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Novatrix
Monday, June 6, 2005
Greensboro
Mood:  vegas lucky
Now Playing: Concerto for Two Violins
Topic: Daily Eruptions
Hans and I had found a home building company we liked on one of our first scouting trips to Greensboro in search of a new place to live. Yesterday, we drove around to three more of their developments and found two townhouses we are considering buying. One is smaller and right inside the Greensboro city limits and is four miles from where Hans will be working. (In theory, he could take public transportation, but it looks like he would have to take 3 buses and a shuttle to travel those 4 miles!) It has a grassy hill just beyond the back porch with a huge, gorgeous old tree behind that. The house is finished and just waiting for someone to move in. We walked through the model homes, and even though this one is small, it's really all the room we need (except the kitchen which really is too small--no pantry or island and fewer cabinets than we have currently), and it could be decorated to give the illusion of more space.

The other is larger and backs up to a bank of trees surrounding a stream with a nice grassy lawn between the porch and the edge of the woods. This one has a kitchen nearly the size we have currently with both an island and a pantry, a separate dining room, and a fireplace in the "Great Room" which is such a joke when you're talking about a townhouse. It has three bedrooms and two baths upstairs, which is one more of each than we really need, but the master is airy and has a cathedral ceiling. This one, though, is in a small town outside Greensboro and would be about twenty miles from Hans's office, meaning we would have to buy a second car and get a mortgage all at the same time. If we could swing the second car, even with a 30 minute commute to work for Hans, that might be less travel time than if we lived four miles away and Hans took the three buses and a shuttle. Plus, it's on the Chapel Hill/Hillsborough side of Greensboro, so it would cut an hour off my total commute time 4 days a week.

We have to make some calls today and see if either of these options are reasonable....

Thoughts captured by Kristine at 9:56 AM EDT
Updated: Thursday, June 9, 2005 1:54 PM EDT
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Sunday, June 5, 2005
Ten Miles
Mood:  on fire
Topic: Marathon
I finished ten miles today feeling great! I was up by 5:10 and out by 6:00, but I'm going to try to get out by 5:00 next week because as the heat goes up, so does my heart rate. I started out very slowly on both the walk and run portions, but by minute 35 I was feeling great. I ran 40% today (2 minute run with a 3 minute walking recovery) and my body didn't have any problems at all until mile 9. I had no coughing or wheezing, my heart rate stayed fairly low even on uphill runs, and my left arch, the one that usually gives out first, didn't have a single pain. At mile 8 I started getting chills, but no goosebumps and my heart rate was still recovering quickly, so I took it easy on the last two miles, and didn't have any trouble finishing. By mile 9, though, I started getting pains in the outside of my right arch and it wasn't the kind of pain that said "you can run through this and it will go away." I continued my run intervals through 9.5 miles, then walked the last half mile completely. It was a really great workout for me.

I still have to work on keeping my shoulders loose. I catch myself doing two things: lifting my shoulders in an attempt to make my body hit the ground more lightly (funny, I know) and bowing my head in an attempt to make myself invisible (even funnier). When I was trying to learn good form in Seattle, I worked really hard on my posture, but now that I'm out doing these long, slow runs, psychologically it's easier for me to watch the pavement right in front of my feet and just think about putting one foot in front of the other than it is to keep my head up and my eyes on the horizon that only inches closer. A man passed me today wearing a Race for the Cure T-shirt and he had that head up, confident look that I would like to develop over the next five months.

At the end of mile 7, I was in a downhill run interval and I suddenly remembered one of the female spectators at my last Danskin Triathlon. She ran with me to the top of the last hill before the finish and kept saying that I had great rhythm and that I was almost there and that I was doing great. Just thinking about that made me start crying this morning, which was not good on a whole lot of levels. My heart rate didn't recover during the walk session and hit 179 beats per minute on the next uphill run segment. Had to get rid of that memory in a hurry!!

I will move up to 60% running on the two short runs this week, which will mean 3 minutes running with a two minute walking recovery. After last weekend, I feel like I'm back on track and happy with my progress.

Thoughts captured by Kristine at 10:28 AM EDT
Updated: Monday, June 6, 2005 9:30 AM EDT
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Saturday, June 4, 2005
Kid Fix
Mood:  silly
Topic: Daily Eruptions
I have to say, spending a couple hours with three adorable kids under five works even better than a donut! Brendan was very cute today--he told me that bees make honey and butterflies make butter, and he spontaneously said that he loved me and Hans while he was eating a chocolate chip cookie and drinking juice after his nap. And the twins were great today, too. They seem finally to be at a stage where they don't feel the need to cry whenever they see us. I spent a little bit of quiet time with each of them before their naps, and Jordan even fell asleep on my shoulder. That in itself made the afternoon worthwhile.

