So I have cleaned up my diet over the last couple weeks for a variety of reasons- to be a better athlete, and (yeah, really) to be the weight I want to be when I try on wedding dresses. I don't feel like this is being negative towards my body- I don't sit around and despise myself when I'm 140, but frankly if you have some unhealthy habits it's best to give them up. Not to mention that I am committed to losing weight in a healthy way- I won't skip meals, I get my proteins, and I definitely eat!
So after 2 weeks of reducing my carb intake and eliminating my post-lunch chocolate and my after work chips, I've dropped somewhere between 5 and 7 lbs. It's so fricken rewarding to work towards something and to achieve it, especially after yesterday's crappy day. Now I'm just praying that my knee gets better so I can start ultra-marathoning.
Wednesday, October 15, 2008
Thursday, October 9, 2008
A Good Day



I woke up this morning at 5:15 to my alarm, and decided that 10 hours at the office was too much (plus the boss is out of town). So I threw my surfboard and running stuff in the car and drove out to Bolinas. I just kept feeling calmer and calmer as the landscape became more rural, with the orangey sunrise light and the cows grazing and the big old Doug Firs along the ridge. Per usual, as I drove I kept trying to figure out the perfect job where I can earn city money while living in the country.I mean, there is a reason that cooped up executives put pictures of Nature on their office wall, right? Maybe they havce more taste than I give them credit for (though the experience is mediated...uh oh, that's grad school talking).
I got to the beach and it was breezy and the waves were crumbly. I saw a man and his teeny daughter all bundled up and toddling, a couple people camped on the beach near the edge of the cliffs, a flock of pelicans cruizing over the water. There were 2 guys out messing around in the whitewater and another guy was about to paddle out. I didn't see anything that inspiring.
I drove out to the Bird Observatory at the southern end of Point Reyes National Seashore, and decided to test my knee out. I saw a bunny in the parking lot as I put my shoes on. I only jogged for a half hour or so, but holy cow the views out over the ocean were sweeping and incredible. My knee still feels achy, but I mentally planned a huge run for this weekend out at Point Reyes. We will see. I drove back feeling refreshed.
Pops drove me to BART, and I rode BART to work, attemping to help an Indian woman figure out how to get to the consulate. I managed various things at work, and helped out the kids next store by finishing some analysis I said I would do awhile ago.
I had a spinach salad and some microwave lean cuisine pasta for lunch. The diet is still going well enough, keeping my eyes on the prize as best I can.
Wednesday, October 8, 2008
Back to blogging?

It always amazes me how much information about me is stored somewhere online. I mean, Amazon can tell me which books (such as the Roadside Geology of Baja) I bought in 2002. I can barely remember what I did last week. Anyhow, this blog appears to still be here, as am I, so I figured I would give a quick update.
Got back from New York on Sunday night. It was a rough day. I ran 9 miles of the Wineglass Marathon (the first 1/3rd) as a relay, but I had intended to run the whole thing. But around mile 6, my right knee started killing. I made it to the relay transfer point (running 8.5 minute miles, happily), but was super disappointed. Enter cry #1. Afterwards, II and I drove back to drop me at JFK, but my flight was delayed which made it so I couldn't catch the midnight Airporter back to Marin. So my options were attempt to navigate public transportation at midnight on Sunday, to sleep on the floor of my office in Oakland (which also meant braving downtown Oakland at 1am), or calling my poor generous father and asking for a ride. Enter cry #2. Luckily pops was kind enough to make the journey- I don't think I could maintain this life without II or my family.
I have been babying my knee ever since with ice, heat, ibuprofin, and topical/oral arnica, but I'm still nervous about it. I tried to jog this morning and turned around immediately because it hurt. Instead I did an hour of elliptical training and 45 min or so of kickboxing at lunch, just trying to keep my overall fitness up. I have signed up for my first 50k at the end of the month, and I want to get in as much training as I can before it's time to rest. Now I am trying to figure out whether I should head to the Sierras this weekend with R and his buddy- I am leaning towards sticking around the Bay Area and being able to move on my own schedule. Maybe do a run with the Luna Girls or out at Point Reyes, eat some yummy pizza at the Bovine Bakery, and meditate out at the Zen Center all sounds pretty good right now. Of course, I would rather sleep under the stars any day, but my body doesn't seem to like the idea all that much at the moment.
