This Week in Training …Week 15 – Halfway There (Gulp!)…

Halfway there.

That is both encouraging and mildly terrifying.

Overall, it was a decent week. A little unusual because I inverted the schedule. I did the long bike and long run at the beginning of the week and then eased off as the week went on. For Week 16, I’ll go back to a more normal structure.

I have two weeks until the Rockford 70.3. After that, I’m going to try rearranging my training week so that Sunday becomes the rest day, the long bike moves to Friday, and the long run moves to Saturday. I hope that I stop nuking entire weekends with training and can actually do things with the family while everyone else is off work.

Swim 🏊

  • Total swims: 3 (FINALLY!)
  • Total distance: 7,550 yards
  • Total time: 2:24

Nothing spectacular, but solid. A little boring, perhaps, but solid. The biggest victory is simply getting in that third swim. It only took fifteen weeks.  I also managed to do one core strength workout.  Miracles do happen!

Bike 🚴

  • Total rides: 3
  • Total distance: 87.5 miles
  • Total time: 5:16

The bike week was a little strange.

Monday was the Rockford course ride, which I’ve already written about. Let’s just say I learned some valuable lessons about hydration, sunscreen, and not leaving critical equipment in the car.

I also missed a brick workout during the week, so yesterday I squeezed in a 1:20 ride after the 5K race.

Unfortunately, that ride had to be on the e-bike because my local bike shop seems to have a unique interpretation of the word “appointment.”

I dropped the bike off on Tuesday for my Thursday appointment.

“We’ll call by the end of business Thursday.”

Nope.

Friday?

“We’re backed up.”

Saturday?

Nope.

Sunday?

Nope.

If it’s not done today, I’m picking it up, getting my deposit back, and taking it somewhere else.

Run 🏃

  • Total runs: 4
  • Total distance: 19.4 miles
  • Total time: 3:05

This included:

  • A 9-mile-long run
  • A 6-mile medium run
  • A 5K race
  • A 1-mile run off the bike

I felt very strong during the 5K. I wound up finishing 7th in my age group out of 35 runners.

Looking at the results afterward, I realized I probably could have challenged for a podium spot. Unfortunately, I was serving as the designated rabbit for my daughter, who wanted to break 30 minutes. She did.

Mission accomplished.

That meant my first two miles were slower than they otherwise would have been, but I wouldn’t trade that result for a slightly faster finishing time.

Total Training Time 🧮

  • Total time: 10:45

A pretty substantial week.

Training Metrics 📈

TrainingPeaks:

  • Fitness: 117
  • Fatigue: 140
  • Form: -5

All good.

Fitness continues to creep upward while fatigue has actually come down significantly from the peak. What really surprised me is how much better I feel physically.

A few weeks ago, I was so sore that rolling over in bed felt like a chore. Now I’m doing nearly twice the training load with maybe half the soreness.

My Garmin metrics reflect that too. Body Battery and Training Readiness have both improved noticeably.

For fun, I went back and looked at Strava Relative Effort. The last time I posted it regularly was around Week 3.

Back then:

  • Week 3 RE: 622

This week:

  • RE: 1,193

Dayum.

Looking Ahead

Today should be a rest day. It won’t be.

I don’t like starting the week with a rest day because life always seems to intervene later in the week. Last week I missed a brick workout and wound up with a very long Sunday because of it. I’d rather run and swim today so that when the inevitable scheduling disaster arrives later in the week, I’m not scrambling to catch up.

This week I’ll head back to the Rockford course and see whether I’ve fixed some of the issues from the first attempt. As for the 70.3 itself, I’m not planning much of a taper. It’s a training day, not an A-race. The goal is experience, execution, and learning.

All in all, I’m feeling good about the progress.

Halfway there. Only fifteen more weeks to go.

 



Harvard Classics Reading Log – May Recap…

May was the first complete month that I’ve owned my Harvard Classics set, and I set a goal of keeping up with the daily readings.

Overall, I’d call it a success.

Out of 31 days, I only missed four readings. Looking at that number, it’s actually more than I thought I’d missed, but I’m still pretty happy with the result. The important thing is that I kept coming back to it day after day.

One of the things I enjoy most about this project is discovering works I didn’t know I’d like. One of the less enjoyable parts is revisiting works I already know I don’t like and discovering that, yes, I still don’t like them.

I’m looking directly at you, Walt Whitman.

I had to read Leaves of Grass in college and absolutely hated it. HATED it. How much do I still hate it? I skipped the May 31 reading entirely because I had no desire to reread even the preface. That’s not exactly the spirit of the project, but life is short.

To be fair, I did enjoy Whitman’s Abraham Lincoln poems from the April readings, especially O Captain! My Captain!, so perhaps there is some Whitman out there for me after all.

The biggest surprise of the month was how often I found myself enjoying works I never would have picked up on my own.

