Saturday, August 21, 2010

Things that make you go Hmmmmm....

Remember Arsenio Hall? What ever happened to him? Well, when I was in high school, we would all stay up until 11:00 so we could watch the funny stuff he used to say in his monologue. Now here is my little version of things that make you go hmmmm, or more like, things about me that are just plain weird.

  • born on the 29th of February - only have a birthday every four years
  • had my boys one year and four days apart, and a total abdominal hysterectomy 14 months after.
  • grew up in five different states.....went to 8 schools by the 9th grade.
  • am a middle child, although my mother says I am not the middle child, but the oldest daughter (I am the second of three children)
  • have never lived in any one house longer than 5 years
  • love to eat but hate to cook
  • will drink reheated coffee up to a week old as long as it has no mold
  • have been told that I dance like Elaine from Seinfeld
  • have an abnormally low temperature, so even when I have a fever, my temperature registers as normal
  • had rhinoplasty at age 14, as a result of getting kicked in the face while spotting a girl doing a back handspring
  • think the only things I do really well are play with preschoolers, get graduate degrees, and eat Blizzards
  • have over 400 friends on facebook, yet I feel lonely most of the time
  • love sports of all sorts - and I have about 15 favorite teams
  • have high arches, TMJ, and scoliosis
  • had Osgood-Schlatter's as a teen
  • I love inside dogs, but do not like outside dogs at all
  • think school uniforms should be mandatory for all schools 
  • am allergic to ragweed, all other weeds, trees, grasses, cockroaches, dust mites, and mold, among other things
  • believe that EVERYTHING happens for a reason, and that God is in charge.

questions? just ask and I will answer.

Saturday, August 14, 2010

We did it!

Finished the Schweizer Fest 2-mile race this morning! My time was just over 24 minutes, which is faster than how I have been averaging according to Nike+ by about a minute per mile. My goals for the race were to finish with a time between 25 and 30 minutes, and to keep running the whole time and not ever walk. I didn't stop at all and walk, although I did get slower a little for awhile. But I never walked. Both goals met. :-)

Taking Beth Moore's advice, I "planned my victory" by meeting my running buddy, Emily, at her house and riding with her. That way, I couldn't chicken out if I had trouble finding a parking spot like I did last month for a zumba class. (Still haven't tried zumba, but my BFF, Missy who is a personal trainer, has it, so we are going to do it sometime in my living room and let the kids play upstairs.)

When we first got there, I felt kind of insecure, but then I got over it as I saw more and more friends, and we got excited about the start. There were lots, I mean LOTS of people there. Even though there were two distances, I didn't feel inferior to those doing the longer distance like I always used to in my 20's. This time I was just proud of myself for getting prepared and getting out there. Except for a 2-mile race in Gainesville right before the Homecoming parade, all the other races I have done were 5K's, but they were in Gainesville, Jacksonville, and Atlanta. I never knew more than one or two people at any of those races, and usually those were the people with whom I had ridden. I liked this sooooo much better, because I felt at home with all the people from school (at least 10 of my co-workers ran) a ton of my former students, the cross-country teams from several schools both nearby and farther away, running and non-running friends, and just a bunch of people I know because our town is so small. We parked in our church parking lot, right where I am used to parking. The girls who took my registration were my sons' teachers. The people giving out water are one of my friends' parents. This familiarity was both completely different and completely wonderful for me, and I am so glad I chose this as the first race of my second generation of running.  I would not have (obviously, as evidenced from last year's efforts) the courage, motivation, gumption, self-confidence - whatever you want to call it - to do it in a strange place.

I loved having people that I know on the sidelines cheering us on! I usually run in the dark or in my basement because I don't want people to see me. Today was a huge risk because I was going to be hanging out there for all to see. I don't think I felt uncomfortable one time about people watching me. I can't remember even thinking about it. That is shocking to me. (I don't have a therapist, but if I did, I am sure s/he would say that is progress.)

I think it is important on this journey to learn what works for each individual. Every runner has different needs, different strengths. I have learned that I run better and farther with a friend. This week I had to run alone a lot and I was lonely and bored. I know it is an individual sport, but I enjoy the companionship of others - and I need it to keep progressing.

