Morning Music…

The Wallflowers – 6th Avenue Heartache




Morning Music….

Joy Division – Transmission




Morning Music…

The Interrupters – She’s Kerosene




That’s not what I remember….

Today’s Harvard Classic reading was Grimm’s Tales – Cinderella.

Wow, is it different than the story I knew (I think most of the tales are)?

First, she’s called Cinderalla because the step-sisters make her sleep in the ashes by the fire and was always dusty and dirty.

Second, there is no fairy godmother

Third, the shoes DO fit the step-sisters because one step-sister cuts off her big toe and the other cuts off part of her heel, so they’ll fit.

Fourth, birds peck out both sisters’ eyes, so they are blind at the end for being wicked and telling falsehoods.

 



Pointing the Camera

I’ve mentioned it before, but for the past year and a half, I’ve journaled every day. More recently, I’ve changed the focus. Instead of spending two pages dumping my mood and then reluctantly writing down three things I’m grateful for, I start with a prompt that is uplifting, reflective, or gratitude-based.

I asked AI to make me a list of prompts, then asked for more about accomplishments, personal growth, and the world at large. I’ve really enjoyed it.

The other day, the prompt was:

What accomplishment am I most likely to minimize that actually deserves more credit?

Well. That one hit.

I thought of three things immediately, and I’ll get to them in a minute, but the prompt really got to the heart of a problem I’ve had most of my life. I don’t give myself enough credit. In fact, I tend to beat myself up and spend an unhealthy amount of time thinking I’m a loser. Unaccomplished. Everyone else does everything better than me.

(Yes, I know. Tiny violin. Moving on.)

So I sat with this one for a while (sorry for the therapist-speak), and I started to understand not only my accomplishments but also why I have always struggled to value them.

First up: Ironman.

I don’t give myself enough credit for completing two full Ironmans, four standalone 70.3s, and two more 70.3s as part of the absolutely ridiculous Triple-T weekend—four triathlons over three days. Instead, I focus on the one 140.6 that I DNF’d. I remember the race where a friend literally had to pick me up off a curb. I think about how I wasn’t as fast or as strong as I “should” have been.

But I did them.

I got off the curb.

I came back after the DNF and finished two years later.

Maybe I was near the back of the pack, but I was in the pack.

Second: my military service.

I was a captain in the Army Reserve. I was Armor branch, but most of my service was with cavalry scout and infantry training units. I got to drive tanks, fire the main gun, practice platoon tactics, and do all sorts of things that are incredibly fun when nobody is actually trying to kill you.

And yet, I minimize it.

“I was never deployed.”

“I was only in the reserves.”

I work at a school with veterans who served in Iraq and Afghanistan. Some spent decades on active duty. Compared to them, I sometimes feel sheepish even saying I served.

But that’s because I’m pointing the camera at them. Not because my service wasn’t meaningful.

Third: being a lawyer.

This one is probably the most obvious. My parents were lawyers. My sister was a lawyer. My brother-in-law was a lawyer. My wife is a lawyer. For years, almost every friend I had was a lawyer. I worked with lawyers, socialized with lawyers, and married a lawyer. When everyone around you has done the same thing, it stops feeling special.

I joke that I went to one of the worst law schools in the country (although I did well there). I joke about whether being a lawyer is really that big of a deal.

But again, that’s because of where I was pointing the camera.

When your entire world is the legal community, becoming a lawyer seems ordinary.

It isn’t.

And that’s the lesson.

The problem was never my accomplishments. It was my framing.

I was comparing my Ironman finishes to people who had done dozens of them. I was comparing my military service to that of decorated combat veterans. I was comparing my legal career to a family and social circle where everyone had the same credentials. I was always looking at the person standing on a higher step of the podium.

So here’s what I’m taking from this.

First, I’m enough.

What I do does not have to be compared to anyone else. If I did something difficult—something that took years of work, discipline, sacrifice, and perseverance—I can acknowledge it without immediately adding a “yeah, but…”

No, I’m not going to start walking around dressed head-to-toe in Ironman gear like I have a sponsorship deal with a company that has never heard of me.

But I also don’t need to pretend those accomplishments don’t matter.

Second, I don’t want to make anyone else feel smaller about what they’ve accomplished.