Favorites from May

Calderón’s Life Is a Dream
A philosophical play about a prince imprisoned from birth because of a prophecy that he would become a tyrant. When he is finally released, he must determine whether life is real or merely a dream. Strange, thoughtful, and much more engaging than I expected.

Cellini’s Autobiography
Part memoir, part adventure story, part ego trip. Cellini recounts the dramatic casting of his famous Perseus statue while feuding with nobles, dodging disasters, and generally behaving like the Renaissance’s most entertaining troublemaker.

Sheridan’s The School for Scandal
Probably my favorite reading of the month. A sharp comedy about gossip, reputation, and hypocrisy that still feels surprisingly modern. The famous screen scene—where characters keep hiding behind the same screen while more people enter the room—is straight out of a Marx Brothers movie. It felt like watching the birth of screwball comedy.

Webster’s The Duchess of Malfi
A dark tragedy full of secret marriages, family intrigue, and bad decisions. Everyone is plotting against everyone else, and it doesn’t end well for almost anybody. Grim, but compelling.

Manzoni’s I Promessi Sposi (The Betrothed)
A story of two young lovers trying to marry while powerful people and historical events keep getting in the way. It combines romance, adventure, faith, and social commentary in a way that explains why it’s considered one of Italy’s great novels.

Hood’s Poems
One of the month’s biggest surprises. Poems such as The Bridge of Sighs and The Death-Bed are sad, sometimes heartbreaking, but beautifully written. This is exactly why I don’t skip the poetry readings. Poetry isn’t my favorite genre, but I’ve been pleasantly surprised by how often I’ve found something I genuinely enjoyed.

Shakespeare’s King Lear
No surprise here. I’ve always liked King Lear. The story of an aging king who mistakes flattery for love and sincerity for disrespect remains one of Shakespeare’s most powerful tragedies.

The Thousand and One Nights
Fun, imaginative, and endlessly inventive. Reading these stories reminded me why they’ve endured for centuries. Adventure, magic, humor, and clever storytelling never really go out of style.

The AI Companion

One thing I’ve started doing after each reading is asking AI to summarize and explain it.

Not because I didn’t understand the story, but because it often helps me appreciate why the work matters or how it fits into literary history. The example that stands out most this month was The School for Scandal. I enjoyed the famous screen scene while reading it. Still, I didn’t fully appreciate how influential it was until I learned that it helped establish comic devices that would later become staples of farce and screwball comedy.

The additional context doesn’t replace the reading. It enriches it.

Looking Ahead

I’ve also noticed that some work recurs over multiple days. King Lear first appeared back in April and continued into May. Cellini’s autobiography has shown up more than once as well. That’s one thing I like about the Harvard Classics schedule – it doesn’t always treat great works as something to be checked off in a single sitting.

For anyone interested, the complete list of May readings is posted in the menu section of the site.

I plan to do one of these recap posts at the end of each month. Right now they’re mostly for me – a way to track what I’ve read, what I enjoyed, and what I didn’t. Maybe over time I’ll get better at highlighting favorites as I go.

And who knows?

Maybe someday I’ll even learn to appreciate Walt Whitman.

But let’s not get carried away.




Morning Music…

Meat Puppets – Backwater




Best Answer…

Yesterday I posted:

I remember reading parenting books when we had two kids, and I was struggling with work, parenting, and finances.  The books basically said, “Yes, it’s hard, but parenting is a wonderful time, and you should enjoy it.”  No shit, but HOW!!!!!   How do I stop worrying about work, how I’m parenting, our finances!???  That was the last time I read a parenting book.

Before we had kids, we attended a 1st birthday party for our neighbor’s son.  At the party, we met a couple who had three kids, all under 6.   My wife asked, “Oh my God, how do you do it?”

The husband said, “We drink.”

My wife and I laughed.

The wife said, “No, he’s serious.”

We all laughed, but over the decades, I’ve thought about that, and it was probably the best, most honest answer I’ve heard to the “HOW?” question.



Morning Music…

Liz Phair – Super Nova




The Emotional Stock Market

 

One of the stranger discoveries of middle age is that I have become an emotional index fund.

My mood is heavily tied to the performance of three other people. Those three people, unfortunately, are my children.

When they were little, this made sense. If a toddler is unhappy, that becomes everyone’s problem. If a teenager is making questionable decisions, parental involvement is generally encouraged. There are forms to sign, rides to provide, curfews to enforce, and occasional lectures that are ignored in real time but hopefully absorbed later.

The problem is that my children are no longer children. They are 26, 24, and 21. And yet somehow I still find myself checking their emotional market performance like a nervous investor watching stock prices.

  • Child A is doing great? Wonderful. The market is up.
  • Child B gets a new opportunity? Bullish.
  • Child C seems happy and engaged. Record highs.

On the other hand, if one of them is in a bad mood, worried about work, stressed about money, frustrated with life, or simply having a normal human day, my internal ticker starts flashing red.

SELL! SELL! SELL!