Oh, this isn't my baby. I just thought it was the cutest thing in the world. No insinuations here either- I got a lot to do before I start breeding...
Monday, August 4, 2008
Tacos!


I'm such a crappy blogger. I don't like to actually reveal how self-absorbed I am, so eventually loose interest. There is no point in starting at the beginning, so I will start at lunch today, and once I get some pictures, I will talk about yesterday's marathon.
Back to lunch.
I'm in San Diego with II for a conference, and so I ran out to grab tacos in the nearby Mexican neighborhood. So happy I did. "Las Cuatro Milpas" is fricken amazing, and the internet says it's been around since 1933. Smoky delicious salsa, incredible meat, crumbly white cheese, and tons of little decor points like a menu made of moveable letters and super simple interior. I brought back 4 tamales, ate 2 tacos, and paid a whopping $10.
Tuesday, June 3, 2008
Things that will never be cool
EvilKat, Poverty, C and I created this list a divey bar in Portland a few months ago. Luckily our waiter was a hipster who could confirm whether hipsters had appropirated various items on this list. We oriented our list towards things hipsters would never become cultish about, either honestly or ironically.
We also decided that "Underestimating the Mumu" would be an awesome band name.
Things that will never be cool
1. All-inclusive vacations
2. Looney tunes
3. Pedicure toe separators
4. Kid Rock
5. JDate
6. Regular, homogenized, non-organic 2% milk
7. The chicken dance
8. Sub-saharan Africa (with the exception of South Africa)
9. Orlando, Florida
10. Fake clown noses
11. Hot topic
12. Being a competitive diver
13. Telling your friends how much you love them when you are sober
14. Tanning booths
15. Believing in crystals
16. USA Today
17. Suburbs
18. Dark Star Orchestra
We also decided that "Underestimating the Mumu" would be an awesome band name.
Things that will never be cool
1. All-inclusive vacations
2. Looney tunes
3. Pedicure toe separators
4. Kid Rock
5. JDate
6. Regular, homogenized, non-organic 2% milk
7. The chicken dance
8. Sub-saharan Africa (with the exception of South Africa)
9. Orlando, Florida
10. Fake clown noses
11. Hot topic
12. Being a competitive diver
13. Telling your friends how much you love them when you are sober
14. Tanning booths
15. Believing in crystals
16. USA Today
17. Suburbs
18. Dark Star Orchestra
Tuesday, April 22, 2008
5 Things Post
5 things I was doing 10 years ago
1. Finishing up my first year of college
2. Slowly replacing my collection of Grateful Dead bootlegs with country music
3. Getting ready to head up to the Sierra's
4. Realizing that Washington actually does have some semblance of summer
5. Morphing from a forest activist into something different
5 things on my to do list
1. Run a marathon
2. Spend as much time in "Nature" as possible this summer
3. Write more
4. Plan an awesomely fun wedding
5. Get better at Spanish
5 snacks I enjoy
1. Laughing cow cheese
2. Berries
3. Dates
4. Cashews
5. those little honey sesame sticks from Trader Joes
5 things I would do if I was a billionaire
1. Travel and surf half the year
2. Build a teeny modern cabin on our other piece of property in Central America
3. Write
4. Get my PhD
5. Go to art school
5 bad habits
1. Leaving my clothes in little piles wherever I took them off
2. Easily distractable
3. Too much coffee, too much wine
4. Hard time with decisions
5. Bad at keeping in touch
5 Places I've lived
1. Tasmania, Australia
2. Alpine, Alaska
3. Olympia, WA
4. Santa Barbara, CA
5. Oakland, CA
5 jobs I've had
1. Teachers Assistant
2. Graphic designer
3. Flower Arranger
4. White water rafting guide
5. Field biologist
1. Finishing up my first year of college
2. Slowly replacing my collection of Grateful Dead bootlegs with country music
3. Getting ready to head up to the Sierra's
4. Realizing that Washington actually does have some semblance of summer
5. Morphing from a forest activist into something different
5 things on my to do list
1. Run a marathon
2. Spend as much time in "Nature" as possible this summer
3. Write more
4. Plan an awesomely fun wedding
5. Get better at Spanish