People who inspire me: two moms that live in our community who both suffer from MS. I read once about Kristin Armstrong, Lance Armstrong's ex-wife, who is a distance runner, and how she says to herself, "I GET to run today." Instead of plodding along and thinking, "I HAVE to run today," she celebrates her health and wellness and the physical ability to run. I know these two moms would love to run - even if it were just up the stairs to get their children, and into the house with the groceries, or outside to the mailbox. They can't, or at least they can't very easily. I take so many things for granted and I have wasted too much time and energy hating my body instead of celebrating the physical wellness and functionality with which God has blessed me. I think of both of these girls on EVERY run and I carry them in my heart as I (relatively) easily put one foot in front of the other. They inspire me to push my body to be stronger, faster, healthier. They are the biggest inspiration I have. I told one of them that today after the race. I had never told anyone that before today - I guess I just kept it as my own little secret until now. I'll keep them in my heart on every future run, too.

After that, my sentiments go south fast. Vanity kicks in and I tell myself, "I just want to be skinny, I don't care how fast I go, or how far, as long as I lose 20 pounds." So far, I have only lost 4 pounds, apparently all from my left boob. Seriously.....

The girl who won the two-mile race ran it twice as fast as I did. For real. 12 minutes? Are you flipping kidding me? Here's the kicker: she is just as sweet and pretty as she is fast (darn it!) and she ran in Gator NikeTempos just like mine. Her body is nothing short of KILLER. She is right up there with Kelly Ripa, and she's my new hero.

Two of my youngest son's classmates and friends ran the two-mile in 13 and 14 minutes. Is that normal for 9- and 10-year-olds? I'm thinking someone needs to send that into Sports Illustrated.

Where do we go from here? Emily and I are going to take on a 5K next month - can't remember where she said.....I don't care as long as it is a little cooler than today.

I have to give a big shout-out to our uber-encourager, Joyce, who sets an example for all of us with her kindness as much as with her fitness. Thanks, Joyce, from all of us newbies! It was hot and fun, and we did it. and I am soooo proud of us!

Friday, August 13, 2010

Dear Kate:

Kate Spade, that is. I have a request. Please hurry and make a really cute cover for my iPhone 4 with pink and green and polka dots or stripes. I love the ones for 3GS, but all they have for the new ones are black and I don't want to look like a manly-man.

Chipper, I can't believe you hurt yourself. I am so glad we went to see you a couple of weeks ago. Will you come back? I say right now it is 50/50. I can see two scenarios. One, he is tired, loaded and doesn't need to prove anything to anyone. He can get his knee fixed and do whatever he wants the rest of his life, in or out of baseball. The other, he wants to go out in style. He wants to be announced loud and clear one last time at every ballpark in the Majors. He always enjoyed the attention, and I think he thinks he deserves it. However, if the recovery and rehab are really painful and hard, and he tries to come back but sucks really bad, he would be embarrassed and want to quit during his farewell tour. Trust me, people, I know these things. What do you think?

Running: I have been running A LOT lately. Like, oh, I don't know, 15-20 miles per week. I know, it is a lot for me, but not for some people. Yesterday I got a new pair of kicks - tried on Mizuno Wave something, a butt ugly pair of Nikes with memory foam in the insole, another pair of Nikes and a pair of asics that were comfy, but decided on the asics Gel Platinum 3. They feel awesome. First race in about 15 years is this Saturday.

It's only a 2-mile but there is a 6-mile distance as well. It is at 8:00 am which is stupid because it is so stinking hot right now. Humans are not supposed to live in this, much less run in it. I also think it is weird that we have 2-mile and 6-mile instead of 5K and 10K like the rest of the world. I think it makes our town seem podunk. Oh, wait, we are a little podunk.

Thankfully, due to a lot of help and encouragement and consistent training, I feel prepared. One of my running buddies wants me to run a half with her. The other one says, "I am not runnin' no half marathon, I just want to be skinny!" Who do I listen to? Well, how about myself?

The boys had back-to-school night. Thrilled with their teachers. W was a little bummed about some of his BFF's not being in his class, but he was excited about some of the kids that are in there. I am always encouraging them to make new friends, and after everything we have been through this summer, we are hoping that everything will go smoothly this year. Oh, who am I kidding? I was mad because the doors were locked when we got there and we had to walk around outside and it was HOT, the tables in the fifth grade classroom are TOO SMALL, the newly-adopted math textbook is NOT challenging enough, and T's high ability class is not cluster-grouped very well. at all. by academic ability or behavior. Come. on. There are some uber-bright kiddos in that class and they need to be encouraged and pushed, not distracted and punished (by special area teachers who out of necessity often evaluate the entire class as a whole). T had five migraines this summer as a result of getting yelled at in baseball by the toughest coach ever: dad.  So now back to that other comment, it's not brain surgery; it's just elementary school. Let's not freak out.