My accomplishments are mine. Someone else’s are theirs. Maybe they didn’t finish an Ironman. Maybe they never served in the military. Maybe they never became a lawyer.

But maybe they raised incredible children. Started a business. Survived a horrible year. Took care of a sick parent. Went back to school at 45. Got sober. Learned a new skill. Kept going when life was beating them up.

Props to them.

This also connects to a book I’m reading called The Score, which is about metrics, measurement, and how we often reduce complex experiences into numbers. The problem is that numbers rarely tell the whole story.

You can measure my VO₂ max. You can measure my pace. You can measure my finishing time at Rockford.

You cannot measure what I got from the training. You can’t measure the mornings alone with my thoughts, the friendships, the confidence, the discipline, or the fact that my wife and daughter came to spend a weekend supporting me.

The clock says 6:45.

My experience was far bigger than 6:45.

And that brings me to one of my favorite “too good to fact-check” stories.

Supposedly, the happiest person on an Olympic podium is the gold medal winner.

Obviously.

But the second happiest is not the silver medalist. It’s the bronze medalist.

The silver medalist is looking up.

“I was so close. I could have won.”

The bronze medalist is looking down.

“Wait, I made the podium? Hell yes.”

Not in a “sucks to be everyone else” way.

Just in a “holy crap, I’m standing on the podium” way.

The silver medalist is thinking they failed.

Failed?

You are literally the second-best person in the world at something.

I think I’ve spent too much of my life being the silver medalist in my own mind.

Always looking up at who did more, who was faster, who was more successful.

Maybe it’s time to look around.

Not with arrogance. Not with superiority. Just with gratitude.

I’m on the podium.

And that’s pretty damn good.



Morning Music..

Flogging Molly – Drunken Lullabies




Find the Good…

I have a hoodie that says “Find the Good.” I remember seeing it online and thinking, That’s a great reminder. I should really wear that.

The problem is I seem to have forgotten to actually do it. Find the good, that is, I wear the hoodie all the time.

This should not come as a shock to anyone who knows me. I am not exactly Mr. Sunshine. I tend to see the bad. Everywhere. All the time.

The newspaper is full of suicide, murder, fraud, corruption, war, and all the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse. I see stories about parents brawling at children’s sporting events, fights at kindergarten graduations (yes, apparently we have those now), and seemingly endless violence in my city.

My default setting is, “Why can’t everyone just get along? Why is everyone so aggro?”

The problem is that living that way is exhausting. It makes me miserable, and I suspect it makes me less enjoyable to be around. That creates its own little cycle. I see the bad, I feel bad, people avoid the person who is always seeing the bad, and then I have another reason to think the world is terrible.

So I’ve decided this summer will be the Summer of Finding the Good.

I know what some of my longtime readers are saying:

“Wait a minute. Didn’t you already have a ‘Something Good Every Day’ category?”

Yes. Yes, I did.

Let’s call this a recommitment.

I may not write about it every day, but I am going to look for it every day.

Case in point: last night I volunteered at a soup kitchen. And by soup kitchen, I mean an actual soup kitchen. There was actual soup. It felt like a detail worth mentioning.

My job was handing out bread to around 150 people who came for dinner. It was hard to see. There were people who were homeless, struggling with poverty, battling mental illness, and a few who looked like they walked out of a Jim Carroll story (if you get that reference).

I came home saddened by the reality that so many people in my own community are suffering. I’ve volunteered at food pantries and soup kitchens before, so I’m not sure why it hit me so hard this time. Maybe I’m just tired of seeing so much evidence that the world can be cruel.

But my wife, who has the unfair advantage of being an optimist, gently pointed out something I completely missed.

I was focusing on the 150 people who needed a meal. I was ignoring the fact that a church group was there twice a week, making sure they got one.

I was focusing on the struggles. I was ignoring the twenty volunteers who gave up their evening to help strangers.

The suffering was real. But so was the kindness.

She pointed out something similar when I mentioned problems a friend had recently shared with me. I focused on the fact that those things happened. She focused on the fact that they overcame them.

And the funny thing is, I used to be good at this. In fact, I used to think it was one of my greatest strengths.

A bad post-college relationship ended? It led me to move home, go to law school, and put me on the path that led to the life I have now.

Leaving a job rather than accepting a temporary demotion? It led me to start my own business, spend more time with my kids when they were young, and allowed my wife to pursue her own goals.

