, which was that Kate had been experiencing some pains in her neck and arm and it gradually got worse until she saw a doctor and they determined she had a “bulging disc” in her back, near  the base of her neck.  I don’t know much about this condition, but after talking to my mom and then later to my sister I found out that it’s usually caused by some sort of trauma (like a car accident or bad fall-though they can’t account for how this happened) and it is extraordinarily painful and does not have a high success rate for recovery. She wakes up every morning in pain, and despite the course of meds they’ve tried on her, not much works and when it does the relief is very brief. She’s had pains in her arm making her unable to lift it and when she moves her neck she sometimes feels as though “the muscles in my back are ripping apart.”

My sister is a very tough person. One of the toughest people I know. So tough, that when she went to ER the nurses were convinced she was  only having muscle spasms. My sister works in the medical field and insisted that was not the problem. They were shocked when they got the results of her CT scan. I guess they imagined she would have been a quivering mass considering the pain she must have been in. Talking to her about all this, she was calm and pulled together, and had a great sense of humor about the whole thing. They want her to have surgery right away, or as my sister put it, “the doctor is cut-happy.” My sister is going through physical therapy this week, to try and see if there is a way to avoid surgery. These kind of surgeries have a low success rate and even with moderate success the recovery is long and grueling. Kate wants to seek alternate therapies but the doc told her not to have high expectations for anything like that to work, so she told the doctor, “Go ahead and schedule the surgery for two weeks out. Then, when I’ve recovered from this with therapy, I will give you a call and cancel that appointment.”

We had a great talk, but it left me feeling sad. Sad that there’s little I can do to help her and sad knowing how she must feel. She’s tougher than I am, has always been. She can deal with more pain and grief than I think I am capable, but I don’t see why that means she’s got to carry such a crapload of it. I would gladly take this pain from her if I could, though I know I wouldn’t handle it nearly as gracefully as she does. I also felt ridiculous for feeling so badly about my own lame condition. It certainly put things in perspective for me. Suddenly, I did not feel nearly as poorly as before. All my little aches and pains from pounding the pavement seemed so dull and faint, as if maybe I’d only imagined them to begin with.

Last night I ran, thinking of  my sister and not the little annoyances of my own body. They were all still there, the pains and the labored breathing, but for the first time in a while none of it bothered me. I listened to my music and I ran, thankful that I was able to do this and to really know what a blessing it is to move in a body that’s not nearly perfect, but perfect enough for what I need it to do everyday. It won’t always be this way, but I’m happy for it now and for however long it remains this way.

I’m praying that before long I can run with my sister, too.

She’s back

Thanks are in order to my husband Ernesto for fixing my hacked blog here and getting me off to yet another fresh start. I haven’t been making time for blogging but to my credit I’ve been busy with a host of other things, running still very much being one of them. I recently joined our local running club and have been taking part in interval training with them at the track. This is the first year I have included speed work in my training and after six weeks I’ve already seen a difference  in my performance. I added a new PR to my list of goals for this spring at the Concord Rock N’ Race 5K, and that was also the first time I ran for charity, which was long overdue. I haven’t quite decided what my new goals are for the rest of this year. Struggling with whether or not I want to do yet another 1/2 marathon. I find the training for it difficult to fit into my schedule and sometimes I feel like if I’m going to work that hard and put in so many miles I may as well just train for a full so I can finally say I’ve done it. I wouldn’t be aiming for any particular time- finishing it would be the goal, for sure.

Life is hectic around here, but fun. We’ve got end of year school business to finish up, a house and garden that both need a lot of tending to, writing and artwork being produced left and right and two parents who somehow find the time to fit some running in here and there. Ernesto just completed two marathons within six weeks of each other (the Boston Marathon and Vermont City Marathon) and amazingly pulled it off, finishing Boston at a blazing 3:12:49  and Vermont at 3:13:06. He felt great after Vermont and had about the best time at a race that he’d ever had, running for the Stonyfield team with three other friends.

More to come soon, but I just wanted to get an update in here to smooth out my blogging chops a bit.

