What would you do if you weren’t scared?

It’s a blog meme that hasn’t been recycled in too long – what would you do if you weren’t scared.

Weren’t scared of losing your job
Weren’t scared of losing your house
Weren’t scared of losing your reputation
Weren’t scared of anything

What is your big idea?

I ask, ’cause I’m scared right now. There’s a big idea we’re working at the office, which is interesting, ’cause the lab I work at doesn’t do big ideas. Sure, we do “change” and we do “improvements” and we do “new technologies”, and we do good jobs with all of that.

But we don’t do big ideas. They’re not written into the DoD 5000 procurement model. We’re engineers on the career track.

What would you do?

I ain’t skeered. GTBMS. There’s work to do.

Last night i dreamed

About running.

Kind of freaky, in hindsight. Dreamed I went running through the neighborhood, but as I ran, I ran into a neighborhood of the absolute cutest Arts and Crafts recreation homes – brand new, but smallish, 1400 sf 3Br 2B homes with large two car detached garages. Hardwood floors, really cool stained glass in the doors and around the windows – not like Angels and Saints stained glass, but the cool A&C geometric patterns – long rectangles of clear glass with some colored accent squares. Beautiful built in cabinets, airy living spaces.

The best part of the dream really was the running – just felt like I could go forever.

But I’m kind of amazed that my mind would come up with houses like that. I’ll admit, it’s what I’d build, given the time, but I’d never given that much thought to it.

Hola Amigos

Wow – Sunday night already.

If you haven’t checked out David and April Anne’s reports, we had one heck of a run trying to dodge the rain. I’d elaborate, but David pretty much nailed it. Well, with the exception of April Anne trying to drive me into heart failure as we raced over the state line and back.

Were I half a good writer, I’d work in the classic joke about “Crossing staid lions with immoral porpises”. But, it’s late, and I’m tired.

The run was outstanding, BTW. Trails are great, and AA has a way of suggesting “just a little further” that’s impossible to resist. I think I was still carrying the endorphin buzz when I had a bit of delayed elective surgery on Friday. So no running this weekend. The doc said I should take at least a week off – we’ll see. The legs are dying to go.

New Haven is, what 6 weeks away? And I’m halfway thinking about heading down to Mystic Places Marathon again, but on a lighter training schedule – work up to a 15 or 18 miler, and then just suffer, suffer, suffer through the race. We’ll see. More likely is I’ll run the 10 miler there. The wife’s doing the Tarzan Brown 5 miler the first weekend in November, and also the Old Saybrook 5 miler in two weeks.

But, mostly my mind’s on getting back into tri. The swim has been a complete and total bust this summer, other than cooling off after runs. I need to focus on that next winter, but as I’ve been telling anyone who will listen, this year’s focus on just getting out on the road, without stressing about results, has likely done way more long-term good than anything else I could think of.

But, one of Missy’s women’s fitness magazines mentioned the Josh Billings Triathlon on 17 September – Kayak, bike, Run. Wow. Sounds like a perfect weekend in my book. 34 mile bike, 5 mile paddle, and a 10K. I am so there if the wife says OK.

Other than that, I’m ready to lose some weight. The scales are down to 167 again, which is way positive. The hunger’s not raging, since I’m not creating two hour training deficits.

Oh, one other thing to mention: I’m going to be going to all Linux for recreational computing for the month of August, with the exception (AFAIK) of using OSX to send my runs into Nike. Unless I can figure out how to hack that. Follow the action over at (Site in need of a decent name). Part of the whole big idea thing I’ve been meaning to push for a while. I’m still planning on buying a MacBook in the fall/winter, but am really, really intrigued by Ubuntu – it’s the first Linux distro I’ve tried that really comes close to “just working” by design, not accident. Vista, schmista – grow your hair long, stir up the mulch pit and plant some organic veggies, and do something out of the goodness of your heart.

Jank’s take on Operacion Puerto

So, in keeping with the doping scandal raging through professional cycling, I’m doing a little experimentation on my own. This weekend, I contracted a massive, and I mean like scary massive, case of poison ivy, and spent most of Monday morning trying to not claw my skin off in the office of a clinic in Newport waiting to get steroids. The doc took one look at me and prescribed a massive dose of Prednisone tablets. Truthfully, I was kind of let down – they used to give a big injection for poison ivy, which absolutely rocked ’cause the itching was gone in like 30 minutes. But instead, I get to dope for about 10 days total. Woo Hoo!

To make things better, it’s toasty out here. I promise it was scratching 90 degrees today at lunch when I strapped on the Nikes to go hit my 5 mile lunchtime loop. Wouldn’t be extremely bad, but the humidity is up around 90%, too. But, I went anyway – got to get the green, squiggly line for the day on my log.

