Who Finally Published a Life List?

I have resisted making a Life List because it seemed like a list of things I need to do before I die to feel like I’ve lived a fulfilled life, and since I already feel fulfilled that seemed pointless. My friend Britt made me see a Life List in a different way – as a reminder to dream courageously. That sounds like a way better idea than a bucket list to me, especially since some of my items don’t seem “bucket list worthy.” I’m all about doing courageous things, great and small.

Right now it seems like a small list, but I plan on adding to it hopefully as I cross some things off.

  1. Take singing lessons. I am quite horrible at singing, but I love it so. I don’t want to be on American Idol, in fact that seems like one of my worst nightmares, I’d just like to be less horrible.
  2. Skydive – Most of my life I thought skydiving seemed like  the most ridiculous thing anyone could ever do with an airplane, but now I kind of really want to do it. Midlife crisis? Maybe. Does it matter? Not in the slightest.
  3. Complete a triathlon – I’ve wanted to do this for a while. I have no need to complete an Ironman, but I would like to at least finish a sprint distance triathlon.
  4. Run the Warrior Dash – Come on, doesn’t that just look fun? I love stuff like that.
  5. Make a quilt – This one is actually in progress. I bought a fancy sewing machine for myself and started taking a class, and I’m enjoying the process. Hopefully I’ll enjoy the result as well!
  6. Learn to make soap – I love handmade soaps. Plus, I’ll have a skill when the zombies invade.
  7. Take a cruise – This is just one of those things that sounds fun. Preferably to somewhere warm because being cold is bullshit.
  8. Run a half-marathon – I love running. I don’t know that I want to push myself to complete a full marathon, but a half will satisfy my need to run big races. I think I’d like to do this one. Hopefully my knee agrees since I’m probably another surgery away from running again.
  9. Sell photos to someone who doesn’t know me – Everyone needs validation, this is mine.
  10. Visit Ireland – With a birthday on St. Patrick’s Day I don’t think this one needs any further explanation.
  11. Photograph the Aurora Borealis – That’s just cool.
  12. Visit Yosemite – It’s so close to me and yet I’ve never visited. I’d like to spend a good amount of time hiking and taking photographs.

So that’s it for this installment of my Life List. I’m going to give the list it’s own page and update it as I think of more things.

What’s on your list?

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On Patience and the Crazy

I never said I was a patient person.

Ok, this recovery thing is bullshit. I’m just going to put that out there.  Bullshit.

I went back to running.  The doctor said to ease into running.  Like walk some, run some, walk more than you run, use a treadmill to be safer.

So I started the Couch to 10K program.

At week four.

Which, in case you were wondering, happens to fit the criteria of walking some/running some, and walking more than running.  It just also happens to last 62 minutes and have 11 intervals of running.

My knee swelled up like a balloon.  And made crunchy/poppy noises.

Oops.

I know I said I had lost my need to be competitive.

That was a lie.  Only, to be fair, I didn’t realize it was a lie at the time.  I really thought I’d had a personal growth moment.

It turns out it’s a lot easier to be all personally grown and mature when you’re not actually being tested with things that make your competitive crazy switch flip into overdrive.  Who knew.

See, here’s what happened.  Some of us at work committed to do the Reno-Tahoe Odyssey.  There are those of us on the team who already are runners, and a few who aren’t.  One of my co-workers is starting from scratch and I suggested the Couch to 5K program for her.  She went online and found the Couch to 10K and, thinking more is always better, she got started.  Yay!  Right?

Except she got started before I was released to run and the whole time she’s been training the devil in my head is screaming SHE’S GETTING AHEAD OF YOU!!

Which is why it seemed perfectly rational that starting at week 4 of the C210K wouldn’t be a bad idea.  I am, after all, an experienced runner.  Who had knee surgery six weeks ago.

And you want to know the bad part?  The this is where I might need therapy part?

Even after my body’s response to doing stupid shit kicked in and gave me pain so I wouldn’t forget next time, I am having a really hard time backing off the training BECAUSE SHE’S GOING TO GET AHEAD OF ME.

I don’t think you understand the level of crazy here.

Never mind that she wasn’t a runner before so she doesn’t have old injuries and new injuries to deal with.

Never mind that she’s cough10cough years younger than I am.

None of that matters.  Running is my thing.  It’s what I love.  I can accept that there are people who are a lot better at it than I am.  My husband can run uphill for days with a 50 lb weight vest strapped to his chest while eating a sandwich and I accepted that.  Ok, I accepted it as long as he never runs with me again, but I accepted it.

I don’t know where this need to compete comes from but I appear to be completely incapable of accepting my limitations and taking it easy.  Does it matter in the grand scheme of things if she ends up finishing a 10K before me?  No.

It doesn’t.

It really doesn’t.

But don’t talk to me about her doing it faster than me.  We’ll cross that bridge when we get there.

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Pee Ess: Tonight I backed way off, all the way back to the Couch to 5K program, and while it wasn’t perfect it was better. I’m really not crazy or self-destructive, so please don’t think I’m going to be reckless just because I’m impatient.

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The One Where You Will Think I’m Crazy

Winter is not a good time for me.  I can feel it coming and the urge to crawl in my cave is almost overwhelming.  It seems like I withdraw from everything as soon as the weather turns cooler, just hunker down and wait for the warmth to come again.  Maybe I should just move somewhere warmer, but I have moved so many times in my life that I just don’t want to do that anymore.