Somewhere over the last few years, I lost that ability.

I’ve had a pretty easy life, and when some larger challenges came along, they pierced the bubble I had been living in. Since then, I feel like I’ve been standing guard, scanning the horizon for the next disaster.

It is exhausting.

So this summer, I’m going back to something I used to know.

The world is not all good. It never has been. History is basically a very long record of humans doing terrible things to one another. But history is also a record of humans feeding strangers, caring for the sick, creating art, raising children, loving each other, and getting up every day to try again.

As I sit here writing this, I can see the sky darkening and the rain beginning to fall, literally

The Summer of Finding the Good guy is going to think about the grass, the flowers, the trees, and every living thing that needs that rain.

I will find the good.



This Week in Training…Or Not….Less is More Edition

I have decided not to race Ironman Wisconsin this year. Or, probably, any year.

And I’m completely at peace with that decision.

First, as I’ve mentioned before, I was never entirely sure of my “why.” Why was I doing this? Why was I jumping straight back into a 140.6 after a 12-year gap? Why wasn’t I building back up naturally – sprint, Olympic, half, and then maybe full over a year or two?

Why did I need to prove anything?

To be honest, I still don’t completely know the answer. But I do know that whatever urge pushed me to sign up for Ironman Wisconsin disappeared somewhere around the finish line of Rockford 70.3.

I don’t know why it came. I don’t know exactly why it left. I just know that it did.

Rockford was actually a very good race for me mentally. I didn’t go to a dark place the way I have in previous races. I proved to myself that I could handle the day. And honestly, I think about 90% of that was my fueling plan. Apparently, my “mental toughness issues” may have been less about my brain and more about the fact that I had been attempting endurance events while essentially starving myself.

Who knew that food was important? Science is amazing.

That isn’t to say Rockford was easy. I was miserable for weeks leading into the race with stress and anxiety, and I certainly had moments during the bike where I could feel myself starting to spiral.

But overall, I enjoyed it more than any race I’ve ever done.

That statement is both encouraging and a little absurd considering that my idea of enjoying a race is “I only suffered emotionally for parts of it.”

Progress.

The second realization came this morning when I looked at my training calendar. Next week was the start of another build phase. And I dreaded it.

The thought of driving 90 minutes to 2.5 hours just to ride my bike for four or five hours did not excite me. In fact, it made me want to do anything else.

That was a pretty clear sign.

Less is more.

I still like triathlon. I still like the structure of training. I like improving. I like being fit. I like seeing what my body can do at 60 years old. But I can get all of those things without making my entire life revolve around one race.

That brings me to the third realization.

A few weekends ago, I ran a 5K with my daughter. I had a blast. Part of that was being with her, but part of it was the race itself. I was actually competitive. I wasn’t hanging on for dear life for six or seven hours. I wasn’t negotiating with myself about how much walking was acceptable.

I was running.

Fast.

Well, “fast” with a very generous age-adjusted definition of the word.

The point is, I realized races could actually be fun. What a concept.

So I joined a local triathlon club. This summer I’ll train with them for rides and open-water swims as I prepare for an Olympic-distance race. I think it will be a lot more enjoyable.

Ironically, the training may actually get harder in some ways. Less volume means more intensity. More speed work. More pushing the pace.I’ll still get that satisfying feeling after a hard workout. It’ll just be from a fast six-mile run instead of a slow ten-mile run. And maybe most importantly, I’ll get time back.

Time to hike with my son. Time to kayak with my wife. Time to play pickleball. Time to say “yes” to things instead of checking whether they interfere with a five-hour bike ride or whether I’ll be too exhausted afterward to enjoy them.

So I have no regrets about signing up for Ironman Wisconsin. It got me back into serious training. It got me healthier (depending on how accurate I want to be, I’ve lost 16 lbs, but that last low weight was the day after Rockford, so maybe not the MOST accurate). It got me to Rockford. It helped me realize what I enjoy and what I don’t.

That was worth something.

But the goal has changed. I don’t need to prove I can suffer for fourteen hours. I’ve already done that.

Maybe the next challenge is figuring out how to enjoy the hours in between.

Less is more.



Morning Music….

Pennywise – Same Old Story




Morning Music…

The Distillers – City of Angels (live)