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Hiatus

29 Saturday Mar 2014

Hiatus

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Posted by Ed Mahoney | Filed under Storytelling

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2013 in review

31 Tuesday Dec 2013

Posted by Ed Mahoney in Storytelling

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The WordPress.com stats helper monkeys prepared a 2013 annual report for this blog.

Here’s an excerpt:

The concert hall at the Sydney Opera House holds 2,700 people. This blog was viewed about 12,000 times in 2013. If it were a concert at Sydney Opera House, it would take about 4 sold-out performances for that many people to see it.

Click here to see the complete report.

WordPress publishes these year-end stats for me.  My brother-in-law asked me the other day what websites I frequent the most.  My homepage is set to the WSJ because I subscribe to both the print and digital editions.  My other top pages are facebook, Fidelity (I track my 401K more and more the closer I get to retirement), dictionary.com (yes I suck at spelling but I try) and my WordPress stats.  I’m addicted to reading my stats like some people read the box scores each day in the Sports pages.

Readers are of course anonymous but I find the stats interesting nonetheless.  I especially like to review people’s search terms.  Runner’s Porn was high but less so than strassburg sock.  Explain that.  And my top 4 most read posts were written before 2013 – my SEI has been steadily growing with the search engines.  I suspect only other bloggers would find stats interesting enough to click on the link to review.  And that’s fine.  Comment with a link to your year-end stats.  I’d like to see them.

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Texas Road Trip

27 Friday Dec 2013

Posted by Ed Mahoney in Running, Storytelling

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Austin, Doctor's Mob, Town Lake

ArmadilloGot in a final nine mile jaunt around Town Lake today.  Fixin’ to dine at Molcas – a really nice family run Tex-Mex in Northwest Hills – for our last supper in Austin.  I should mention we dined last night at Hyde Park Bar & Grill too.  We always make an effort to visit our favorite eateries in Austin.

We’ll be driving early tomorrow morning to Dallas to visit long-time family friends and then head out west on 287 for as far as we can.  I hope to make it past Amarillo but don’t expect to cross the Texas border into New Mexico until Sunday.  As long as that sounds, it’ll be better than the trip down.  I thought I’d re-post this armadillo pic because I saw one cross the road on the drive down at night between Childress and Abilene.  It was as big as a baby black bear.

Actually just returned from Molcas.  Couldn’t finish this post first.  So I’m almost too stuffed with cheese and Bohemias to type.  Papa is playing his victrola for Brittany.  Some WWI era 78 rpm tune.  Brit is pursuing a music degree and is interested in such things.  Her Papa gave her a turntable earlier and she’s been playing 33 rpm vinyl records all day.  Some U2 War, Roberta Flack and her Uncle Steve’s Doctor’s Mob album.

Karen and I just made the decision to not pack the minivan tonight.  Grandma Barbie is dancing the Charleston.  Molcas serves decent frozen ritas.  I wonder how much gear we’ll leave behind when we leave.  I’m guessing multiple iPhone/iPad chargers and some really important jewelry.  See you in Colorado.

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Listless

26 Tuesday Mar 2013

Posted by Ed Mahoney in Running, Storytelling

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

running blog

Sad, loney, depressed or listless boy sittingNever go to the grocery store angry.  If you think shopping hungry is a bad idea, I started with Lay’s Potato Chips and French Onion Dip, and then moved on to the ice cream isle.  I ended the day mad about something at work and instead of running to relieve the stress, I just got all pissy.  I sent a bitchy email to my second line, signed off, went to the store for Karen and forgot half of what I was supposed to pick up.  I should have run.  Maybe I should have made dinner.  I should have done something.

Instead I’m sitting here irritated not knowing what to do.  I could finish that Ken Follett book I started last Halloween.  Friggin facebook is boring.  No new people joining anymore.  Today is all about the Supreme Court reviewing California’s Amendment 8 and Clinton’s DOMA.  Clinton should have settled that shit, are we really still talking about it?  Am I just a loser if I don’t get in my run?

