Mind your own time
I’ve recently received conflicting commentary on how I spend my time. It’s ranged from “you must have time for that, since you don’t have kids,” to “you’re so busy, Kim, how do you have time for anything?!”
Well, which is it? Ha ha. Do I have all the time in the world or not?!
It’s always a bit of a shock when you’re reminded other people are thinking about how you spend your time (why do they care?!), and mostly likely, how they’d spend your time, if they were you.
I’m certainly not immune to it. When you study to become a certified personal trainer, you learn a lot about the reasons people don’t exercise, and ways to encourage them to do so. The number one reason people give is that they don’t have enough time. So, yes, when people tell me they don’t have time to exercise, my brain automatically thinks “I bet you do!” and tries to come up with solutions to “fit it in.”
But you know what? I never share those solutions unless asked. And I feel guilty for thinking of them, at all. Because I very much believe we should all do whatever we want with our time, however our lives are set up. We all get the same amount of hours in the day, do what you can with them! (Just, please, don’t act surprised when you don’t get the results you’d like because you didn’t spend your time in the manner to get them.)
Are you surprised when people comment on how you spend your time? Do you get a range of comments about it?
I wrote about this almost two years ago, and feel that I have gotten much better at not filling all my free time with things to do, and at not caring (mostly, at all) what people do with theirs, since then. I’ve gone through a cycle. After college, when I was getting used to working full time, I was exhausted most nights and just wanted to stay in. Then one night we went out for a movie on a weeknight, and it didn’t kill me so I realized weeknights could be for social activities, too! So then I started scheduling more of them… hence getting to having too much (for me) going on. Now I have a pretty decent balance. We have something going on most weekends, and I am out of the house two weeknights, working, but I really try to protect my “down” time at home, with the boys, because I know it keeps me sane.
Why the Hallmark hate?
Awhile ago, me and a few people were all buying (individual) greeting cards for the same person. We were discussing if anyone had bought or sent their card yet – no one had done either. In fact, I had plans to stop at Hallmark that day to get mine. Good thing I didn’t mention it! By name, anyway…
“I am getting mine today, but NOT at Hallmark. Their cards are so impersonal and tacky,” said one person.
Um… they are? I didn’t think so… I have found cards there that say exactly what I want to say to someone, only better. I have also found beautiful blank cards, where I can write whatever silly thing comes to mind. I have found great cards other places. I have spent under a dollar on a card. I have spent $10. I have had cards custom made! I thought… gosh, I thought it was the thought that counts. The intention and content, not the brand. I have loved a homemade card as much as I have loved a note sprawled on a sheet of ripped out spiral-bound paper. A card (or note, whatever), to me, in a digital time (har de har har me so old) is just so thoughtful and deliberate. I’m not getting bent out of shape over where it’s from.
The way this person reacted made me think they would be offended if they received a Hallmark card. Sigh. Everyone is entitled to their opinions on products/brands, but the amount of disgust over Hallmark simply shocked me.
And now is the point in the post where I’m not sure where to take this. Because while I think “it’s the thought that counts” for a (sincerely, of course) sent card, I don’t feel that way about every material gift. And I don’t feel like it would be fair for me to publish this without mentioning that (even though they are two separate arenas).
There are people I wish wouldn’t buy me things, and would get to know me, instead. I have received completely thoughtless (in my opinion) gifts that did make me feel offended. I have been upset, when I told someone over and over “I don’t like that,” and “I don’t want that,” and they still gave it to me. I have been frustrated when I’ve asked someone to stop buying me things in general, yet, they still do.
Ha. You thought the Hallmark-hater was the bad guy in this post? It seems like it’s really me! Why can’t I just be grateful for generosity? Why do I have to question it?
Don’t worry – I am not like that all the time. I am not like that often. I am a grateful person. And, I know I have been on the other end, too. I am sure I have given people things and they are thinking “Another xyz from Kim?!” I have wished I knew someone better and was spending time with them instead of buying them something. I know I have given thoughtless gifts.
But I hope I’ve never given a thoughtless card. And I hope no one has ever been disappointed I sent them one from Hallmark!