Thoughts captured by Kristine at 7:11 PM EDT
Updated: Saturday, June 4, 2005 9:30 PM EDT
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Reminiscent of Tom and Viv
Mood:  hug me
Now Playing: Ready to Fly by Richard Marx
Topic: Daily Eruptions
I woke up cranky again today, almost as though it was a chemical imbalance. Now that I think about it, it probably was a chemical imbalance. I had a caffeinated Pepsi at lunch yesterday and have eaten a Weight Watchers lowfat chocolate ice cream sandwich every day this week because they were on sale last weekend. Chocolate+Dairy+Caffeine=Cranky Bitch.

It doesn't help that the sky is still overcast today. What I really want to do is get in the car and burn some fossil fuels, but I told Candy I'd watch the kids this afternoon so she and Al could go to a movie. So after giving Hans hell first thing this morning, I read the two short stories in the June edition of The Sun (both amazing, check them out online here), went to the allergist, and somehow made it home without stopping at the grocery store for a donut, the thing I can be sure will smooth out a bad mood even if it might contribute to a later bad mood. Instead of giving in to the craving, I came home and made myself Tangerine Orange Zinger tea and took the notebook I nearly filled at Mackinac last summer out to the deck to write. For the most part, all healthy behaviors except that I maybe should have waited until I was calmer to talk to Hans. It was stuff that needed saying, but because I said it when I was in a mood, I'm not sure he understands that. I tried to speak in a level tone, and when he asked why I was so pissed off, I said I wasn't pissed off, I was resolute, and he said, "Okay, don't get pissed off telling me you're not pissed off!"

Unfortunately, I was pissed off, and not just at him. John told me he thought my story was sexist, so he and I have been having what he calls a "debate" over gender differences by email all week. I felt like I was being attacked and talked down to and as though the man had completely forgotten everything he knows about me, so yesterday I put a halt to the email debate and said I'd call him last night so we could continue in a manner that would allow me to hear his tone in addition to his words. We had only gotten a few minutes into the conversation when Chaz beeped in on John's phone. Chaz is getting married this summer and John was supposed to perform the ceremony. Because of his recent operation, though, John won't be able to travel to the wedding and is now only doing pre-marital counseling with the couple--something I find a little interesting given the speed with which John recently proposed, married, and divorced his high school sweetheart. Apparently, Chaz and his fiancee were in need last night, so John got off the phone to help them. I was frustrated because I'd stayed up late in order to reach him at home, which causes friction between me and Hans because the dog keeps him awake until I come to bed, and I still hadn't resolved anything with John.

I'm feeling better now, and tomorrow will be better still. I do well on days I have a set agenda, and tomorrow I have an early morning ten mile run and then Hans and I are going to drive to Greensboro to look around some more. There's a builder we want to talk to and we need to look into other apartment options. Tuesday is the day we'll know for sure that we're moving, and the mad dash will begin in earnest.

Thoughts captured by Kristine at 2:08 PM EDT
Updated: Thursday, June 9, 2005 1:55 PM EDT
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Thursday, June 2, 2005
Seattle Spit
Mood:  energetic
Now Playing: So Long Farewell Goodbye by Big Bad Voodoo Daddy
Topic: Marathon
I did my 45 minute run/walk in a true Seattle spit tonight, and it was awesome. As much as the gloom and drizzle of the Pacific Northwest depressed me and made me tired, it was definitely good for workouts. Finding those same conditions here in North Carolina tonight was a real blessing. The slugs and frogs were out, and I felt right at home. In contrast to the last couple runs, by minute 20 I was feeling really strong and into it. I pushed the run portions just a little faster than normal on the second 20 minutes and finished feeling great. Not a single cough tonight, no wheezing, and my feet feel fine. Nice way to end an otherwise frustrating day and turn the energy around.

Thoughts captured by Kristine at 9:42 PM EDT
Updated: Thursday, June 2, 2005 9:44 PM EDT
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Technical Difficulties
Mood:  irritated
Topic: Daily Eruptions
I could swear Mercury were retrograde with all the technical problems I'm having with Sudie's computer and fax/printer! Just when I get one problem fixed, I discover another one. Today I discovered that after taking the computer in to be cleaned, defragged, backed up, and de-spywared, I can no longer open QuickBooks. Kind of important for a small business to be able to open QuickBooks. So, after lunch, I get to call the computer tech back and dive into this problem.