Thought about working on my taxes.  Emailed my brother instead goading him to do his because I know he hasn’t.  He says he did.  Three weeks ago.  I participated in an interesting thread today from a blogger I follow – running blog – about another blogger who copy/pasted a really well written story of hers’ and claimed it as his own.  Her other followers totally detailed his history of plagiarism on facebook and his website.  What a copyleft loser.  What a lame story to be the highlight of my day.  Who reads running blogs?

I need to just go to bed early and wake up tomorrow.

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High School

26 Saturday Jan 2013

Posted by Ed Mahoney in Storytelling

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Don Hall, Round Rock, RRHS

Don HallI learned through facebook today that Don Hall passed away at 79.  He was my high school counselor and the father to one of my buddies.  It brought back a flood of memories and made me cry a little.  Don was such a kick.  He wandered around the halls with a more mischievous grin than any kid in school.  You almost expected him to be planning a senior day prank.  And like his son, he was a runner.  He put on the same air as his son did at races, with a big smile and telling jokes that would make everyone forget about their nerves.

He was so much fun and thinking about him made me recall all the good memories from high school.  I know I suffered all the teenage angst too but I don’t remember any of that.  Just the good times.  I had such good buddies.  And my school had more pretty girls than was probably fair.  Today they would bus such a dense grouping of beauty to other schools in the district to meet educational equality guidelines.  Of course my high school sweetheart was by far the most gorgeous.

It’s funny but I can recall high school with more lucidity than college.  Maybe because college was faster paced with moving and meeting new friends every semester.  I can recall all of my high school cross country and track races too.  I can hardly remember any from college.  Sort of strange, unless it’s that way for others too.  And even though I didn’t keep up with Don since moving to Colorado, I remember him clowning around like it was yesterday.  I’ll miss him.

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Wistful Winter

30 Sunday Dec 2012

Posted by Ed Mahoney in Storytelling

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

happy new years, holidays, seasonal

iStock winter ornamentsAs the holidays yield to winter, I find myself in a pensive mood.  Doubt this is unusual, for me or most people, to reflect over the past year with a touch of melancholy.  In my case, there’s typically a stemmed glass within reach.  The girls have all returned to Colorado, leaving me behind in Texas to spend a few more weeks with my mom.

The moment my first daughter was born, like an epiphany, I knew my purpose in life.  Each trip home, spending quality time with family, reinforces the message.  Gollum doesn’t know the meaning of precious.  Waking up to a half dozen nieces and nephews each morning at my in-laws presented me with an over abundance of precious.  The silence is deafening now that they are gone.  Maybe I should have ran a daycare; I like watching kids play.

With one more day left in the year I’m starting to think of the future.  No big resolutions are coming to mind but I am going to stop responding to stupid facebook posts.  I thought I was doing good to keep my election comments limited to just one of my outspoken friends, but I’ve kept it up post-election with the Sandy Hook emotion.  I couldn’t help myself.  I’ve always been pro gun control and I could not believe the poor form expressed by gun advocates with their aggressive social network response to that tragedy.  I don’t care about their 2nd Amendment rights any more than the stats and reasons that I reply with.  I just care about how I feel on the topic.  That’s not going to change so I’m done talking about it and will just hope for positive social progress.

My running plans won’t change.  I’ll keep up most of the same.  I was able to register the other day for Moab and I’m set to run the Austin 3M Half Marathon in two weeks.  One thought I do have for a new years resolution is to start cooking from recipes in order to broaden my meal portfolio.  I’m not big on recipes generally but I do enjoy cooking.  Another thought is extending my trading savvy with options.  I traded options quite a bit this past year but I wouldn’t call it sophisticated.  I sold covered calls most months.  Great way to add a few points to my overall return but not very exciting otherwise.

I have a few thoughts on my job as well but that’s it.  Keep up my running.  Improve my cooking and investing tactics.  And cherish every moment with family.  Happy new years.

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Fifty Shades of Shit

13 Friday Jul 2012

Posted by Ed Mahoney in Storytelling

≈ 4 Comments

I go on summer holiday Tuesday, returning the next week’s Wednesday; which is odd but to give my scheduler credit – she got us some super cheap airfare.  I started my search for a summertime read last night.  Figure the odds of this.  I logged into facebook first and had an invite to a book club app called Goodreads.  How does facebook know?