One thing at a time
If I had a mantra for the year, that would be it – one thing at a time.
You know how people have that thing they talk about all the time without realizing it? But when they get started you are thinking “here they go again!” or “give it a rest, already!!!”? Ha ha. That is going to be me, this year, with talking about wanting to focus on one thing at a time, and doing it by disconnecting (online) a bit more.
I have run across a few articles talking about this being a trendy resolution for the year – people trying to get away from technology. I don’t want to do that 100%, per se – I love the internetz, blogging, and connecting with people online. What I don’t love, however, is how freakin’ distracted I am, and most of the time now – online and sometimes in person.
It’s kind of sad that the only time I can truly focus is when I am on a run. I had all weekend to write my workout for strength class tonight. When could I focus on planning it out? In my head, on my long run this am. I do have my phone with me when I run, for safety and photos, but that’s all I want to use it for. Running is basically the only time I can be alone with my thoughts without distraction (self-inflicted or otherwise). A few people have told me how cool it is that the new Garmin watch will show you incoming texts. Um… that is fantastic, but would really distract me if I had it.
And that is the thing – I wonder how much of this is in my control? Can I work toward becoming less distracted or is it hopeless? Ha ha. Of course it isn’t! But I have to be mindful about it, and that is the thing I am struggling with to start with – mindfulness!
As I mentioned last week, I am reading a book about this subject (hence me going on and on and on about it…). One section of the book mentioned how we get online and start doing so many things, and eventually get used to that state of “continuous partial attention.” Um, yeah, that describes me, a lot of the time (online and not, unfortunately). And how about this blurb, describing how that state makes us feel?
Um, yes. All that communication coming at you is addictive, and to use Dr. Small’s word, “irresistible.” It excites me, to have so many things going on at once. But to what cost is it? I am NOT a supertasker. I do my best focusing on one thing at a time. Why do I keep trying otherwise? Why, why, why?
So I have been trying really hard to get better at this. It’s stupid stuff, like when the phone rang when I was writing this, I got up and talked on it in a different room, instead of playing on the computer while on the phone. I turned my phone text notification off so I could focus on writing. I made sure I wasn’t doing anything in any other tabs. There were emails I wanted to write and people I wanted to gchat, but I held off on it.
It’s silly I have to be so mindful about it! But I feel better when I am!
Anyone else feel like they get caught in a state of “continuous partial attention”? What do you do to get out of it?
I wanted to make sure to give you an update on Data! I think it’s safe to say he’s on the road to recovery (although we need to see if he needs follow-up bloodwork, still). He felt well enough to attack me while I was knitting last week, and to let me know he wanted to be fed… by biting me. He’s eaten his normal amount of food this weekend, plus some! Yay! My little sh*t is back!
Training Week 274
Highlight of the Week: Receiving rave reviews after my second Efit fitness boxing class! It’s so rewarding to hear the students love it as much as I do! And 5, out of nowhere, speedy for me, miles on Monday!
Monday | January 12, 2015: 5 m run + teaching strength class
Loc: hood, Temp: 16°/12°, Time: 42:12, Pace: 8:26 avg, Difficulty: mostly easy, Felt: happy that the main streets were clear!