Except that I have in the last week gotten a huge, exciting reason to freak out. But you have to wait to the next post to find out what it is!

Oh, and one more thing. Dear Tiger: Karma's a bitch. You need to hang out with Tim Tebow, but not at his barber's.

Sunday, August 8, 2010

Head's up! Whitaker is back in the goalie box!

I need to update on Whitaker. Last Tuesday we met with Dr. Charles Stevenson, the wonderful pediatric neurosurgeon that operated on Whitaker in June. He evaluated Whitaker's balance, strength, vision, coordination, and all the other neuro-functions that could be affected by the Chiari repair surgery. Dr. Stevenson said that despite the large size of the craniectomy that he executed on Whitaker, he thought W looked GREAT and he cleared him for normal activities after just six weeks of recovery. He cautioned against no trampolines or anything else that could cause him to get jolted in the neck/head area, but said that he could play soccer this year and he could even head the soccer ball. I'm not crazy about that, but hey, I'll take good news in any way, shape or form.

Last week both boys played soccer in a four-day mini-camp. Whitaker did awesome, had no headaches, and has increased stamina beyond what he had before the surgery. We are so amazed, thankful, and excited that he is doing so well. It is remarkable, if not miraculous, that Whitaker has recovered so fully, so quickly. I know that everyone's prayers and concern contributed greatly to his successful surgery and recovery, and John and I will never be able to express how much the support from friends and family means to us.

I have to give a big shout out to the Perry County Youth Soccer League for allowing us to register Whitaker for soccer way past the deadline for the fall season. Since we had been told he could not do organized sports for three months, we did not fill out the forms and pay the registration fee. However, we got the good report from the neurosurgeon just before the teams were rostered, and they were nice enough to let him get on a team. That means the world to him since he didn't think he was going to get to do any sports until basketball.

Things Whitaker can't do ever:
Lacrosse/field hockey
football :-(
wrestling
some gymnastics moves (head-stands, hanging upside down)
combative martial arts (non-contact martial arts are okay)
boxing
rugby

Things Whitaker shouldn't do ever:
trampoline
skateboarding
motorcyclying
rough roller-coasters
bungee-jumping
sky-diving
cliff-diving
race-car driving
pillow fighting
tubing on the river (because of risk of head injury when falling off)
intense weight-lifting (due to risk of CSF leak when straining)
space travel

Things Whitaker can do (carefully, of course):
baseball/softball
tennis
raquetball
basketball
soccer
golf
running
swimming (pool and river)
diving
kickball
fishing
hunting
dodgeball (only if balls make contact from waist-down)
volleyball
bicycling (not stunt-bikes, just distance riding)
camping
hiking
bowling
billiards
corn-hole
ping pong
zip-lining
mountain-climbing (with protective head gear and safety ropes)
snorkeling
surfing

As you can see, there are PLENTY of activities to keep us all busy that are completely safe and fun, and will promote wellness and fitness.  We choose to concentrate on all the things he CAN do, rather than those he can't or shouldn't. Most of the things that he shouldn't do are either not likely (space travel, race-car driving), or not recommended for healthy people (cliff-diving, bungee-jumping). However, since Whitaker was a wrestler, a football player, and a motorocycle-rider, there are some things on the list that will constitute some life-style changes. The more common activities such as trampoline, pillow fighting, and tubing will be more of a daily challenge for him, and therefore us. Thankfully - God made Whitaker a little afraid of heights and crazy roller-coasters, so unlike his brother, Whitaker will be completely content to keep his feet firmly on the soccer field, or the basketball court.

Tuesday, August 3, 2010

I'm grouchy

I am having a crazy day. I spent the morning in court and for the second time gave up 2 and half hours of my life without ever doing what I was supposed to be doing there. and I have to go back again. grrrrr

I have spent the afternoon working on paperwork for school, which is going really well, except for the blog part. I did the photo release form, and the parent newsletter, but now I am trying to create the blogs for each class really quickly. One problem:  I am not quick at these things. I am trying to plant my feet firmly in the 21st century and set an example as a media specialist, but neither of those seems to be working right now. I will post the link to the blogs whenever I get them going. Gotta get back to working on that.

Oh yeah - and I ate chocolate ice cream and pretzel m&m's for supper. On what planet is that a healthy choice? I'm hot and tired and I have sooooo much to do. later. See, I told you I was grouchy.