I don’t allow many apps to take over my personal profile but acquiesced for this.  The timing was in its favor.  For the next hour I added books to my profile and scoured those read and reviewed by my friends.  And I didn’t find one book I was interested in.  What’s with that?

In a perfect world I would read non-stop all day long, all year long.  History suggests I go in ruts.  Read tons for several months, go months without reading squat.  Sometimes it’s my work schedule but more often than not it’s that I can’t find anything interesting.  I actually downloaded the bible the other day – for 99¢ I might add.  Haven’t read it since high school, and while I am hardly “searching” right now, it’s on my list of things to read.  But good Lord I would rather read some page-turning thriller, some historical fiction, some lurid, graphic novel on my summer vacation.

Please provide recommendations.

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Runner Porn

05 Thursday Jul 2012

Posted by Ed Mahoney in Running, Storytelling

≈ 6 Comments

My stats show that I get a considerable number of hits from search queries for “runner porn”.  Sometimes specifically trail runner porn or cross country runner porn.  I find that more unbelievable than weird; but then it occurs to me that perhaps people aren’t using the term porn with a sexual connotation but rather in its alternative etymology – which is to say highly descriptive or overly alliterative prose that creates or satisfies desire.  In this instance, the need to satiate the desire to run.  These readers are probably fairly disappointed when they read my inane rhetoric on weekend workouts.  With that in mind, here is my contribution to the runner porn genre.

The trail guide book depicts the seven mile long forest service road as intended for 2-wheel drive vehicles.  Assuming the snow is plowed.  There is no snow on the fourth of July, but drives like this make Sara wish she had a Subaru Outback instead of her Honda Accord.  To make up for the slow driving over boulders jutting up from the dirt and gravel, she guns the accelerator over the occasional good stretches.  But even those are laced with ridges from the road grading that renders her CD player useless.  There are two kinds of people in the world; those who crawl over speed bumps painfully slow and drivers like Sara who race over the crests of gravel road waves without letting the car’s frame sink into the troughs.  Faster is always better.

Sara doesn’t necessarily need to hurry.  She isn’t meeting anyone.  This run will be solo.  But the hour long drive from her home in Boulder to this trail head sitting at 8000 feet has her filled with anticipation.  And she needs to piss like a race horse.  To avoid having to carry water on this run, she downs a 16 ounce water bottle of Cytomax on the drive after waking up with two cups of Peet’s Jamaica Blue Mountain.

There is justification to arrive as early as possible to beat the heat.  The morning temperature was already 58° at 6am.  Cool temps would also mitigate the need to carry a camelbak or water bottles.  And she wants to beat the crowd.  The previous night’s dinner engagement didn’t allow her the opportunity to come up and camp.  This is a risk in terms of parking as well for the privacy she might need to pee.  This trail head doesn’t offer facilities.

After rounding a curve, she sees the trail head.  Only two cars are parked – likely overnight campers.  The lot supports up to four cars and she takes the third spot.  Sara knows when she returns from her out-and-back run that dozens of cars will be parked along the road.  This trail leads to a popular 14er.  She picked the trail though because the first five miles were almost entirely under a thick canopy of old growth forest with soft dirt covered in pine needles.  Rocks are scarce while fun little stream crossings abound.  Sara loves navigating water features at full speed.  And this 10 miler is fixin’ to be balls out fast.  This isn’t a training run leading up to a race.  This is simply a narcissistic escape she’d been planning after already getting in race shape.  Sara has run this trail numerous times with her old high school cross country teammates and has nice memories of flying down specific sections.  But she’s never run it in peak condition before.  This is no workout and no race.  She pictures this trail whenever daydreaming of a run.  This is about personal pleasure.