The run started out pretty well. Nike+iPod told me that it was only 2.55 to the Gazebo that I’d measured at 2.6 with both the Forerunner and Gmaps-Pedometer, but who’s going to quibble with the sultry voice that whispers in my ear whenever I push her button.

The back was awful. I’m not sure, but I think that the ‘roids have got to be doing something negative to my cardiovascular system – I just couldn’t catch my breath at all. Sure, the heat may have played a role, but even when I slowed way down, it was tough. Which must be why the cyclists topped up on EPO while taking steroids. Strength and endurance.

I took a couple of walking breaks on the way back, but still managed to drag in at a 9:30 something pace overall. Not bad for a doper.

No real new notes on the iPod gizmo. Well, maybe one: I wish that there were a setting where you could request automatic updates from the woman in the ether. I’d like to get my info every half mile or mile without having to think about pushing the button.

Nike+iPod Review

So, the box showed up today about 11:30. I got home about 6, did supper, and headed to the track to calibrate the sensor and do my two miles for the day.

Initial feelings about the kit are extremely positive: The sensor is, indeed, tiny, and the whole thing does, indeed, “Just Works It” (TM) as soon as you plug it in. There is empirical data (Courtesy of my ranting and geek blog and an old and fine friend) that the simplest solution, velcroing the sensor to another pair of sneaks, works like a champ. I haven’t tried that yet, but figure I will in the near future.

I don’t think it’s going to be difficult at all to mod other shoes, especially for runners who wear orthotics. Just mold the sensor into the orthotics. I’ll buy a pair of Dr. Sholls insoles next month and do the deed with my Asics. The handy foam plug that comes out of the Nikes will make a great template to modify.

Actually, how’s this for a thought? Don’t they have special custom molded orthotics where you put a package into your sneaks, then stick in your foot and wear them for a couple of minutes while the wonder of plastics takes place and they mold to your foot? Why not put the Nike+ sensor beneath the insole before you step in?

The Air Zoom Moire + sneakers – well, I cannot decide if I like them or not. Physically, they’re great – lightweight, kind of a “sock” design similar to my beloved Asics Gel Cumulus VIIIs, but without anything stiff on the outside to rub if they’re laced on tight, which is how I like to run. Running on a track today, they felt absolutely great. I think they share a design philosophy with the much maligned* “Free” series. There wasn’t much to the soles other than cushion, and just enough of that. I could tell when I was transitioning from rubber track to concrete, and from concrete to gravel.

As much as I like the uppers and the midsole, I’m kind of worried about the actual rubber that meets the road. The Moire+ shoes are a completely flat bottom, with kind of a snowshoe thingy sticking off of the heel. For someone like me with a pretty decent stride, the extra pad off of the heel is an invitation to backslide to heel striking.

As a New England runner, the completely flat sole gives me willies, too. Completely flat means more surface area, which means less pressure per unit area on the sole, which means I start sliding on ice much, much sooner. Not a problem in July, but not the best of situations from December through March. Yet more incentive to hack the insole of the Asics.

The iPod part was as easy as you’d expect from Apple. Plug in the module, go to the Nike + iPod menu on the Main Menu, and click, click, click. Then start running.

There’s two calibrations for the sensor: Running and Walking. When I got to the track, I selected up the “Running” calibration, dialed it up to 400 meters, or a quarter mile for those of us who still swear by imperial measures, and wish we could get an actual imperial clock for use in Metric Football that tells us when the game is going to end, clicked to start the workout, and started running. Clicked when I finished running, and the iPod said that calibration was successful.

This morning’s text message was “Two Miles”, so after calibrating, I selected “Distance -> 2 Miles -> Shuffle Songs”, clicked start, and started running. There was an option to select a workout (purchase from the ITMS), or a playlist, or (my favorite) “Shuffle Songs”. The shuffle songs worked like a champ. It did seem to self-select more up-tempo songs, and ones I hadn’t given high star ratings too.

As I ran, I hit the middle button at each lap and got a time, speed, and distance report whispered into my ear by my own personal trainer. Great voice casting for the woman, haven’t tried the man. She sounded intelligent, fit, and encouraging. I need to ask the wife when she did the recording – it wasn’t “robotic” sounding at all, so h’m assuming it’s some sort of pre-recording.

The voice told me when I started the last mile, last half mile, last 400 m, 300 m, 200 m, 100 m, and completion. Pretty slick. The calibration seemed right on, maybe a little bit long, but isn’t that better than being short?

After the run, I did the walking calibration, which ended up being something like 20 yards short of 400 m. My guess is that it’s default is for “power walkers”, and I was just sort of ambling along to catch my breath.

Out of curiosity, I redid the running cal, and it ended up exactly the same as the first time I did it.