Run strong out there.

It was gorgeous here today. Sunny, breezy, high close to 60. I had missed my chance at a run yesterday as for some reason Ernesto and I got it into our heads it would be a good day to stack firewood, clean out the garage and move some furniture around. Ya know, just a kickin’ back kind of fun Saturday. Something about this weather makes you do crazy stuff like that. The change in temps makes you view your surrounding a little differently, I guess.

But today I was determined to get out, if only for a quick run. I didn’t have much time since I was driving Ernesto to the airport later this afternoon as he was heading off for a business related trip. I did a quick 3 mile loop that I’ve done a hundred times, but it’s been a while since I’ve run it in temps over 30 degrees. The snow melt made for some crazy puddles, so it was kind of like a city adventure run of sorts. The new Saucony pro-grid’s I picked up a few weeks back at an expo are a little less “new” now, but that’s okay. I always feel a little self-conscious in clean running shoes and these are mostly white too. Well, they were, I mean.

So now I am hunkering down after a long day of fresh air (the kids of course did not care mom just came back from a run- they wanted to bike around the block a few times so off we went) and getting some home business stuff attended to. My face has that warm taut feeling you get from being out in the sun and air all day.

I’ll enjoy it while it lasts, because I hear it will be 30 and snowy tomorrow.

So I completed my first ever half-marathon a few weeks ago and I’m happy to have done it. But more than that, I’m happy to be done training for it. While it’s good to have that race date looming over as a reminder to get the miles in, it’s kind of a pain in the ass, too. Especially since this has been a brutal winter for training. I know us folks in the Northeast like to moan about the snow and cold all season long, but we have gotten socked with storm after storm and while I don’t mind running in the cold (sometimes I prefer it- the summer heat drains me during runs) the snow is sloppy and dangerous to run in. And it’s not as if anyone shovels their sidewalks, so if you dare to run in the road, you have to be prepared to hurl yourself sideways into the occasional snow bank because a car will most definitely come within a foot of clipping you at least a few times during your run. And even if you don’t get hit, you will step in several “mush puddles” of snow/ice/salt/dirt/water and arrive home with shoes a different hue than you started out with. And you can’t get your runs in early in the day (too dark out and bitterly cold) or too late in the afternoon (not as bitterly cold, yet still too dark) so that leaves you with middle of the day and I rarely get that luxury. Mostly I had to save my long runs for the weekends and during the week, suffer the treadmill at the gym (another beast entirely).

No, no more long winter races for me. I’m going to take advantage of all the other seasons as much as possible and leave the winter for more cross training and a more relaxed running schedule. I’m planning to register for a Mother’s Day 5k a few towns away. It’s enough to keep me motivated, but not too daunting a training schedule to have me frazzled.

I don’t know about all of you but I am looking forward to running in some real spring weather. Tomorrow is supposed to reach at least 50 and I’m going to take advantage of that. I imagine I’ll see more than the usual number of runners out on the road. Now I only have to figure out what to wear. Not exactly compression clothing weather. Maybe this spring I will be brave enough to wear one of these. Or maybe I’ll wait until I’m fast enough so that people won’t confuse me for a lady jogging over to the tennis court.

I saw this on another runner’s site today and wanted to share it here as well. I have a weird little habit of creating running commercials in my head when I go out for long runs, so I usually find these Nike running shoe ads very appealing. This one in particular is a good summary of the runner’s inner struggle just to keep going.

Beginning Again

I am back from a rather lengthy hiatus from the blogosphere. It wasn’t as if I didn’t have plenty to write about- I did. Enough to fill volumes, even and perhaps that was part of the problem. Too much rattling around in my head and not enough time, discipline or desire to get it all down. I needed some focus. And I think I’ve found it.

I like writing about my family. I like writing about the goofy things my kids say and do. I like writing about the frustrations and joys of being a mom and wife. I like writing about how much I hate the post office. I like writing about my deep love for chocolate and peanut butter.

I could go on, and so you see the problem.