Not seeing anyone, Sara squats down by her Honda’s front bumper and pees.  She is relieved that this immediately alleviates her stomach cramping.  Still, she downs another 8 ounces of water before locking her car.  She starts a playlist in shuffle mode trusting the serendipity will serve as a virtual running partner, surprising her with random fast tempo sprints.  She stretches against the car for maybe two minutes; mostly to adjust the volume and run through a mental checklist of ensuring the car is locked, her key is secure, her body is ready…

There is no fence bordering the lot and is unnecessary as the trees begin immediately forming a natural border.  The trail is marked by knee-high boulders on each flank and are also unneeded as the trail is a well-worn path.  One could easily stray into the woods however as the trees maintain several feet of space between trunks and there is very little undergrowth.  But the sun is largely obscured and she feels the temperature noticeably drop upon starting into the woods.  She figured the air to be in the low 50s but with no wind she is comfortable in only shorts and a jogging bra – all black hi-tek fabric.

The trail starts off mostly flat with a slight downward slope.  Enough slope that when combined with the allure of the quintessential pine-needle trail it is tempting to begin running at a fast clip.  Her discipline helps guide her with a warm-up pace though, knowing better than to build up lactic acid in the first mile.  Sara considered not wearing her Garmin because she didn’t really need it for this trail.  Each downslope is roughly a half mile in distance, bottoming out at a creek bed and then rising for another half mile or so.  That’s the other amazing thing about this trail – each mile contains a single downhill followed by a single uphill – each summit marking another mile.  Only a few of the intervals, this first mile included, presents more than 200 meters of relatively flat running.  And then there are only two hills steep enough to induce walking.  Sara senses she might put together a few fast miles today so she wears the Garmin.

The grade increases its downward slope as she approaches the trough at the half mile point.  She allows her legs to gain momentum giving her what she refers to as a sling-shot approach into the bottom knowing the creek could be easily jumped with enough momentum.  The water could be walked with two sizable stones but she clears it safely without hardly changing her stride.  This is a warmup stream.  As she crosses the creek, Sara catches site of three or four one-man tents in her peripheral vision – likely the campers paired with the cars at the trail head.  The trail continues flat for ten meters and then begins to climb at a slightly more aggressive grade than the previous downhill.  As her muscles are now awake, if anything her pace increases and she feels strong taking the hill.  Her Garmin beeps denoting the first mile soon after cresting the rise.  The 9 minute mile pace doesn’t surprise her other than it being exactly 9:00.  Her half marathon race pace averages closer to 8:45 with her first mile generally under 8:00.  She wouldn’t be surprised if she ran her overall half marathon race pace today.  It would likely feel more pleasant starting off slower like this, than after the initial surge required in races.

The crest of this first hump is short and Sara feels the descent begin as soon as she looks up from her Garmin.  This slope isn’t any steeper than the previous over its half mile length, but it consists of three terraces.  Sara maintains an even pace through the downhills and short flat sections until the third and final slope when she feels her legs suddenly complete the warmup.  Her legs over-rule the pace set by Sara’s mind and quicken their cadence.  Her shoulders remain squared above her hips so she isn’t leaning forward, but her footfalls gradually hit more forefoot than the mid-foot stride she had been running with from the start.  Depending on the uphill section, this second mile is positioned to come in under a 9 minute mile pace.

The creek crossing at the bottom of this second mile is one of Sara’s favorites.  The stream is wide with fast and ankle to nearly knee-deep running water.  There is no bridge but rather five flat rocks spaced almost perfectly for her current stride.  The trick is that the creek appears just around a turn so the typical first-time trail runner would come to a complete stop to determine how to negotiate the crossing.  Sara will take the creek without missing a beat.  The stones do actually require a slightly shorter stride but they’ve never been slick and she intends to do the equivalent of a football player drill of high-stepping through tires.

Sara rounds the curve with the random thought of wishing a group of hikers would be present to watch her perform her athletic prowess over this water feature.  And oh shit, there are.  The four campers are hiking across the creek just in front of her.  They are all carrying black crash pads.  These are mattress-sized foam rectangles on their backs used by rock climbers.  Three of the climbers are already across the creek but the fourth is stepping from the 4th rock to the 5th as she hits the first rock.  He is shuffling from the 5th to the shore as she launches from the 4th rock.  It never occurs to her to slow down, that commitment had already been made.  She lands her left foot to the right edge of the 5th rock as she can’t guarantee his foot will be off it in time.  It isn’t.  She leaps around him to the far right landing in a splash of water.  The water isn’t deep enough to even cover her water-proof trail shoe but she then needs an additional step with her left foot to reach the top of the shoreline.  This lateral movement isn’t planned and stresses her quads which are optimized for forward motion.

