Runny

Your sofa misses you.

Cut me some slack, eh? I’m about to be a “Bride.” June 13, 2007

Filed under: Uncategorized — Temple @ 6:30 am

So I ended up missing Saturday’s group ride because I overdid it on Thursday and my back hurt like hell until Sunday night. Monday, I decided to make up for it and I went out and rode 35 miles (very few hills, so I rode a little longer than prescribed). I was a little ow-y on Tuesday, but manageable.

But I’m looking at my calendar and realizing the odds of me getting all my rides in over the next couple of weeks, especially the group rides, are ridiculously poor. It’s probably going to be all about quality time with the stationary bikes at the gym, at like 5 in the morning. Not too thrilling to write about.

See, I’m getting married in, like 10 days.

It’s really impeding my ability to get things done.

Up until the last week or so, Alexander and I have managed not to let it get in the way of real life. We’re doing something small, on the (relatively) cheap, and highly irreverent, as far as wedding thingies go. And I am so sick of thinking about it.

However, it’s all I’ve got in my head right now. So today, I’m going to digress on the topic of weddings.

I was a little kid, at the height of my dress-up and make-believe years, when Lady Di married Prince Charles and the nation was transfixed by their wedding. Families clustered around television sets watching the century’s last ostentatious display of royalty. Captivated by a royal fantasy even greater than than the one inspired by Grace Kelly, mothers held their daughters close and stared at their televisions wishing it could be them and communicating that desire to their daughters. The model was set for a generation of brides to aspire to — the bride-as-princess is an image none of us who grew up with television in the last 30 years can get away from, whether we agree with it or not.

However, for whatever reason, it never really caught ahold of me. My desire was less Princess Di and more Stevie Nicks.

And as I grew up, I’d occasionally think about what it would be like to be married to the boyfriend of the moment, but it never crossed my mind to imagine our wedding. I usually just jumped straight ahead to the first fight about money.

When Alexander and I decided to get married, I encountered so many people who were far more excited about it than I was. Apparently the bridal fantasy is so ingrained in our culture that everyone assumes you’re engaging in it. If I had a good financial planner and a buck for every time someone (a woman) asked me how things were going and looked at me knowingly and said, “you must be up to your eyeballs in wedding planning,” Alexander and I actually wouldn’t need to get a mortgage.

Do you have a date, where are you having it, what’s your dress going to look like, what are your colors?

What are my fucking colors? I don’t have any colors! They’re blue and red and we’re going to have a West Side Story-style gang dance fight when the Crips and the Bloods come out! Do you really think that colors are what I’m occupying my brain with? Have you ever met me?

What gets me the most is the assumption that my blasé attitude about the wedding is somehow flawed. That I “don’t understand,” and I’ll regret it if I don’t do it a certain way.

Logically, it seems that I’d be far more likely to regret spending thousands of dollars on a one-day party that most invitees will only be passively interested in attending because they know they “should.”

Seems more likely I’d regret not having a pre-nuptial agreement to simplify the divorce process if that should ever have to happen.

Seems more likely I’d regret spending a crapload of cash on a dress that’s completely inappropriate to wear to any other event and that I will then vacuum pack and seal into a box, never to look at it again.

But no one’s mentioning those things to me. And what cranks me up even further is that no one’s asking Alexander about these things. Apparently it’s only MY problem, and the looks I get when I say things like “we” indicate with a slight headshake that I’m just so foolish for trying to get him involved. The best I can hope for is that he’ll hold my purse while I’m shopping.

I’d understand if that were coming only from my mother’s generation. But it’s even women about my age, who I run into at the feminist bookstore and have strong careers that they’ve built for themselves by themselves and have said things to me a long the lines of “never stay in a relationship that isn’t a partnership.” Even these women are falling prey to the assumption that a wedding is the bride’s “big day” — that it’s the day when we all get to trade in the pillowcase for tulle, and we may love the man standing in the groom’s spot, but just like when we were kids, it doesn’t really matter who’s standing there because it’s all about the girl in the white dress.

Alexander and I have spent the last few years building a relationship that I’m really proud of. It’s actually a partnership, held and honored between two individuals. We make decisions together, celebrate the positives and re-group after the negatives. I’m not holding it up as some example of the perfect relationship—of course we’ve got issues we’ve got to work out. But we worked long and hard to get here—two incredibly fierce individuals who never saw themselves in a long-term partnership coming together to create a relationship that we are both happy with.

In a nutshell, that means that we do things together. We discuss what we both want and don’t want, throw out the highs and lows, and come to a strong average.

When we decided to get married, it was exactly that. There were no bent knees or rings hidden a bouquet or any of that crap. We came to it after a discussion about rights and benefits and weighing our options between marriage, civil partnership, and just letting it go.