This winter I have a lot to do, so I’m hoping it goes by faster.  First, I have triathlon training to get on with.  If you’ve known me for any length of time whatsoever you know that I can be a bit obsessive about things, and this triathlon path I’m on is no different.  I have to be obsessive about it this time though, because the training is kind of a big deal and I’m a little intimidated, I’m not gonna lie.  I haven’t actually registered for a race yet, but I have my eye on one in Sacramento in June.  It just depends because there is this other thing…

A couple of people at work got this harebrained idea to get a team together for the Reno-Tahoe Odyssey.  Now before a couple of you start thinking I might be the harebrained one this was not my idea.  I am smart enough to have a healthy amount of fear when you’re talking about a 178-mile long relay race with an almost 2,500 foot altitude climb and descent over an 18 to 40 hour period of time and only 12 team members to complete it.  I am not smart enough, it turns out, to say no when asked to be one of the 12 runners trekking from Reno to Tahoe to Carson and Virginia City and back to Reno.  Since each runner has to run three legs each, and each leg is a minimum of 3 miles (and a max of 8), I need to be able to run at least 6 miles at a go to feel anywhere near comfortable that I will be able to complete my end of this lunacy.  Guess who is going to be running all winter long?

So I haven’t committed to a triathlon date because the Odyssey is June 3-4, and I’m not sure how big of a space I should have between events.  Any advice?

The other thing we have going this winter is Christmas.  Every year Christmas seems like a mad consumerist scramble to fill out everyone’s list.  Except if you’re like me, you only made the list because other people made you make it so they would have an idea of what to give you, even though you would be happy with just the family getting together to be merry and all that.  This year my husband had the idea to have a Little House on the Prairie style Christmas where the gifts have to be hand-made.  Hand-made by us, more specifically.  No craft fairs allowed.  I’m really excited about this because I love making things, and I love giving things I’ve made to other people.  It seems so much more personal.  I do wish we had come up with this idea earlier, but it’s still going to be a lot of fun.

Hopefully all of these grand plans get me at least most of the way through winter without becoming a cranky despondent hermit (yes it really is that bad).  What about you?  Does winter turn your crank or make you cranky?  What do you do to get yourself through the long, cold darkness?

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Totally only Somewhat Related Aside:  My WordPress for iPhone app shit the bed so responding to comments is a little more difficult right now until I get it fixed or find an alternative.  I may only open my laptop once or twice a week lately, so please don’t think I don’t love you if I take too long to respond.  Spanks for understanding.

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Happy Trails

Today hubs and I went for a walk on the trails where I used to run.  We took the long route, the one I used to run every other day when I was running often.  It felt good to be back on the trails, even though I was moving at a much slower pace.

It made me think back to how I felt when I was in peak condition, how being on the trails felt when I was a “runner.”  I remember the exhilaration.  The feeling that it was my trail.  I owned that stretch of land and I paid for it in gallons upon gallons of sweat.

I remember how, for the first part of the run, my head would pull out that one thing that was bothering me and work on it for a while.  I would hold imaginary conversations with people in my head, work on problems, and resolve conflicts all on my own while I was running.  I worked out a lot of issues that way and came back feeling cleansed.

I also remember how during the second half of a run I couldn’t do that anymore.  The second half became about the bargaining and the head games it takes to get to the end when really, stopping right now seems so much better.  Just one more telephone pole.  Anyone can run one more telephone pole.  If you just make it to the next telephone pole you can make the rest.  You don’t get to walk until you get to the turnoff, those are the rules.  You know that.  You can make it.

As I was walking I remembered all the parts of the trail, as it is indelibly etched into my physical memory.  I ran that trail so many times I know every last part of it, even though it changes all the time because it’s the desert and the only thing that changes more than the dessert is water.  There was a time when I could, and did, run that trail in the dark.

I would get to a particularly sandy part and think oh yeah, this was the hardest part to get through.  This is where my shoes filled with sand and it felt like running in slow motion. Then I’d get to a hard-packed area, or the graded road that used to lead to an old pit back in the hills, and I would remember how I could run the fastest in those areas with my iPod tuned to the fastest songs in my playlist and the wind at my back.

I walked by the two different places I’ve seen rattlesnakes, and the different areas where I’ve seen coyotes.  Once a coyote crossed the trail right in front of me, just like they run out in front of the cars on the road.  That made me stop in my tracks, unsure if it was a good idea to have him behind me or if, since he was alone, I was ok.  There were times I saw them on my early morning runs when they were not alone, when they were hunting in a pack, and it was a lot more unsettling.

I remember the wind.  In the desert there’s a reason they can’t remember your name and it’s because the wind blows it away.  During the first part of my run the wind was always at my back, but on the way home I had to fight it the whole way.  At times I was sure I was standing still, it was blowing so hard.  The wind gives and it takes, though, because even though it can be like running against a wall, it keeps you cooler and drier.  Oh how I’ve cursed and thanked that wind at the same time.

Friday I’m starting the surgeries that are hopefully going to get me back on that trail.  I am nervous and hopeful at the same time, and I think the biggest nerves stem not from the pain that is sure to come but from the hopes.  I am afraid that my hopes for future dates with my trail will not be fulfilled and that I will be relegated to walking it.  Or worse, that I will only be able to drive by and remember how it used to be, when I made that trail my own and we learned how to get along.

And that will be the saddest thing of all.

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