Strength: sandbags and kettlebells, Difficulty: easy, Felt: good
Tuesday | January 13, 2015: 7 m run incl. 4x”400″ & 2x”800″ (first 5 w/Kelly) + 10 min strength
Loc: LSC (indoor track), Time: 1:09:48, Pace: 10:00 avg, Difficulty: mostly easy, Felt: good, capable
Wednesday | January 14, 2015: rest
Thursday | January 15, 2015: 7 m run (first 5 w/Kelly)
Loc: LSC, Time: 1:12:59, Pace: 10:21 avg, Difficulty: easy, Felt: tired (sleepy)
Friday | January 16, 2015: teaching strength class + 10 m run (2.5 w/Dawn) + 15 m bike
Strength: sandbags, Difficulty: easy/medium, Felt: happy with switching up the workout
Loc: LSC, Time: 1:41:30, Pace: 10:10, Difficulty: easy, Felt: good
Bike Time: 1:00:02, Pace: 15.01 mph avg, Difficulty: easy, Felt: good
Saturday | January 17, 2015: teaching fitness boxing + 3.1 m run (w/Janet)
Strength: boxing and body weight workout, Difficulty: medium, Felt: pumped
Loc: Grayslake, Temp: 39°, Time: 27:13, Pace: 8:49 avg, Difficulty: medium/hard, Felt: gassed
Sunday | January 18, 2015: 8 m run
Loc: hood, Temp: 33°/35°, Time: 1:18:33, Pace: 9:49 avg, Difficulty: easy, Felt: good
Notes:
- I don’t think my body is digging indoor running. At least, so much indoor running. The knee that’s on the inside when I turn is feeling a bit stiff, and my legs feel sore, in general (they rarely feel that way, typically). I should really save running indoors for speed days only (even though this is super counter-intuitive since we don’t know how far we are running on the “track,” ha ha!). I ran inside so much last week because the roads were nasty, but this week was a bit better. Maybe next week will be too!
- My friend and I had plans to snowshoe this afternoon but it got so warm that a lot of the snow melted! Oops! I wonder if my snowshoe race next Sunday will turn in to a trail race! Either way, it’ll be fun!
- I’ve gotten a headache the last two Saturdays and I wonder if I am not fueling/drinking enough after teaching the fitness boxing class. I have a warped perception of my effort because I do most, but not all, of the class with the students, making me feel like I didn’t work as hard and don’t need to fuel as carefully. Dumb. I had a protein shake after each class, but maybe I need something else! We’ll see if I get another headache this Saturday – I am not teaching, so maybe something entirely different is causing it.
- Because said headache made last Sunday’s long run not so pleasant, I decided to move this week’s to tomorrow. I know it seems like I am running stupid high miles to be training for a 5K in March, but, I am actually making sure I am running enough miles to be prepared for the ultra in April. I wrote myself a training plan with a slow progression from 40 miles a week to 60 (peak week only). My goal half is four weeks after the ultra. Then… the summer of rest! (Or if I stay in good shape, I could throw in a late spring marathon. Maybe.)
NOPE. Not a perfectionist. (For now?)
Thank you so much for your well wishes for Data! He ate again yesterday, and this morning, and seems more playful and energetic! Fingers crossed!
So now that I have tried it myself, I have much more admiration for my friends and family who can knit (and crochet)!
For a long time, I was telling Mica that I wanted to learn how to knit. She often tells me about her knitting projects, which I think are really cool, and, yes, have inspired me to want to learn the craft!
Mica sent me some needles and yarn (what a sweetie!), and some really helpful links to try it out on my own, which I did! I was able to get a cast on and start my first (well, second) row, but I always screwed something up and didn’t know what I was doing wrong. So I thought it would be good if I took a class, which… is what I did last night. And realized I am NOT a natural at knitting!
Ha ha, I don’t suppose anyone is. I suppose most everyone made huge mistakes like I did the first time, and had to learn muscle memory over time, but holy cow, is it frustrating! I can’t tell you how many times I asked the instructor to come fix what I’d messed up.
Now, the good part is I actually realized I messed it up – I could see my stitches were twisted, or that for some reason I had switched from perling to knitting and I wasn’t supposed to. Anyway. What I have learned about this, is that like with most other things, it requires way more concentration and focus than comes naturally to me. For example I would be knitting a row then all of a sudden start using the needle from the wrong side, because I stopped paying attention and started talking to someone else. So I guess this won’t really be a hobby I can do while I am watching a movie, or having a conversation, or… anything else.*
But hopefully! I will stick with it, and get better at it! Because when I do get in to a groove with it, it’s fun. And it’s a little addictive – I was thinking about it most of the morning until I could work on it again.
I was laughing though, because last night, the instructor saw me fixing something, and moving it around on my needle and wanting things to be lined up just right and she goes “Oh, you must be a perfectionist, like me!”
And I am thinking, “I am NOT a perfectionist.” This thing we’re making? This washcloth? I know the first half of it is going to look like total crap and hopefully the last few rows I get right. And that’s okay. You’ll be able to see my progress in the work and I am okay with that. I don’t plan on using it. Maybe I will make twenty of them before I start a real project I care about.