Which is fine.  That she negotiated this quick thinking and athletic stunt only adds to her pleasure.  The other hikers see her because they are already turned to look at their buddy cross the creek.  One of them deftly leans his crash pad out of her way, the other two do so more awkwardly with three quarter turns.  She mumbled a “thanks guys” as she speeds past.  They say nothing.  In her experience, rock climbers tend to be somewhat deliberate thinkers.  They no doubt will think of something clever to say in a few minutes.  “Ass-wipes,” Sara mutters once fully past the rock climbers.

Sara welcomes the immediate turn through thick pine to give her a quick escape from those boys as she thinks over what the proper trail etiquette should have been for that crossing.  Biker yields to hiker/runner.  Both yield to horses.  The general rule is a greater power yields to the lesser power to demonstrate control.  That’s not intuitive with big-ass horses, but it’s in terms of their rider being at risk if the horse is spooked.  And she’s always felt this equation changes whether one is going uphill or downhill.  Sara is fairly certain she should have slowed for the climbers to finish crossing the creek.  They both fit the criteria of hiker/runner, and she was behind them – arguably running out of control.  But there were clearly extenuating circumstances here.  Who the fuck hikes with big-ass mattress pads.  Climbers must have some sort of obligation to let you pass?  This particular event is clearly debatable but she knows one thing.  Sprinting across these creeks is half the reason she’s here today and she’s glad she didn’t slow down back there.  At the same time, Sara isn’t sure why she was being so tough on climbers.  She has good friends who are climbers.  They’re not all bad.

This mile two hill isn’t any steeper than the last one and follows gentle switchbacks, but it is a tad bit longer than average with the previous downhill being a tad bit shorter.  Her Garmin beeped just as she tops the climb.  Her pace drops to 8:30 which she attributes to those climbers getting her worked up.  And while this is only two miles into a ten miler, she doesn’t feel that second hill and continues a strong pace across the top.  The trees thin out some on this ridge letting in more sun but the air remains cool.  She hopes it will stay that way.  A Lady Gaga song plays through her ear buds and she surges down the next hill into mile three.

Sara figures she’ll track her time by counting the seconds/minutes over or under a 9 minute pace – expecting to finish in about 90 minutes.  After two miles she is 30 seconds under and feeling strong.  This segment has a much steeper slope and is closer to a quarter mile with the corresponding uphill being about three quarters of a mile.  This will be a slower mile pace although who knows.  Sara concentrates on good running form.  She focuses on her footwork, avoiding heel strikes which would slow her momentum.  And she lets herself run to the song.  It is still playing as she hits the creek, a bridge actually.  Not as fun but quite quaint.  She wishes someone would take a picture of her running across this little wooden structure.  In the middle of a little Aspen grove, it has a great photogenic quality to it.

The uphill that follows the bridge is literally in her face as soon as she crosses the bridge because the climb begins within steps of the creek and is extremely vertical.  She remembers this real bridge being smart on the way back when she would be nearly sliding down this slope.  Despite the grade, no one ever walks this segment because it only lasts for 50 meters or so before leveling out, and it’s not even a full three miles into the run for Chrissake.  But it’s a momentum stopper for sure.  There go those 30 seconds under.  Sara of course slows down – there is no decision to make here.  But she increases her cadence with quick strike knee lifts to keep her legs moving and heart at a constant rate.  Slowing down would normally spike her heart rate, so increasing her cadence while technically running slower is a trick that sometimes works to keep hills from being a game changer to the overall pace.

Sara forges up the steep slope like this until it levels off and she recovers her standard stride in less than half a minute.  Still, it is a game changer.  She no longer has a feel for the strong pace she’d been running.  When her Garmin beeps at the top to mark three miles, she sees a 9:33 pace in the display.  Well, not critical.  She is nearly on par, three seconds over.