I have checked my horoscope for the month and there is no mention of Mercury. All it says is that after two years of hard work and little play, this is finally my month for romance and travel, and that I will find more leisure time and meet many new people. Sounds great, but it doesn't sound like my life. Romance of the old, married couple sort might be a possibility for another week or so, but if Hans goes to Seattle at the end of the month, even that would be difficult. And as far as travel goes, I see myself running lots of errands for Sudie and trying to find a place to live in Greensboro. The only two potentially dark spots in the horoscope are that one of the new men I might meet won't be truthful with me and that one of my co-workers may have it in for me. Like I said, doesn't sound like my life.

I thanked the deities of technology this morning for helping me figure out how to get the computer to recognize the new printer and share the phone line with the fax, but maybe they thought I still took too much credit for myself and are slapping me around to keep me from getting a swelled head.


Thoughts captured by Kristine at 1:35 PM EDT
Updated: Thursday, June 9, 2005 1:56 PM EDT
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Wednesday, June 1, 2005
The "Reviews" Are In
Mood:  lucky
Topic: Writing
I heard back from Scott yesterday about the story--he said I could send him "hot stuff like that" any time and that he liked the pacing. It's not his favorite thing I've written, however.

I heard from John today and he says he enjoyed the story, but doesn't appreciate the sexist attitude it takes. He thinks the man would know the stakes right from the start but would likely still take the risk because he would feel there would only be minimal consequences to his actions even if he got caught.

And, I think the response I got from Rich was also a thumbs up, so I'm a very happy girl. It's amazing how much good vibe I can milk out of finishing one very small story!

Finishing one, though, has given me so much joy that I am antsy to write more. I got that one endorphin hit and now I'll go back and press the bar no matter how many electric shocks I have to endure just to get my next hit. In January, right after I started working for Sudie, I wrote a one page beginning of another relationship story. I typed that up tonight and wrote another half page just to keep the energy rolling forward. It's too early to tell with this one, but I have a faint notion of where it's going. It might be difficult, though, because I think this story is going to force me to be a girl, or at least write like one, and I'm not always the best at that. Especially because the story will require viewpoints from multiple girls. It could come across as a really bad imitation of Sex and the City which I watched a little of in the first season--enough to know I'm not cool enough to write that kind of dialogue. But, again, it's an exercise and it's outside of my present comfort zone, so it's all good.

One of these days, I will write something other than a story about a relationship, but for now, I can't seem to help it. This is only the third (or fourth depending on whether or not I do any more work developing that outside-the-hotel-room-door scene) story in a row I've written dealing with relationships, so it's not an alarming trend, but there is this nagging "should" that says I should be writing something grander. That I need to get serious about nature writing or environmental reporting or something more life and death than whether or not one marriage survives. Still, I'm writing about whether one marriage survives, and I'll just have to keep writing about that until I've looked at it from enough angles that it's, at least temporarily, resolved for me and I find energy elsewhere.

It's all part of the puzzle I'm trying to figure out about what it means to be an independent, self-actualized woman, and what are the acceptable rules of conduct, and whether I want to follow the acceptable rules. My feelings for the last ten years are that I probably don't want to follow the acceptable rules, so then there is this constant feeling my way along the edge to decide just what is right for me and how far out from the "norm" I can go and still be okay. And then there's the constant reevaluation of what I can use as an appropriate measure of success for myself when I seem to be all the wrong sizes for society's usual yardsticks. All very self-centered, I know. But it's what interests me, and therefore what drives the writing. No way to know yet whether anyone else will care, but for now, I'm using the writing muscles and they feel good.

Thoughts captured by Kristine at 10:16 PM EDT
Updated: Wednesday, June 1, 2005 10:25 PM EDT
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Tuesday, May 31, 2005
New short short
Mood:  happy
Now Playing: I Fall in Love Too Easily by Curtis Stigers
Topic: Writing
I've posted the new short short temporarily on my website at [NOTE: this story is no longer available for viewing as of 6/20/05]

Just my way of reminding myself that I am writing again (and really, really happy about that!) :)

I'm moving next to another short story, but last night I was attacked by a line that may find its way into a poem soon:

I find poems and leave them
without explanation
or introduction

I don't know...it's kind of weak hanging out there all by itself! We'll see.