5 snacks I enjoy
1. Laughing cow cheese
2. Berries
3. Dates
4. Cashews
5. those little honey sesame sticks from Trader Joes
5 things I would do if I was a billionaire
1. Travel and surf half the year
2. Build a teeny modern cabin on our other piece of property in Central America
3. Write
4. Get my PhD
5. Go to art school
5 bad habits
1. Leaving my clothes in little piles wherever I took them off
2. Easily distractable
3. Too much coffee, too much wine
4. Hard time with decisions
5. Bad at keeping in touch
5 Places I've lived
1. Tasmania, Australia
2. Alpine, Alaska
3. Olympia, WA
4. Santa Barbara, CA
5. Oakland, CA
5 jobs I've had
1. Teachers Assistant
2. Graphic designer
3. Flower Arranger
4. White water rafting guide
5. Field biologist
Friday, February 29, 2008
The Car Won't Start (working title)
I had turned the steering wheel back and forth, pumped the clutch, and wiggled the key in the ignition. Barely keeping my balance on the ice, I got out of the driver’s seat and rocked my 1989 Toyota pickup back and forth, hoping to jiggle whatever had become unjiggled back into place. No dice. It was becoming more and more official that my truck wasn’t going start with my amateurish coaxing.
Before this starts sounding overly dramatic, let me clarify that I wasn’t in a particularly life threatening situation. Uncomfortable, sure, but by no means dire. It was noon on a Friday and I was stuck in the parking lot of my local supermarket. I considered my options. I didn’t want to call a shop or a tow truck just yet- the last time this had happened my truck came to life a few hours later with no part replacements or fluid refills necessary. I decided to walk the couple miles home, and come back and check on my truck later when my boyfriend came home from work.
The only hook, however, was the weather. The temperature was below freezing, but snow did not float silently and picturesquely from the sky. Instead hunks of rain pelted down, slamming into the ground with apparent vengeance. When I walked to my car that morning, it was encased on all sides by a thin layer of ice, resembling an oblong rippled jellyfish. Slushy puddles emerged around curbs and in driveways, covered in dubiously strong partial coatings of ice. Coincidentally, the night before I had finished reading the story of Randy Morgensen, a ranger in the high Sierra backcountry who had spent his last few moments on earth pinned by rushing water to the wall of an icy lake after having crossed an ice bridge which had given way. Granted, a parking lot in upstate New York was no remote Sierra back country, but it did make the slashes of sharp, windy snow seem just a little more ominous.
The market was in the type of area that has found its way into the outskirts of nearly every major town in recent years, with gargantuan chain bookstores, restaurants, hardware stores, and a Wal-Mart. You know the area- you may swing by after work to pick up a copy of “Eat, Pray, Love” for your aunt for her birthday, but it’s certainly not the type of place you stroll through leisurely on Saturday afternoon. The main road was one of those “formerly the main highway until a bigger highway got built nearby” type of roads, not constructed with pedestrians in mind. The condo we were living in was tucked away right off this main road, backing up on a chunk of forest that would no doubt be developed similarly in the upcoming years. I was not anticipating this walk being overly pleasant, but I have the tendency of being somewhat stubborn when I decide to take something on.
I was a bit chagrined to realize that despite leaving the house thinking I looked kind of cute, or at least appropriate for running errands, nearly half of what I was wearing was completely appropriate for a walk in the snow. I had bought my hat for doing fish surveys in Alaska, I had worn my fleece on many backpacking trips, and my down vest had kept me warm during lots of cold nights in the Sierras. Even the yoga pants I was wearing would wick away water. While my attire was certainly convenient for the situation at hand, the minor fantasy that I successfully disguised myself as an urbanite had been dashed.