But I suppose if I ever plan on making something to wear or even give to someone else, it probably should be a little closer to perfect than I ever aim for. Ha ha.
I actually recorded this post then transcribed it with minor editing, so if it reads different than my typical post, that’s because it’s mostly my speaking style!
*I already know I am a horrible multitasker, so a hobby like this for me, is a good thing.
A welcomed early wake-up call
Typically, I am not very appreciate of Data’s early morning, before the alarm clock, “feed me right meow!” wake-up calls. I can get up just fine on my own! And you can wait to eat, Data!
But this morning? I was more than appreciative that Data was waking me up thirty minutes before my alarm, at 4:00 am. I was excited to offer him some food when I got up. I was excited to see he ate a bit!
And I was pumped when I got home from my run and he was crawling all over my desk, asking for more food. And again, when he ate it, along with part of his breakfast.
Phew. I hope he is on the mend.
On Saturday am, he threw up an abnormal amount, in a short amount of time (he rarely throws up). We took him to the vet, and they did blood work, and gave him some anti-nausea meds and fluids, and had us fast him for 24 hours. I was expecting him to be BEGGING for food during those 24 hours. Nope. More throw up (thankfully, not as much) during that time, and when the 24 hours was over on Sunday, he didn’t have any interest in food. On Monday the vet called and said he has pancreatitis, and to monitor his symptoms at home, but that if he starts drinking and eating, he should get better on his own.
Sigh. So I continued food journaling for Data. He took a single bit of food Monday and Tuesday. That was it. He was acting cuddly and sweet, and I was trying not to worry… but I could feel fear building up inside me. Fear of losing him.
Needless to say, I was in a deep funk at the beginning of the week. And felt guilty any time I left the house (and left him).
But thankfully, he ate a bit more last night (and we put some water in his wet food to get him to drink), and as I mentioned, again, this morning. I really hope he is back on the mend! I want my “whining for food all the time” cat back!
Why I still read print magazines and books
It became more apparent to me, how much magazines are struggling, when I saw this blurb in the January/February issue of Runner’s World:
I was actually confused when I got the issue – confused that it was a two-month issue. I had recalled them printing every month. So that explained it.
That blurb made me feel disappointed (and it made me laugh – I always feel like an impostor reading Running Times since I am not “competitive” or a “front-of-the-pack” runner) – first, that they were shifting their focus more toward online content (which I struggle to read), and second, that they are really cutting back even more on my favorite running magazine, Running Times.
I realize it’s odd that I have an aversion to reading articles from a magazine online, since I read so many blogs and other news stories also, online. But, the ones I can pay attention to, all the way through, are on the shorter side. There’s just something about magazine articles (and books) that makes me lose focus.
I’m currently reading Michael Harris’s The End of Absence: Reclaiming What We’ve Lost in a World of Constant Connection, and highlighting the hell out of it. Right away, two blurbs in the beginning of the book gave me some insight as to why I struggle with longer online content:
(apologies for these being out of context)
To Manguel’s point – yes, I do feel like I “speed” through digital text with urgency. There is so much of it – and for that I am grateful – but I also have that “NEED TO READ ALL THE THINGZ!!!” feeling, which, yes, makes me want to rush, from one thing, to the next. What am I missing out on while I am reading this right now?! Hurry and go find out!
Carr’s paragraph is really out of context, but in that section of the book, Harris is discussing how our minds are constantly adapting, changing, and molding to the world/stimuli around us. So, our brains have been taught to absorb online content differently than a “real” book or magazine. As Carr says, we absorb information less effectively, skip to the bottom of paragraphs, and are constantly shifting focus. Yeah… that definitely describes my online reading habits, from time to time!
I honestly did wonder why I lose focus on longer online articles and books so much before, and reading those two blurbs helped me understand it. I am not sure if it’s something I want to “fix” though! I just tend to get more out of something I can physically hold, dog ear, highlight, make notes on, put down and come back to… The content sticks with me longer when I read something that way. It’s completely fantastic to have some much information online for reference, but it just doesn’t “stick” as well as when I read it in hard print.