The strange part is that I know better. I know adults are supposed to have struggles. I know uncertainty is part of growth. I know nobody becomes resilient by avoiding every difficulty. In fact, if you asked me about someone else’s children, I would sound remarkably wise.

“They’ll figure it out.”

“These experiences build character.”

“Growth comes through challenges.”

Apparently, I become considerably less philosophical when the people involved share my last name.

Recently, I realized that my mood often rises and falls with theirs. If they are happy, I relax. If they are struggling, I struggle. That sounds loving. It is also exhausting.

I suspect I may come by this honestly. Years ago, after my wife told my dad she was pregnant with our third child, my father asked a question that has stuck with me ever since.

“Why would you try for a third when you already have two healthy children? What if the third has a defect?”

Now, before anyone starts sending letters to the editor, my father was not a bad man. He loved his family deeply. But he was also a worrier. His mind naturally jumped to what could go wrong. He was a worrier. At the time, I remember being stunned by the question. We weren’t thinking about defects. We were thinking about another child to love.

But now, decades later, I wonder if I inherited more than his eye color. Maybe I inherited some of the wiring, too.

When I see one of my children struggling, my mind immediately starts building flow charts.

What if this leads to that?

What if that leads to something worse?

What if this is the beginning of a larger problem?

The reality is that most of those imagined futures never arrive. Meanwhile, the actual present often looks much better than my imagination.

The child I’m worried about may simply be having a bad day. The one I’m convinced is lonely may be spending time with friends. The one I’m worried is lost may simply be taking a longer route.

I am slowly learning that one of the hardest parts of parenting adult children is accepting that they are allowed to be unhappy. Not permanently unhappy. Not destructively unhappy. Just unhappy sometimes.

They are allowed to be frustrated. They are allowed to make mistakes. They are allowed to struggle. They are allowed to figure things out the same way I did.

The challenge is that every parental instinct screams, “Do something!”

Unfortunately, adulthood has changed the job description.

When children are young, parenting is often:

  • Notice the problem.
  • Fix the problem.

When children become adults, parenting becomes:

  • Notice the problem.
  • Stay available.
  • Wait.

The waiting is brutal.

It feels like inaction.  I’m not a patient man.  I watch 2-3 episodes of a show and then Google recaps of the finale because I can’t bear the ups and downs and just want to know what happens.  And yeah, I do read the end chapter of books to see who is still alive.

It feels irresponsible just watching the kids struggle and learn, but I know that’s what they need to grow. That’s the job now.

What I’m trying to learn is that I can love my children without carrying their lives on my shoulders. I can care deeply without making their mood my mood. I can trust the process without knowing the outcome.

And perhaps most importantly, I can remember that every one of my children is still in the middle of their story.

The truth is that if my parents had judged my future when I was twenty-four, they probably would have worried too.  I know they worried.  I made some bonehead mistakes, was pathless, and, although I remember enjoying it all, was probably as sad sack miserable as any Gen X person at the time.  Only one of my friends had a “real job,” and yet decades later, we’re all doing well with our lives.

At that time, though, my parents would have seen uncertainty. They would have seen mistakes. They would have seen unanswered questions.

What they would not have seen at that time was the life that eventually emerged.

Maybe my children deserve the same grace.

And maybe so do I.

⇔  Post post – Throughout the post, I say “I know.”  Intellectually, I know all of that.  I know I struggled at that age.  I know the 20’s are hard years for many.  I know they need to find their own path and learn from their own mistakes.  Intellectually, I know all of that, but my body doesn’t.  I’m tired of reading, journaling, and doing everything “they” say to do, but I can’t stop the worry/rumination/catastrophizing.

I remember reading parenting books when we had two kids, and I was struggling with work, parenting, and finances.  The books basically said, “Yes, it’s hard, but parenting is a wonderful time, and you should enjoy it.”  No shit, but HOW!!!!!   How do I stop worrying about work, how I’m parenting, our finances!???  That was the last time I read a parenting book.

So now, it’s a different phase of parenting, and I’m still waiting for someone to say how.  HOW do I not feel all this?  If I do feel it all, HOW do I move past it?

So please don’t think this is some self-help post for you.  It was just for me to try to get it out of my head, and maybe someone will read it and think, “Hey, me too, glad to know I’m not the only one.”



Morning Music…

Frank Black – Headache




That Time of Year…

It’s finally light enough and warm enough for me to have my coffee and read the paper each morning out back on our deck.  I’ve done it for the last few days, and it will only get better as the summer continues.  I get fresh air and sunlight.  I get to see the sun rise, even though it’s over a garage and an alley, and it still feels nice on my face.   My wife has done a great job planting hanging flower baskets on the porch and plants in the backyard.  It’s a beautiful, quiet space, and it’s about the best way I know to start a day.



Morning Music…

Pixies – Where Is My Mind




Morning Music…

Ride – Vapour Trail (Live) (back to back Ride)