After wrapping up my purse and its contents in plastic grocery bags swiped from the market, I began my trek. Even as I crossed the parking lot towards the main road, I realized that I had gotten myself into a jarringly adventurous situation. It was cold. Really cold. The wind flapped all loose articles of clothing, and the freezing rain found its way inside the collar of my jacket. My nose went numb. I quickly soaked my running shoes (the weakest part of my ensemble) and had to keep wiggling my baby toes to keep my socks from freezing solid. Even with my slapdash winter garb on, I felt like I was at that part of an outdoor adventure when you realize you have gotten in a little over your head.
I slogged on down the road, tucking myself behind the guardrail to avoid being run down by a semi or a freewheeling minivan. Not much care had been put in to making the area “pedestrian friendly”, which is a bit of an understatement considering there was not a sidewalk in site. Somewhat ironically the road was lined with car dealerships, and I amused myself by fantasizing that it was an intentional juxtaposition in order to increase business (“I’m sick of walking on this damn road with no sidewalk! I’m going to buy a car right now!”). At one point I heard rumbling, and turned to see a giant man in an equally giant snowplow barreling in my direction. Trapped between the main road and a small embankment, there was nowhere for me to escape the concoction of brown slushy ice, freezing water, and dirty rocks that it had churned up. The man caught my eye, shrugged his shoulders, and in desperation I threw myself face down against the embankment, hoping to avoid the worst of the concoction. I was mediocre in my success.
After picking myself up and wiping myself off, I thought back on nicer (warmer) days. The previous summer, a family friend and I had gone on a weekend-long backpacking trip in Big Sur. We were a couple miles from our car when the narrow trail transitioned into a dirt road, and given that it was getting late we decided to try and flag down a ride. We heard a car approaching and stuck out our thumbs. The SUV rumbled past us up the road without stopping, leaving a cloud of dust behind it for us to inhale. As it passed, we could see through the back windshield that its back seat was empty. We stared at one another, aghast. The prospect that this person, having seen our need for a ride, would actually disregard it and continue on, was unthinkable. It was akin to finding someone hurt on the side of the trail and leaving him or her. This jerk in the SUV had violated one of the cardinal rules of wilderness ethics- help each other out.
But today, car after car whipped past, none of them stopping to offer me a ride, and I didn’t feel the same anger that I did in Big Sur that summer. While I was filled with a vague, sinking disappointment, I knew that every person’s decision not to stop was couched in a mental process that justified it. I was an axe murder, they couldn’t pull over in time, they were late, the front seat was full of trash. I don’t think these were excuses to justify selfishness, but rather ways that we deal with the utterly overwhelming complexity of everyday modern life. My bet is that most people who saw me trudging through the snow wanted to pick me up, but you can’t give money to every homeless person. You can’t adopt every puppy. So we donate money to a cause we believe in or we volunteer on the weekends, as if compassion had an on/off switch. Or does that just make it easier to drive on by?
I have always been attracted to the outdoors, and I can’t deny that some it has to do with the utter clarity that dictates one’s actions. If you are thirsty in the wilderness, you don’t have to face the grocery store, with its entire aisle of water and the ensuing mental process it takes to get from there to drinking. What brand? How much does it cost? Plastic or glass? Where is it from? Should I just drink tap water? While nature holds its own physical challenges, for the most part they are set in front of you cleanly and neatly, like a math problem or a cake recipe. You find a stream, boil water, purify it. The chain of decisions begins and ends at a single point. The decision tree of the water aisle branches out into so many directions, with some much trust placed in things we can’t see or touch. The conclusion is guaranteed, but at what consequence?
Sometimes I think I am not fit for this world. I wish I could be more like the people driving by me today, who don’t think about the ways in which we draw boundaries around ourselves. But as much as I will always enjoy the crispness of the high Sierras or watching the sun melt into the ocean from the cliffs above, I don’t want to need the wilderness to make a decision with clarity. I don’t want to be absolved of responsibility, to cop out and turn my decisions over to a trail or a rainstorm. The real challenge lies in the normalcy of the side of the road here today, where it’s not life and death, where the weather feels like the wilderness, but there is no turn out to stop and think. How do I sort through the overwhelming choices and make a decision with clarity? How do I decide when to stop the car and when to drive on by, and know that I made the right decision?