Thoughts captured by Kristine at 11:20 PM EDT
Updated: Monday, June 20, 2005 9:29 AM EDT
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Captain Jack
Mood:  chillin'
Now Playing: Life's a Bitch by ShOOTER
Topic: Marathon
I woke up this morning dreaming that not only did I work for George W, but that I also lived in the same two-story house in the suburbs with him and Mrs. Bush and all their staffers. I had a meeting I thought Mr. Bush needed to take but he was refusing. I had been up all night working and there was an empty pizza box and wrappers from almost an entire bag of miniature chocolate candy bars spread all over the kitchen table with my papers. While I was upstairs trying to convince Mrs. Bush that the President needed to take this meeting, the other staffers were waking up and wandering downstairs and finding the remains of my late-night binge. What a horrible way to wake up!! Not only did I have a job that would no doubt frustrate me every minute of every day, but I was actually dealing with my dream frustration with dream binge eating! (When I told Scott, he made the comment that if I were going to binge, doing so in my dreams was probably healthier than doing it while I was awake.) On top of that, I had "Captain Jack" by Billy Joel playing in my head--a song about how alcohol/drugs can solve all your problems. Needless to say, I was in the pissiest mood this morning.

Scott brought me out of that with an encouraging email this morning, though, and the day improved.

I did my short run tonight, and while I didn't love it, I hung in there. My mind wanted to stop after 30 minutes, but because of the way the long run went on Sunday, I really want to hold myself to 45 minutes on the two short runs this week. So at the 30 minute mark, I started spontaneously making a list in my head of all the reasons why I was going to keep running tonight, and it turned out to be a really great tool. I'll have to remember that one. I finished in a good mood and had no problems with either my lungs or my left arch! In my book, that counts as a good session.

I feel like I'm going into June with some good momentum. I just have to keep building on that because things are going to get really crazy really quickly after June 7 when we hear definitively about Hans's new job. We will have only a few weeks to figure out whether we want to try to buy a house in Greensboro or go back to living in an apartment (we have been really spoiled by living in the townhouse here and the Queen Anne condo in Seattle, and really even by the townhouse apartment building we managed in Edmonds, and are having a difficult time thinking about high density apartment living again.), and what we're going to do about a second car. And packing. I escaped all the packing with the move from Seattle to Wake Forest because I was in Raleigh and the move was unexpected, so Hans took care of everything. This time, he may be in Seattle for training, which means the packing will fall to me. Hans is thinking this would be true justice and is hoping that if I have to pack everything, maybe I'll be inclined to throw or give away more things. Silly man.

Thoughts captured by Kristine at 12:01 AM EDT
Updated: Wednesday, June 1, 2005 1:15 PM EDT
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Sunday, May 29, 2005
I did a dumb, dumb thing
Mood:  not sure
Now Playing: Superior: The Inland Sea from the Great Lakes Suite by Dan Gibson
Topic: Marathon
In Pam Houston's Sight Hound, Rae's husband is always making up new lyrics for songs he already knows. If he were here, he would be singing, "Baby did a dumb, dumb thing" to the tune of Chris Isaak's "Baby Did a Bad, Bad Thing." I slept altogether too late today and by the time I had done yoga and got out to do my long run, it was hot. It was my first attempt at a long run with 2 minute run intervals, and, in spite of the heat, I thought I was going to be okay.

My lungs did great! I finally figured out how to get my heart rate monitor working again today and I watched it to see what my max looked like and to make sure I was recovering in a reasonable time on the walk breaks. On uphill runs, I maxed out at 172, mostly because I wouldn't let myself go any higher than that. After I hit it three times, I could tell by the way my body felt--slightly sick to my stomach--when I had reached it, and I would slow down to make sure I didn't exceed it. A long run in the heat isn't a time to push the heart rate.

Fifty-five minutes in, my mind was hating the whole experience. I was convinced that my body wasn't going to feel its usual relief at that point, but I made myself check in with my body anyway. I was amazed to discover that my body actually did seem to have reached the state of adjustment it typically finds several miles into my long sessions. My lungs were doing beautifully and the pain in my left arch seemed to have subsided. My legs felt strong, and I had found my rhythm. My mood started to pick up.

The next two run intervals were mostly downhill, but the third interval was all uphill. I hit 172, started feeling queasy, backed off, and then realized that I was also getting chills. Chills in that kind of heat are not a good thing. I walked another half mile to see if they subsided, but they didn't, and I decided to call it a day even though my heart rate was still recovering relatively quickly. Maybe I'm a wimp or just looking for an excuse to stop, but I couldn't see how heat stroke would benefit me.

No asthma attack when I finished--yay!--but the left arch started absolutely screaming the minute I stopped moving. Hans was worried I had a stress fracture, but finally, now, two hours later I can finally walk on it. When I stopped the run early this morning, I promised myself I would finish the last three miles tonight after the heat has passed. If the foot feels up to it, I will at least try to walk those three miles. And for next Sunday's ten-miler, I have to be up by 5:00 a.m. and out the door.

There are so many variables to try to manage and monitor without a coach....

Thoughts captured by Kristine at 12:57 PM EDT
Updated: Sunday, May 29, 2005 1:02 PM EDT
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