And when we decided to have a wedding, we decided what kind of party we’d like to throw and that we’d work together to achieve it. No one in our parents’ generation, most specifically our parents, seems to get this, and it’s hard to make it clear to them without being abjectly rude.

For months, we told our families that we were not planning a “typical” or “traditional” wedding and it’d be best for everyone if all involved started to think of it as more of a party, and ease themselves out of any attachments to the white wedding ideal.

But when we visited Alexander’s mother, every month she’d have a new issue of every bridal magazine on the market, carefully laid out on coffee tables and tucked into bookshelves. My mother could well have been doing the same thing, but she lives further away so I don’t see her coffee table on a weekly basis.

These magazines will not be clues to what we want, we told Mom Deux. Save your money and your time and just let us do our thing.

“Of course,” she’d nod, and then subscribe to yet another magazine when we left.

Occasionally, we’d be telling her about whatever loose plans we had or didn’t have, and she’d come up with some errand for Alexander to run or a broken thing to ask him to repair around the house. As soon as he was out of earshot, she’d pull me aside and look at me knowingly. “He’s got a really strong personality,” she’d tell me as though I’d just met him and didn’t have one myself.

“Don’t let him push you into something you don’t want.” I’d smile and, as politely as possible, tell her that I’m not. All the stuff we’d just been discussing? It was actually my idea.

When people find out how stripped down and non-standard our thing is going to be, and that it’s basically at my request, they really don’t know what to do with it from there. They lower their eyes, look away…. “Oh. well that’s good…I guess.”

In truth, most of this is my idea. Alexander is a good guy. He wants me to happy, and he also likes a good party. I’m pretty sure that if I really wanted trappings of the traditional wedding, if I actually did want to play princess, he’d support it and find a way to make it work, because it’s what I wanted. I’m not much for grand displays, but he is.

So the wedding we’re coming up with, part subversion of tradition, part big-ass party, is a nice compromise.

If we were actually doing it MY way, we’d have gotten married at the all-night donut shop downtown and emailed everyone pictures after the fact.

 

My Marlon Brando Sunset June 5, 2007

Filed under: biking, hills — Temple @ 9:46 am

Marlon Brando was well-known for being a serious “Method” actor. In his younger years, this made him fascinating, mysterious and brooding. In his older years, this combined with his other personality disorders to just make him really strange and scary.

In Hearts of Darkness, the documentary about the filming of Apocalypse Now, there’s a series of outtakes where you see Brando’s face contorting and getting this evil expression. This is totally within context for the role of Kurtz, but it’s still super freaky. Especially when he swallows and says, “I swallowed a bug.”

It was Kurtz saying it, but Brando living it. He really had just swallowed a bug.

Last night, I joined a few of the TNT folks for a midweek ride up Mt. Tabor. Tabor’s an extinct cinder cone resting smack in the middle of East Portland. And it’s like a million stories high. (OK, 600 ft. But when your skill level’s where mine is, the two look a lot alike.)

I’m thrilled to say that I made it to the top without stopping.

I totally wanted to, but I knew that if I actually stopped and got off the bike, I’d sit down and never move again. I’d be Portland’s own little contemporary Sitting Bull, only I’d have no cause to speak of (except my own lameness) and I’d be remarkably inappropriately dressed.

I got home from work later than planned, so I didn’t have time to look up the address of the meeting spot and make sure I knew how to get there. So I just left straight from my place and assumed I’d either catch the group on the way, or I’d have a nice little ride on my own.

The neighborhoods on the way to Tabor are progressively hillier, so I plunged up and down on my way. Nearly all the way to the entrance to the park, I still hadn’t seen them. I decided that I’d just get to the entrance and turn around, taking time to go into the neighborhoods and do some more of the little hills on my way home.

And then what do I see, in my rearview mirror, but a small pack of lean people wearing tech fibers and talking in voices I recognized.

Crap.

They are all faster than me, so they progressively gain on me as I huff up the hill. Where are the cross streets? Come on, give me a turnoff! If I can just hang a right here in the next block, they won’t know it’s me, and….oh, hey guys, I thought that was you!

So much for being a quitter. I have no problem with the ethics of quitting in general…I just don’t want anyone to see me doing it.

So up the hill we went. Very conscientiously, I stayed in the back… to, um, make sure no one got left behind… yeah, that’s it….

Once we got to the sweet, sweet summit, a few of those bastards barreled back down to ride up again. Those of us with a tighter grasp on reality (and maybe a looser grasp on fitness) stayed at the top to do laps.

Then we all sailed back down. In the end, I’m glad I did it. I’m not racing out to do it again today by any means, but it was a good workout and helped wash away the day’s stress. And that downhill coast was delicious and packed with protein.

No, really.