No one offered me a ride that day, as much as wished they would. Sick of dodging the spray from cars, I cut through a small forest to cover the last half-mile and hacked my way through saplings and shrubs with plastic bags wrapped around their bases. At home, I wrung out my icy clothes, threw them in the dryer, and climbed into the shower to thaw out. Later that night my boyfriend came home, and he drove me the couple miles down the road to the grocery store parking lot. A man was walking on the side of the road and I though about picking him up, but we were only going a short distance and he looked disheveled and dirty. We made it to my truck. I put my key in the ignition, and turned it. It started.
Before this starts sounding overly dramatic, let me clarify that I wasn’t in a particularly life threatening situation. Uncomfortable, sure, but by no means dire. It was noon on a Friday and I was stuck in the parking lot of my local supermarket. I considered my options. I didn’t want to call a shop or a tow truck just yet- the last time this had happened my truck came to life a few hours later with no part replacements or fluid refills necessary. I decided to walk the couple miles home, and come back and check on my truck later when my boyfriend came home from work.
The only hook, however, was the weather. The temperature was below freezing, but snow did not float silently and picturesquely from the sky. Instead hunks of rain pelted down, slamming into the ground with apparent vengeance. When I walked to my car that morning, it was encased on all sides by a thin layer of ice, resembling an oblong rippled jellyfish. Slushy puddles emerged around curbs and in driveways, covered in dubiously strong partial coatings of ice. Coincidentally, the night before I had finished reading the story of Randy Morgensen, a ranger in the high Sierra backcountry who had spent his last few moments on earth pinned by rushing water to the wall of an icy lake after having crossed an ice bridge which had given way. Granted, a parking lot in upstate New York was no remote Sierra back country, but it did make the slashes of sharp, windy snow seem just a little more ominous.
The market was in the type of area that has found its way into the outskirts of nearly every major town in recent years, with gargantuan chain bookstores, restaurants, hardware stores, and a Wal-Mart. You know the area- you may swing by after work to pick up a copy of “Eat, Pray, Love” for your aunt for her birthday, but it’s certainly not the type of place you stroll through leisurely on Saturday afternoon. The main road was one of those “formerly the main highway until a bigger highway got built nearby” type of roads, not constructed with pedestrians in mind. The condo we were living in was tucked away right off this main road, backing up on a chunk of forest that would no doubt be developed similarly in the upcoming years. I was not anticipating this walk being overly pleasant, but I have the tendency of being somewhat stubborn when I decide to take something on.
I was a bit chagrined to realize that despite leaving the house thinking I looked kind of cute, or at least appropriate for running errands, nearly half of what I was wearing was completely appropriate for a walk in the snow. I had bought my hat for doing fish surveys in Alaska, I had worn my fleece on many backpacking trips, and my down vest had kept me warm during lots of cold nights in the Sierras. Even the yoga pants I was wearing would wick away water. While my attire was certainly convenient for the situation at hand, the minor fantasy that I successfully disguised myself as an urbanite had been dashed.
After wrapping up my purse and its contents in plastic grocery bags swiped from the market, I began my trek. Even as I crossed the parking lot towards the main road, I realized that I had gotten myself into a jarringly adventurous situation. It was cold. Really cold. The wind flapped all loose articles of clothing, and the freezing rain found its way inside the collar of my jacket. My nose went numb. I quickly soaked my running shoes (the weakest part of my ensemble) and had to keep wiggling my baby toes to keep my socks from freezing solid. Even with my slapdash winter garb on, I felt like I was at that part of an outdoor adventure when you realize you have gotten in a little over your head.