And I am not even getting in to the “feel” of reading something. A magazine or book feels warmer to me that reading something online. And look at online articles – if you are reading on the website and not in some rss aggregator that filters out all the ads and links to other articles, it feels so busy, and spammy! Of course, the rss aggregator feels cold and sterile (but that helps me focus, more).
So… I will continue to read magazine and books, even though they seem to be dying out, and even though all of that content is eventually online (and usually, for free!).
Do you still subscribe to magazines? Do you feel like you rush through online articles, or skip around the content while you are reading them, and lose focus?
Training Week 273
Highlight of the Week: Teaching a fun new boxing class at Efit!
Monday | January 5, 2015: 5 m run + teaching strength class
Loc: hood, Temp: 7°/6°, Time: 52:59, Pace: 10:36 avg, Difficulty: medium (footing), Felt: good, but so slick out!
Strength: sand bags, Difficulty: easy, Felt: good!
Tuesday | January 6, 2015: rest
Wednesday | January 7, 2015: 10.5 m run (first 4.75 w/Kelly)/10 min strength + Body Beast Cardio* (w/Steven)
*counting as a strength workout
Loc: Libertyville Sports Complex, Time: 1:40:01, Pace: 9:31 avg, Difficulty: easy, Felt: good
Thursday | January 8, 2015: 4.2 m run incl. 4x”400″ (w/Kelly) + 12 m bike
Loc: Libertyville Sports Complex, Time: 40:56, Pace: 9:41 avg, Difficulty: easy/medium, Felt: good (sore from Monday)
Bike Time: 46:39, Pace: 15.4 mph avg, Difficulty: easy, Felt: good (helped with sore legs)
Friday | January 9, 2015: teaching strength class + 8 m run (first 4 w/Dawn)
Strength: sand bags, Difficulty: easy, Felt: good
Loc: Libertyville Sports Complex, Time: 1:22:43, Pace: 10:21, Difficulty: easy, Felt: good
Saturday | January 10, 2015: teaching fitness boxing + 3.2 m run
Strength: boxing and body weight workout, Difficulty: easy, Felt: hyped up – lost my voice! Ha ha
Loc: hood, Temp: 17°/17°, Time: 32:40, Pace: 10:13 avg, Difficulty: easy/medium, Felt: good, still slick out
Sunday | January 11, 2015: 12 m run
Loc: hood, Temp: 25°/32°, Time: 2:09:56, Pace: 10:50 avg, Difficulty: medium (headache), Felt: good, warm
Notes:
- Ahh, winter running! I had my first real taste of it this Monday – slipping and sliding all over snow covered ice! I gotta work the snow running muscles back up! That, paired with the strength workout I taught Monday night (lots of side lunges) left my hip adductors and glutes quite sore for a few days. Who else was slipping and sliding all over outside this week?
- With our streets being a dangerous mess most of the week, and my desire to run longer than 5 miles (about what I am ready for in the snow right now) and do some speedwork, I did a few indoor track runs. And actually enjoyed it! Weird! I’ll keep doing the speed workouts indoors when the roads are crummy.
- As of Thursday am, the 8th, I had already run more miles in this January, than January of last year. I know I’ve mentioned in a few times, but I am just so grateful not to be starting this year off sick, like I did last year! Okay. I better stop talking about it now so I don’t jinx it!
- I kind of lied about not bombarding you guys with 2015 stats that only I care about… and did add a yearly cumulative stats bar at the bottom of my collage for fun. Fun for me. Feel free to scroll on by it! Ha ha.
- I intended to get out on my snowshoes on Sunday but didn’t plan my day out well enough to do it in the daylight. Darn. I hope I can early next week… I have a snow shoe race two weeks from today!
Always brush your tongue
One day in February last year, I woke up with a dark spot on the back of my tongue, and when I brushed my teeth, I was spitting up something dark, too!
I actually took a photo of my tongue, because I was worried something was wrong with it (ha, I won’t force you to look at that photo). But then I noticed the more and more I brushed my tongue. The more the spot went away.