Clouds of gnats were out in full force, and on the ride down, there was no way to avoid them. Just had to keep your mouth closed and hope for the best.

Back at the bottom, we all split off to go our separate ways, and I turned off to head home.

Forgetting about the gnats, I said “bye” and waved. As I turned, a bug flew into my mouth and I spattered and sputtered as I pedaled away.

“I just swallowed a bug,” I said to myself.

Laughing at my terrible Marlon Brando imitation, I swallowed a handful more.

 

They Called Her “Wrench” June 3, 2007

Filed under: biking, fixing a flat — Temple @ 6:57 am

post bike girl
Or was that “wench”? They were going kind of fast when they passed me.
Yesterday was the third group ride, a lovely, 30-mile country ride out in Hillsboro.

At about mile 1, I rode over a nasty rock, stick, or hypodermic needle such as you find along the road in rural Oregon, and punctured my rear tire.

From mile 1 to mile 1.10 , I obsessively looked down while pedaling, trying not to veer into oncoming traffic, and repeating, “not a flat, not a flat, not a flat.”

Not so much.

As the pack pulled even further ahead of me at mile 1.25, I knew it was over and I pulled over into some creepy guy’s “no trespassing” driveway.

I, constantly having my genius cap on, never programmed any of the coaches or mentors’ phone numbers into my phone. “It’s just you and me, bike-o-mine,” I sighed, squaring my shoulders and bracing myself for the possibility that I’d be carrying my bike back to the starting line if I couldn’t figure this out. I was very grateful that I still hadn’t swapped out my heavy (but stocked) commuter bag for a smaller, sexier wedge bag.

In high school I had a job at the Olentangy Indian Caverns in Delaware, Ohio (A story in and of itself, for another time). I had a job and a bike, but not a car. So most days I pedaled the 10 miles or so each way.

Looking back, I realize how ridiculously lucky I was. A), I was never hit, run off the road, or otherwise injured. But, more importantly, B) I never had any bike problems. I had no idea how to fix a flat, repair a chain, adjust my brakes, anything. And I never got a flat, never hit anything, had no issues.

Karmically, I was due for something to happen. I’m just glad it happened on a day when I was out with a bunch of other people, and there was a support vehicle.

Of course, since I didn’t have any phone numbers handy, I wasn’t able to tap into those resources until Coach Neil called me and wanted to know what the hell was going on.

By that point, I am proud to say, I had finished removing the rear wheel, changing the tube, and replacing the wheel, all by my ownself.

We’d had a flat tire workshop a couple of weeks ago, but we only focused on the front tire. So the tube-changing part was a pain in the butt but not a problem.

It was standing there with a wheel in one hand and a greasy, sagging chain in the other that made me want to cry a little.

But I figgered it out all by myself, thankyouverymuch. And rather than fix that tube and reuse it, I am going to hang it on my wall like a hunter mounts the head of his prey: I am the master of this beast.

…At least, until something else happens that isn’t in Biking 101 and can’t be figured out intuitively.

 

Latest Review June 3, 2007

Filed under: Running — Temple @ 6:34 am

This was actually published a couple of weeks ago. But it was during my unplanned hiatus. So here’s the link.

 

Climbing Back Into the Saddle, So to Speak June 1, 2007

Filed under: back pain, biking, cycling — Temple @ 7:07 am

It’s been a hundred years since I posted. I seem to have fallen off the wagon for a bit there. I always hate it when the blogs and sites I like to go to don’t have any new posts for days on end, so I’m feeling particularly guilty about it.

But since, at this point, I’m probably mostly just talking to myself, I think it’s time for me to get over it.

So. The news.

I am officially all signed up to ride the “Peach of a Century” with TNT in September. So far I’ve been in training for two weeks. We rode 12 miles at Sauvie Island the first week, and then 25 miles at Champoeg last weekend. Alexander and I went yurting last weekend, so I actually went out on my own and rode the route on Friday all by my lonesome.

Tomorrow, we take on 30 miles in Hillsboro.

So far, it’s going great. On the first day, we rode as far as my LAST training run in April. I’m trying to get a little hippy-dippy about it and see that as a continuance, all things lead to all other things, blah blah blah.

It’s a million times easier on my back, which is still in pretty bad shape. It turns out my stellar independent health insurance does not cover “alternative” medicines, so I’m on my own in paying for it. Cash flow is a dribble at best until sometime in July, so I’m waiting until then to go forth and chiropractify.

In the meantime, I’m just taking it slow and holding in my gut a lot, to support my lower back.

Which is all well and good, as I like to think that under the many layers of insulation, those abs are just rock-solid. However, they’re tiny muscles that tire easily. So if it’s a day of a lot of moving around, by midafternoon, everything is exhausted and hanging out at all ends and I’ve got a super-rockin Archie Bunker thing going on.