At home I plugged in the iPod, and got asked if I wanted to sync with nikeplus.com.

initialscreen

At the setup screen. Entered the info I’d been using with nikerunning.com, and clicked “enter”

SelectAccount

The computer sucked the info out of the iPod, sent it off into the ether, and sent me to the nikeplus website. There, I set some prefs:

nikepluswebsetup.jpg

and up popped my run

MyRun

Easy as advertised. It even synced with my nikerunning.com account, so all of that history is still useful.

I’m kind of unimpressed with the nikeplus.com website – not a whole lot of cool training tools there. More like running as a videogame, which is not bad as a general concept, just a concept to be marketed to folks only half a decade or so younger than me.

General takeaway is that, for average runners, the system is indeed all that and a bag of chips. For folks like us RBFers, that is to say, obsessive/compulsive types, it offers not nearly enough customization (ie, how do I make it do intervals, how do I get my voice whispering in other people’s ears, how do I set up a business sending out customized, coached workouts via RSS feed…) But I love that you don’t have to do custom playlists (I was dreading that) for every workout, and that you can customize time/distance/speed. And, I love that it does sync with Nikerunning.com, which, even with all my love for Jeff and breakingthetape.com, is really, really useful.

* the griping about the “Free” shoes was warranted – barefoot is completely and totally, 100% different than running with padding on your feet. No question about it, and the marketing stunk because of that. Kind of like people who equate lap dances with real interaction with real women (not meaning to demean dancers by any means, but it’s like paying your friends.)**

** Speaking of that, guys, the checks for July are in the mail

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Good runs

Catching up with David last Thursday was absolutely great. We did, by his reckoning, 6.8 miles from his folk’s house down to the Atlantic and back, with a climb back up to the neighborhood from the sea that just went on and on. Great run.

There’s something great about catching up with another RBF’er – an easy conversation, love of life, the road, etc. We gabbed about running since the last time we’d hit the road together (way back at New Haven, hard to believe). Jobs, projects, family, food… Good times, and the miles flew. Really didn’t want the run to be over.

Friday, the text message was “4 miles with 4×3 minutes Tempo followed by 3 minutes recovery.” Not really sure what that was, so I parked over at Jamestown, and started running. About a mile into the run, I figured that “tempo” ought to mean “Run as hard as physically possible for 3 minutes”, so, I waited until the current song had 3 minutes left, and picked up the pace until I couldn’t hold it, then backed off slightly. 3 minutes later, I dropped down to a jog to try to recover. Repeated again, and realized that I was in tremendous pain – sorry, discomfort. 5 minutes to recover. Did two more “tempos”, but only 2 minutes each time.

The run was exceptional, though – perfect weather, good swim afterwards.

Saturday the message was “Rest”, so I did – took on the poison ivy again (and got another rash) with some success. Took the boys for a ride in the kayak. Jake in the stern hatch worked like a champ. Nate in the front hatch – not so good. It was a little bit too tight for him with a life jacket on, so he rode back to the put-in in my lap. Which was not as bad as one might think.

Sunday, the text message didn’t come, so I ended up not running. The boy and I headed back up to the church after lunch to do some fairly strenuous yard work in preparation for getting a pre-school for 2 year olds state certified. Good stuff, then a little trip to the beach with the boys.

Hope everyone else is having as great a summer.

Nike + iPod (or, why you should select overnight shipping)

The kits and shoes are shipping. You can track mine here. Currently, it’s en-route to Shrewsbury, Mass. I’m guessing it’ll be here sometime Tuesday or so.

Other people have theirs. AppleInsider has great pics. Dig this one with the quarter:

What makes me chuckle, though, is that the pics of the stuff were up before “operational” reports. Clearly tech sites instead of runner sites…

Two glorious miles

So, I’ve been taking advantage of Nike’s deal with Wiggle Wireless to deliver workouts via text-messaging. Every morning at 0500, in conjunction with the alarm on the phone going off to wake me up, I get a text message with the day’s workout.

The idea is that I’ll haul out of bed and go do the workout before i go to work.

The practice is that I hit snooze, and wake up about 6 to head into the office, then work through lunch so I can run on the way home.

Overall, the system has been working for me – no planning, just run or do not run. Lets me concentrate on trying not to eat.

Today, the message said “TWO MILES.” Great, I can do that in my sleep.

Stopped by Jamestown on the ride home. A massive fog bank was rolling in off the Atlantic. The run was good – 10 minutes out (~1.1 miles), 8 minutes back! and a little jog to get up to 20 minutes.

Then, another quick snorkel. Very different today – the water was rough and choppy, and the bottom was really stirred up. Impressive to be in the water, in a very protected cove, and to just feel the power of the sea. 200 yards.