Then I remembered I ate about a zillion of these the night before:
Ha ha. So. Apparently, if you eat a bunch of truffles and don’t brush your tongue very well, you will think you have some crazy disease when you wake up in the morning.
YOU’VE BEEN WARNED!
I was thinking about that incident yesterday as I cleaned out our “junk” shelf in our pantry (some stuff went to the trash, some will go toward the “office dump,” some was kept), because I didn’t realize how much chocolate I had. I keep it all in a box and forget about it. There were four dark chocolate candy bars, a new box of truffles, half a box from before, and all of Steven’s milk chocolate. Geesh! No one needs that much chocolate in their house! If I were to eat it, I would definitely think I had some tongue disease again, ha ha.
Did you see the “report” (pdf here) this week that people start to amp up their purchasing of junk food toward the holidays, and continue to a bit in the new year? And that, yeah, that would make it harder to lose weight if that was a “resolution” of yours, because you are still in some sort of junk food purchasing auto-pilot.
We actually did fairly well not buying a lot of junk for the holidays this year, but mostly because we were traveling. If we were hosting, I would have had a few candy items around the house, and baked something. The only items I purchased were for Steven’s family’s stockings (And I forgot to get my snister her favorite treat! Sorry, snis!), and of course, I received a few things. Apparently enough to make me do a purge of the “junk” shelf!
Mostly… I am happy to have the holidays behind me and get back to my typical eating plan! It’s fun to eat treats around the holidays, but my body can only tolerate a little bit, ha ha!
Are you back to your normal eating plan after the holidays? Or do you feel like you are still buying some “junky” items, like that article suggests?
The only marathon I may do this year
For Christmas I asked my parents for The Fast and the Furious Collection*, and they delivered!
I’d actually forgotten I asked, and was surprised and excited to receive them**… and eager to start watching! So Steven and I started the movie “marathon” on December 29th. Our New Year’s Eve travels set our “marathon” back a bit (as well as wanting to watch out Netflix disks), but we’re currently on Furious 6 and nearing the end of the series***, which I am actually a little sad about****.
I keep joking with Steven about the “importance of this ‘marathon”” as it may be the only one I do this year. Ha ha. After saying it for about the zillionth time last night, he asked “But aren’t you doing one of those ultra things with Rachel this year?”
That is true. Rachel and I are targeting an April ultra that is 33.5 miles long. But… here is the thing – in my mind, ultras fit in to the “race for fun” category. Actually, to me, every distance BUT 26.2 does, meaning, I would run any of those race distances just for the “fun” of it, and not care what my finish time was, or if I had trained specifically for it (trained enough miles, for sure, just not in a specific way).
I’d also run any of those distances for a goal time, it’s just that the marathon doesn’t fit in both categories. It’s… a purposeful race for me. It’s not something I want to BS my way through. It’s potentially too long and painful for that. If I am signed up for one, I want to have specifically prepared for it, and actually have a goal finish time in mind.
So, I am a bit hesitant to have one on my calendar. Because, at any moment I can choose to run my other “goal” race distances just for fun (yes, I build in contingency for myself to stop caring about goal finish times I’ve had in mind – cause it’s definitely happened), but I don’t want to be “stuck” signed up for a marathon that I no longer feel like doing.
Ha! All of this sounds very negative to write, especially since my last two marathons went so fabulously! But, that is just how my brain works – it’s still hyper sensitive about keeping the marathon “sacred.” Respecting the distance, really. So apparently, it’s the only distance I respect, since I am willing to run most others willy-nilly!
Do you have any race distances that you won’t run “just for the fun of it”? Or are they all that way for you? (Yeah, I am not a very “serious” racer!)
Oops, I thought this post was going to be about movie watching marathons. To which I must say, as much as I love this one, Star Wars will always be number 1!
*Minus the first one, which we already owned.
**Although you’d never be able to tell from this picture! I was still getting over being sick and you could totally see it in my face!
***We’re watching them in story chronological order, not chronological release order, so we still have to get through Tokyo Drift.
****These movies are ridiculous but I find them to be enjoyable and entertaining to watch! Now I’ll have to wait until April for Furious 7!