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Meta
Fit-to-Fat-to-Fit Blog: 4/11/12
Goal Weight: 195 lbs.
I woke up twenty minutes before the alarm excited about my morning run.
I immediately thought, “You have lost your freakin’ mind!”
But I didn’t just want to run this morning. I NEEDED to run. I have a lot on my mind. I needed the cool wind in my face. I needed to chase the moon. I needed to feel the pain in my legs. I needed to feel my lungs burn. I needed the challenge of the steep hills in my neighborhood. I needed to think.
I needed to run 5.33 miles.
Thank God I did. It was my prayer time. My time to contemplate. To try to assess where I’ve been, where I am and where I’m going. Life seems so unclear right now. I needed a solid goal. And I needed to achieve it.
Exercise is the antidepressant with amazingly positive side effects.
I feel great this morning. And I can’t wait to go run again.
Posted in Fat-Fit-Fat
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For Better or Worse
Snort.
“You calling pigs?”
“What are you talking about?!?” Snort.
The man in the woman sat in the kitchen eating breakfast. The orange sun rose through the yellow haze as pollen fell like powdery snow.
Snort.
“Oh, that. Allergies. Sorry.” Snort.
“Blow your nose.”
After 25 years, their conversation had lost its flowery edge. There was love there, but it had been peeled back one layer at a time to a plain core. Their relationship was more transactional now. Most of their time talking was about business, not dreams.
Snort.
“Any words from the kids?” the husband asked as he read his iPad. The first 20 years of their marriage had been all about the kids. The last five years were them trying to reconnect in the middle of an empty nest. Somedays were better than others. Today was about to be their worst.
“Julie is studying for an accounting exam. And James is proud to report that after two years, he’s now officially a sophomore.”
“Glad he takes after you in the smarts department.” If the wife’s eyes could shoot lasers, the husband would have burst into flames years ago.
Her cellphone rang. She put down the pot she was drying and walked over to answer it. “Funny,” he thought, “Who could be calling at this time of the morning?” He watched as his wife said, “Hello?” He smiled. Even in her mid-forties she was as beautiful to him as she was on their marriage day. She sat silent for a moment and then said a weak, “Thank you,” and dropped the phone, breaking it into six pieces.
The husband dropped his tablet on the table and ran over to his slumped wife on the floor. She was sobbing uncontrollably.”
“I. Have. C -c-c-c-c — uh — I have cancer. Breast cancer. The tests came back — positive.”
The husband felt like he had had the wind sucked out of him and then punched. For all the years, for all the fights, well, at that moment, the one person he loved the most was being threatened. It was an epiphany — the moment when he realized what EXACTLY mattered to him. No, WHO exactly mattered to him. Her. The woman in the white dress. The woman who had given birth to and practically single-handedly raised their two children. Now she was under siege by her own body. She had to have more strength than she possessed on her own. They had taken “For Better” for granted. Now it is was time for “For Worse.”
Words failed him, but his arms did the talking. He held her as she violently sobbed into his chest. It was time for him to step up as a husband. It was time for him to step up as a man. The were on top of a frightening roller coaster and were about to head downhill. Fast.
Time passed and scars healed. Surgery was followed by chemo and radiation. The bad cells were killed — much like the weaknesses in their marriage. She had fallen down and he had caught her. Twenty-five years of trespasses were forgiven at the alter of cancer. A new, stronger relationship was rebuilt from the moment of that phone call.
On the one-year anniversary of “The call,” the husband held his wife as she slept against his chest on the couch. He thought about all the struggles from the past year and had to smile. When the priest had said, “For better or worse,” he thought they were two separate things. But a single phone call made him realize that the best moments in life truly can come from the worst.
Posted in Writing
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Fit-to-Fat-to-Fit Blog: 4/10/12
Goal Weight: 195 lbs
Woke up too late to run. Did 10 minutes on the bike and then 40 sit-ups and 40 pushups. I’ll run tonight. Was up late last night trying to get my taxes ready to take to the accountant.
Now that will be a painful workout.
Posted in Fat-Fit-Fat
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Fit-to-Fat-to-Fit Blog: 4/9/12
Goal Weight: 195 lbs.
Today’s Weight: 206 lbs.
The bright, nearly full moon followed along beside me this morning as I ran through my neighborhood and the one next to it. The temperature was cool and I could feel my heart beating its usual 150 beats per minute. The Rocky soundtrack was playing over the headphones this morning — I needed as much inspiration as I could get (God Bless composer Bill Conti). I ran 4.88 miles in a little over 46 minutes. It was a strong run with lots of hills. My right leg, which has been in pain because of shin splints, held up. I turned my ankle at one point (the pavement is awful) but no damage there. I got home and did 25 sit-ups and 25 pushups and then went to work.
Last Friday, being in shape most likely saved my life. My son, a friend and I were in a little boating mishap (read the full story here) on the Buffalo River and to make a long story short, I got into a situation where a piece of chain on a rope wrapped around my leg. I very easily could have drowned — but didn’t. Why? I was in good enough shape to fight the current and free myself from the chain. I was able to do sit-up as the water pulled me under. I managed to keep my head above water. Then I was able to reach the chain with my hands and free myself. I also was in good enough shape to help capture the boat and help flip it. Finally, I was able to help winch it back on the trailer.
The character Rocky Balboa said it best when he said, “It ain’t about how hard you hit, it’s about how you can get hit and keep moving forward. How much you can take and keep moving forward.” Life will take a punch at you every once in a while. Because I was in shape, I was able to take the punch. I had the strength to not drown. So I’m not exaggerating when I say this, “being fit can save your life.”
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