I slogged on down the road, tucking myself behind the guardrail to avoid being run down by a semi or a freewheeling minivan. Not much care had been put in to making the area “pedestrian friendly”, which is a bit of an understatement considering there was not a sidewalk in site. Somewhat ironically the road was lined with car dealerships, and I amused myself by fantasizing that it was an intentional juxtaposition in order to increase business (“I’m sick of walking on this damn road with no sidewalk! I’m going to buy a car right now!”). At one point I heard rumbling, and turned to see a giant man in an equally giant snowplow barreling in my direction. Trapped between the main road and a small embankment, there was nowhere for me to escape the concoction of brown slushy ice, freezing water, and dirty rocks that it had churned up. The man caught my eye, shrugged his shoulders, and in desperation I threw myself face down against the embankment, hoping to avoid the worst of the concoction. I was mediocre in my success.
After picking myself up and wiping myself off, I thought back on nicer (warmer) days. The previous summer, a family friend and I had gone on a weekend-long backpacking trip in Big Sur. We were a couple miles from our car when the narrow trail transitioned into a dirt road, and given that it was getting late we decided to try and flag down a ride. We heard a car approaching and stuck out our thumbs. The SUV rumbled past us up the road without stopping, leaving a cloud of dust behind it for us to inhale. As it passed, we could see through the back windshield that its back seat was empty. We stared at one another, aghast. The prospect that this person, having seen our need for a ride, would actually disregard it and continue on, was unthinkable. It was akin to finding someone hurt on the side of the trail and leaving him or her. This jerk in the SUV had violated one of the cardinal rules of wilderness ethics- help each other out.
But today, car after car whipped past, none of them stopping to offer me a ride, and I didn’t feel the same anger that I did in Big Sur that summer. While I was filled with a vague, sinking disappointment, I knew that every person’s decision not to stop was couched in a mental process that justified it. I was an axe murder, they couldn’t pull over in time, they were late, the front seat was full of trash. I don’t think these were excuses to justify selfishness, but rather ways that we deal with the utterly overwhelming complexity of everyday modern life. My bet is that most people who saw me trudging through the snow wanted to pick me up, but you can’t give money to every homeless person. You can’t adopt every puppy. So we donate money to a cause we believe in or we volunteer on the weekends, as if compassion had an on/off switch. Or does that just make it easier to drive on by?
I have always been attracted to the outdoors, and I can’t deny that some it has to do with the utter clarity that dictates one’s actions. If you are thirsty in the wilderness, you don’t have to face the grocery store, with its entire aisle of water and the ensuing mental process it takes to get from there to drinking. What brand? How much does it cost? Plastic or glass? Where is it from? Should I just drink tap water? While nature holds its own physical challenges, for the most part they are set in front of you cleanly and neatly, like a math problem or a cake recipe. You find a stream, boil water, purify it. The chain of decisions begins and ends at a single point. The decision tree of the water aisle branches out into so many directions, with some much trust placed in things we can’t see or touch. The conclusion is guaranteed, but at what consequence?
Sometimes I think I am not fit for this world. I wish I could be more like the people driving by me today, who don’t think about the ways in which we draw boundaries around ourselves. But as much as I will always enjoy the crispness of the high Sierras or watching the sun melt into the ocean from the cliffs above, I don’t want to need the wilderness to make a decision with clarity. I don’t want to be absolved of responsibility, to cop out and turn my decisions over to a trail or a rainstorm. The real challenge lies in the normalcy of the side of the road here today, where it’s not life and death, where the weather feels like the wilderness, but there is no turn out to stop and think. How do I sort through the overwhelming choices and make a decision with clarity? How do I decide when to stop the car and when to drive on by, and know that I made the right decision?
No one offered me a ride that day, as much as wished they would. Sick of dodging the spray from cars, I cut through a small forest to cover the last half-mile and hacked my way through saplings and shrubs with plastic bags wrapped around their bases. At home, I wrung out my icy clothes, threw them in the dryer, and climbed into the shower to thaw out. Later that night my boyfriend came home, and he drove me the couple miles down the road to the grocery store parking lot. A man was walking on the side of the road and I though about picking him up, but we were only going a short distance and he looked disheveled and dirty. We made it to my truck. I put my key in the ignition, and turned it. It started.
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