Sure it’s fun to write about a little bit of everything and I plan to still do that. But I need something, a “hook” if you will to bring me back around when I get a little scattered. I wanted something about my blog to be consistent. I don’t want to be yet another mommy blogger who just needs to rant. Because when I feel the need to rant, I go out for a run instead.

And I’ll hope maybe you’ll come along. If you’re a mom who runs too, then great- I can’t wait to share stories with you. But no matter who you are, I hope you’ll come along with me for an occasional jog here. And don’t worry, you’ll be able to keep up because I’m not that fast. Yet.

Here’s a post I wrote last year on my old blog about running, just so you can get an idea where I’m coming from.

Running is sometimes like being in labor. It’s uncomfortable, hot and sweaty work. There’s some pain, sometimes lots of pain, and a great deal of heavy breathing. I try to control the rhythm of my breathing (in through the nose, out through the mouth and repeat) and keep focused on the goal of getting to the end. Of course at the end of labor you have a new baby and you can’t walk comfortably for several days. With running you just have the latter. Well, that’s not true now, of course. When I first got into running it was like that. I would run (ok, jog) and be thinking, “why am I doing this? Oh, this sucks so much. I should just stop now. No, I can’t stop now. If someone sees me they’ll think I’m some kind of wuss. Got… to… keep… going. Oh, someone kill me.” And all this just before reaching the end of my street.

That was the old days. Now I go out, feel good for the most part, get tired through the middle and usually finish up strong. I still get stitches, especially if I’ve eaten too much right before a run, and I get the occasional tweak in my foot or ankle that makes me have to take it easy for a few days here and there. I still breathe heavy up the hills, but I can smile sailing down them. Once in a while, not very often, I’ll get heckled by guys driving by, but it doesn’t bother me. I’ve usually got U2 blasting in my ears and I can’t hear a damn thing they’re saying, but I imagine it’s something like, “Oh, you are so gorgeous and mighty, running lady, and I am so lowly and insecure, for I feel compelled to yell at you while driving my truck! Why am I such a bastard?”

I both love and loathe running. And sometimes, still, the best part of running is the stopping running. Getting to the corner of my street, seeing my house and knowing it’s finished and I can rest, get a drink of water and take off my stinky shoes. The kids all come rally around me and David always smiles and asks, “How far did you go this time, mommy?” Some runs are farther than others, but always I run just far enough to get out of my own head for a little while, or deeper into it, I’m not sure. Far enough to get my heart thudding in my ears. Far enough to get me to think about death and to feel every once in a while that God has got my back. Far enough to get just enough crazy out of me so I can do everything that I need to do every day…every day. That is what I love most about running- How far I can get without every leaving my city.

Thankful

My 6 year old son David has a school project that’s due at the end of each month. It’s something that he works on at home sometimes with help from us if he needs it. These usually have a theme and of course this month’s theme was Thanksgiving. Every day in November David had to write two things he is thankful for in a journal. At first it was difficult for him to get in the habit of writing in it, and difficult for me to remember to remind him. At this age, any homework for him is also homework for me. But it only took about a week for him to consistently remember to write in it on his own and the more he did it, the more he seemed to enjoy the process of writing and bringing to mind all the things he’s glad to have in his life. I got a kick out of what he’s written so far, and so with his permission I’ve written them here, spelling errors and all:

I am thankful for my famuly and my home.
I am thankful for my Legos and my K’nex.
I am thankful for birthdays and food.
I am thankful for drinks and toys.
I am thankful for ise crem and I am also thankful for trees.
I am thankful for fish and grass.
I am thankful for watr and sand.
I am thankful for my friends and whole milk.
I am thankful for birds and lemonade.
I am thankful for darey prodx and pizza. (me too!)
I am thankful for ham and mashd potato.
I am thankful for land and sea.
I am thankful for clocks and muusic.
I am thankful for cats and dogs.
I am thankful for lemons and baskits.
I am thankful for Pokemon and peckoks.
I am thankful for pigs and paradis. (reminds me of a Jimmy Buffet song)
I am thankful for Miss Hazzalton and Misses Graval. (his teachers)
I am thankful for church and gym.
I am thankful for school and light.
I am thankful for rice and chicin.
I am thankful for juice and cake. (mmm…cake)
I am thankful for mackarony and chees and bred. (absolutely)
I’m thankful for chereos and cinamin tost crunch.
I’m thankful for soup and my cats.

