Morning Music…

Johnny Cash – Rusty Cage




Minor Peeve: The Lying Weather App…

Here’s something that annoys me way more than it should.

My weather app currently says:
High: 42
Low: 35

Cool. Got it.

Also my weather app:
Current temperature: 25

…excuse me?

So at some point, without notifying anyone, we decided to just… blow past the low? Like it was more of a suggestion? A vibe? A loose guideline?

And the best part—they don’t update it.

Not like:
“Hey, quick correction—turns out 35 was wildly optimistic. New low: 25. Our bad.”

Nope. They just leave it there.
Like I’m not looking directly at the number.

This happens all the time. More often than not, honestly. The forecast is basically that friend who says, “I’ll be there in 10 minutes,” and then shows up an hour later with Starbucks and no explanation.

I’m not asking for perfection. Weather is complicated. Science is hard. Clouds are sneaky.

But if the temperature is already LOWER than your predicted low… maybe… just maybe… update the low?

Otherwise, what are we even doing here?  Other than telling me, “hey, we got it wrong…again”



Less Is More, Even When It’s Hard…

In my last post, I talked about a concept from The Comfort Crisis by Michael Easter called prevalence-induced concept change—the idea that when problems become rare, we expand the definition of what counts as a problem.

The more I think about it, the more it connects to a theme I’ve been writing about here for a while: Less Is More.

At first glance that phrase sounds like minimalism. Fewer possessions. Less clutter. Maybe a clean desk and three shirts hanging in the closet.

But the idea Easter is getting at goes deeper than that.

It’s about removing some comfort on purpose.

The Problem With Perfect Comfort

Modern life is incredibly comfortable.

  • Climate-controlled homes
  • Food is available 24 hours a day
  • Entertainment instantly available
  • GPS so we never get lost
  • Online shopping, so we don’t even have to leave the couch

None of these things are bad. In fact, they’re amazing when you step back and think about them.

But there’s a strange side effect.

When life becomes frictionless, our tolerance for friction disappears.

Small inconveniences suddenly feel like real problems.

The internet is slow.

The coffee line is long.

The streaming service doesn’t have the show we want.

None of these would even register as issues to someone living a hundred years ago. But our brains recalibrate to the environment we live in.

And our environment has almost no hardship.

Humans Were Built for Some Hardness

Easter argues that humans evolved in environments that regularly included challenge:

  • physical exertion
  • hunger between meals
  • cold
  • uncertainty
  • boredom

Those weren’t occasional experiences. They were normal parts of life.

Today we’ve engineered most of them away.

Again, that’s mostly a good thing. I’m not advocating bringing back cholera or food shortages.

But when everything becomes comfortable all the time, we lose something important: contrast.

Without occasional discomfort, comfort itself stops feeling good.

Parenting and the Discomfort of Letting Go

This idea has been bouncing around in my head lately in a place I didn’t expect: parenting adult children.

When kids leave home, graduate from college, and start building their own lives, they run into all sorts of struggles.

Jobs don’t work out.

Friends drift away.

Money is tight.

Plans fall apart.

And as a parent, your instinct is to fix it. Remove the discomfort. Smooth the road.

I catch myself worrying about their struggles as if they’re something that went wrong.

But maybe they’re not.

Maybe that discomfort is the point.

Struggling through those early adult years—figuring things out, making mistakes, recovering from them—is exactly what builds the qualities we all hope our kids will have:

  • resilience
  • independence
  • self-confidence
  • the ability to handle life when things don’t go perfectly

If parents successfully remove every hardship, we may accidentally remove the very experiences that create capable adults.

Which is a hard thing to accept when the instinct is to protect.

Sometimes the best thing we can do is step back and let them handle their own discomfort.

The Less Is More Version of This

This is where my own “Less Is More” idea overlaps with Easter’s argument.

Sometimes adding more comfort doesn’t make life better.

Sometimes removing comfort does.

Examples from my own life:

Riding my bike for two hours in the cold doesn’t sound comfortable, but afterwards, a hot shower feels incredible.  Plus, I feel great for having completed the ride!

Spending a weekend camping without constant screens somehow makes ordinary life feel richer when you get back.

Even something as simple as being bored can lead to reading a book, going for a walk, or thinking about something new.

The hardship creates the appreciation.

The Strange Trick

What Easter suggests—and what really stuck with me—is intentionally adding small amounts of voluntary discomfort back into life.

Not suffering for suffering’s sake.

Just doing things that remind your brain what effort feels like.

Walking instead of driving.

Working out hard enough to be tired.

Going outside when it’s cold.

Leaving your phone behind sometimes.

None of these is dramatic.

But they reset the calibration.

Why This Matters

If prevalence-induced concept change means we redefine smaller and smaller inconveniences as problems, then the solution might be surprisingly simple:

Reintroduce a little difficulty.

Not because life needs to be miserable.

But because a little hardship restores perspective.

It reminds us that the things we complain about most of the time…aren’t actually problems.

And maybe it reminds parents of something else, too:

Sometimes the hard parts of life—the ones we want to protect our kids from—are exactly the parts that will make them strong enough to build a life of their own.  This is why I’m trying to get.



They Don’t Make it Easy…

I should learn my lesson.  This is the second professional development day at my school that I can’t “sign in” to because I don’t bring my phone.  I want to be a better “student,” so I don’t bring electronics to the meeting.  That way, I won’t be the person scrolling online like 95% of my colleagues and ignoring the teacher.  I know I hate that when I’m teaching so I’m trying to be mindful and respectful.

BUT then, sign-ins are always QR codes to scan.

Sigh

 

 



Morning Music…

Fugazi – Waiting Room (live)




When Problems Disappear, We Redefine Them….

I’m reading The Comfort Crisis by Michael Easter and came across a concept that made me stop and stare at the wall for a minute.

It’s called prevalence-induced concept change, which is a fancy way of saying:

When problems become rare, we expand our definition of the problem so we keep seeing it.

Researchers ran an experiment in which participants had to identify threatening faces in a series of photos. At first, there were plenty of threats. Then the researchers quietly started removing them.

You’d expect people to say, “Hey, fewer threats!”

Nope.

Instead, participants started labeling normal faces as threatening.

Their definition of “threat” expanded.

Apparently, our brains really don’t like empty problem space. If the big problems disappear, we simply promote smaller ones.

And once you hear that idea, you start seeing it everywhere.

Parenting in the Age of Imaginary Dangers

One place it shows up is parenting.

If you’re roughly my age, your childhood probably included phrases like:

  • “Be home when the streetlights come on.”
  • “Don’t burn the house down.”
  • “If someone kidnaps you, I’m not paying the ransom.”

And then you rode your bike around the neighborhood for six hours with no adult supervision.

Today, parents are far more anxious about kids being outside alone, largely because of fears of kidnapping or “stranger danger.”

The thing is, statistically speaking, stranger abductions are incredibly rare. I remember reading somewhere that a child would need to stand on a street corner for something like hundreds of years before the odds of being kidnapped by a stranger caught up with them.

But because the truly serious dangers to kids—disease, violence, unsafe environments—have dropped dramatically over generations, we’ve become hyper-sensitive to extremely rare risks.

The definition of “danger” expands.

Now, a kid walking to the park alone feels like a crisis.

When Success Creates New Problems

The same phenomenon happens at the societal level.

When governments or institutions successfully reduce a problem, the incentives don’t always reward saying, “Great! We solved it.”

Instead, the definition of the problem often expands.

Take language shifts like:

  • Homeless → Unhoused
  • Hunger → Food insecurity

Originally, homelessness meant someone living on the street or in a car. Today, depending on the definition used, it can include someone temporarily staying with relatives or couch-surfing.

Hunger once meant literally not having enough food. Now “food insecurity” can include uncertainty about where the next meal might come from.

To be clear, those situations can still be real struggles.

But the broader the definition becomes, the bigger the problem appears, which conveniently keeps the attention, funding, and bureaucratic machinery running.

When a problem becomes less prevalent, the definition often expands to fill the gap.

The Comfort Crisis Part

This ties directly into Easter’s larger argument.

Modern life has removed many of the hardships humans evolved to deal with:

  • hunger
  • cold
  • physical danger
  • boredom
  • uncertainty

Our ancestors regularly dealt with real adversity.

We deal with Wi-Fi outages and slow lines at Starbucks.

But our brains still evolved to scan for problems. When the big ones disappear, we simply recalibrate.

A minor inconvenience becomes a serious grievance.

A rare risk becomes a looming danger.

A solved problem becomes a newly defined crisis.

The Takeaway

The lesson here isn’t that problems aren’t real.

It’s that our perception of them is relative.

When life gets better, we don’t necessarily feel better. We often just move the goalposts for what counts as bad.

Understanding that might help us do something radical in modern life:

Pause.

Look around.

And admit that things might actually be…pretty good.



Morning Music

The Thermals – A Pillar of Salt




This Week in Training: Base Phase – Week 4….

This entry will look a little different than the previous ones because I switched tracking platforms this week. Up until now, I’ve been using Strava, but I’m moving back to TrainingPeaks for Ironman training. It’s what I used the last three times I trained for IMWI. It has more bells and whistles and—if I can figure it out—might even have my old workouts that I can copy forward.

With that change noted, this was a good, solid week where I hit about 90% of the plan. The only thing I missed was a 15-minute run off the bike.

Total planned training time was 7:00, and I finished at 6:41, which I’ll happily take. Fifteen minutes of that gap was the missed brick run, and the rest was just being a few minutes short on swims that were distance-based anyway.

Swim 🏊

  • Workouts: 2
  • Total Distance: 4,850 yards
  • Total Time: 1:25

Both swims felt good. Nothing heroic, just steady work and decent rhythm in the water.

Bike 🚴

  • Workouts: 4
  • Total Distance: 47.1 miles

Also felt good. Once I get back from Spring Break, I’ll switch back to the road bike. For now I don’t mind using the e-mountain bike because it keeps me solidly in Zone 2, which is exactly where I want to be during base.

Run 🏃

  • Workouts: 3
  • Total Distance: 13.6 miles
  • Total Time: 2:16

This was a nice jump from last week’s 10 miles, and I definitely felt it. Today’s six miler was basically slow miles, slower miles, slowest miles. But it got done, and I immediately followed it with a 2,500-yard swim, which is the kind of back-to-back work that builds durability.

Total Training Time 🧮

  • Total Time This Week: 6 hours 41 minutes (out of 7:00 planned)

TrainingPeaks Metrics 📈

Because of the switch to TrainingPeaks, I don’t have a comparable relative effort score this week. TrainingPeaks uses a different system:

  • Fitness: 35
  • Fatigue: 70
  • Form: -9

Since I don’t have historical data loaded yet, those numbers don’t mean much on their own. What I really care about is the trend—the week-to-week deltas—not the raw numbers.

Reflections ✍️

Overall, this was a very solid base week. Good volume, most of the workouts completed, and no real signs of overreaching. The runs felt a little heavy, but that’s expected with the mileage bump.

Once I get back from Spring Break, the plan is simple:

  • move back onto the road bike,
  • keep stacking Zone 2 time,
  • and keep nudging the run mileage upward without forcing it.

Base Phase Week 4: steady progress.



Morning Music…

Circle Jerks – When the Shit Hits the Fan (live)




Morning Music…

Dropkick Murphys – The Warrior’s Code