All I can say is, that kid likes his food. You wouldn’t know it by how much he fusses at dinnertime, but then you’ll notice he did not say he was thankful for “mom’s experimental chicken dishes with weird sauces and spices”. What I also found interesting was that some of the things were obvious associations (land and sea), while others were less so (soup and cats). He’s probably heard me making too many jokes about how I’d gladly cook up the cats if I had no other means of feeding the family.

Mostly I’m thankful for my family, my home and our health. There are many subcategories but those are the big ones. And of course I’m thankful for “mashd potato”. How could you not be thankful for that?

What are you most thankful for this year?

Name that picture

I am a lazy blogger. So lazy, I can’t even come up with a caption for this photo. So you do it for me. Best caption gets my utmost respect and a copy of my unfinished short story.

These are tough economic times. We do what we can.

I got a notice in the mail that I needed to renew my driver’s license. Just another opportunity to stand and line and hand over $50, and I get grumpy thinking about it but then a faint, low voice echoes in my head, “Driving is a privilege, not a right!” Whoever said that did not have to drive around in my dirty minivan with my three kids.

Anyhoo.

So I got to the DMV early yesterday morning with Sofia and Isobel in tow and it seems quiet enough at the registration desk, but then I round the corner for the licensing and OH! There it is! The long line of sullen faces reaching back to the far wall, the herd corralled within the line dividers so they can’t escape, their hands all clutching their little renewal notices. They all look at me, their eyes pleading, it’s not too late for you…run while you still can! But I’m here. I could come back tomorrow but I’m here now so I’ll just get it over with.

The first 20 minutes go smoothly. The girls have snacks, then some water. Then Isobel gets restless. She keeps grabbing at the skirt of the woman in front of us. It looks silky, so I guess she likes the way it feels. Then she tries to go under it. The woman tries and laughs it off, but I apologize and hoist ‘Bel unto my shoulders. Then she messes up my hair, which didn’t look so hot to begin with, but now it’s totally craptacular. Now Sofia is getting restless. “I’m so bored,” she moans. “Me too, hon. Nobody likes to wait in line. Let’s just try and make the best of it.” I try doing finger plays with the girls, like “thumbkin” and “open, shut them” and they are only mildly amused. The line shuffles along, slightly. Now we’re 40 minutes in. Still about 8 people in front of me. Isobel begins to lose her cool, so I throw her in the air repeatedly, but then after about 10 tosses my arms begin to fatigue and I have to put her down. She wants nothing to do with the stroller. Then “Desperado” starts playing over the speaker. Now, you’re probably wondering what I’ve got against that song. I used to really like it a lot, but years ago when I worked for a dinner theater I was in a play in which my character had to sing it 5 nights a week for 4 months. Sometimes we had matinees and I would sing it twice a day. So now I just really hate it. That’s all.

So if that’s not bad enough now Isobel is really starting to lose it and nothing I do is helping and then in walks some man with a little boy of about 2 years old in tow and he starts yelling, “REPENT all ye sinners! REPENT!” Now, I’ve nothing against repentance- it’s good for the soul, for sure, but this guy is nutty and I am scared because I am certain any minute he is going to pull out a gun and start shooting everyone. I’m already planning my exit route with the kids and I’m glad I’m wearing my sneakers in case I have to haul ass out of here and I think, “no, I can’t die at the DMV…anywhere but here, please!”And then, suddenly…it’s my turn.

So I take my eye test, pay my fifty bucks, get my hideous picture taken and leave with my life intact.

Thanks DMV for such a stellar birthday gift. Really, you shouldn’t have!

Into the Unknown

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