She shouldn’t be tiring though after only three miles.  She needs to recover her sense of pace.  A Springsteen song comes on that usually amps her up, and she knows will run for a good four minutes.  Just the ticket.  Her form relaxes into the song while her pace steadily increases.  The grade of the downhill gains at a rate in rhythm with the tune.  By the bottom of the hill, with Bruce nearing his climax, she hits the hewn side-by-side logs that spanned the creek in full stride.  She is moving fast.  Her momentum carries her completely up the next hill with little decrease in speed or even breathing.  Granted, this is not a monster hill but it is still a half mile up at altitude.  She is definitely in shape.  The Garmin beeps to inform her of an 8:42 mile pace.  “Damn!”  15 seconds back under par and one more mile before turning back.

Sara maintains this strong pace down her fifth down slope.  It is almost necessary given the grade – the steepest yet in terms of its complete length.  Not too steep though to require putting on the brakes, so she takes what the course gives her and flies down.  The fifth upslope will be the steepest as well.  Not as steep as the first 50 meters of the last uphill, but overall the toughest hill to climb of the entire trail.  Seconds made here would for sure be lost there.  This creek offers something special too.  She knows it is within 100 meters or so once the slope bottoms out.  The trail runs along the trough – a meadow really – for a bit parallel to the creek before turning to cross it.  And she can see the creek this entire stretch as there are few trees.  But there are no logs or bridge.  There are some rocks depending on how high the water is running.  She suspects the water is lower than average given the under average snow pack, but she isn’t in the mood to use them.  Sara figures this creek span is about three feet across.  She’d cleared it in the past but had a bad miss once.  Oddly, it was the miss that made this special.  It’s what challenges her to try to completely jump it rather than step across the rocks.  There is no question that today is a day for jumping.  She picks up her pace and throws her body over the stream, landing with what seems like a foot to spare.  She is still moving fast.

Until 100 meters into the hill where it become more like a ladder.  This isn’t going to be one of her sub 9 minute miles.  She’d always walked this hill on past runs.  Most everyone did.  Not even halfway up her calves are numb while her thighs burn with what feels like actual fire.  Her stride is actually just a shuffle now and common sense rationalizes that walking wouldn’t necessarily be any slower.  But sometimes it’s about principle.  And Sara honestly believes that by maintaining a running form – or shuffle whatever – her legs will be able to more quickly resume a normal running stride once she reaches the crest.  Today is no day for walking.

You never really see the top of a hill like this.  It’s always this curved horizon that never shows you its top.  And the one thing imperfect about making this a 10 mile run is that she knows the Garmin will beep at 5 miles – still a good 100 meters before the true crest.  That’s OK.  With this level of fatigue in one’s legs, you don’t suddenly decide to go for the final 100 meters to make it a 10.2 mile run.  She plans to turn exactly at the beep.

The beep chirps to tell her of a 10:45 pace.  She’d expected over 11 minutes so she is fine with this.  It does put her 90 seconds over par and now it’s hard to imagine running back with the same intensity given the amount of lactic acid in her legs.  She turns back down the hill not trying to push it anymore, just trying to recover.  She hopes the steep downhill will give her a decent pace anyway.  She surprises herself by how well she recovers.  Certainly her breathing does but her legs have lost some strength and she can’t clear the stream with a jump on the return.  She isn’t overly impressive skipping across the rocks either.  Sara turns off the playlist.  After over 45 minutes of motivational tunes, she finds music annoying.  She doesn’t have any pockets but decides to carry the ear buds in her hand rather than leave them in.

The sound of the forest is better than music.  This deep into the trail with no one around is surreal.  The peace allows Sara to refocus on her form and regain her strong pace from earlier in the run.  This hill is one of the steeper ones as well but not one that would make someone in her condition walk.  Sara focuses on lifting her legs, popping up her knees with a shorter stride and quicker cadence.  Lifting your legs when you’re tired is easier than pushing the weight of your body.  She isn’t certain if that’s what her form is actually doing.  It seems like some sort of perpetual motion lie but simply telling yourself that lifting your legs is lighter than pushing your body seems to work.  Her Garmin beeps at the summit to indicate having completed 6 miles.  This last mile in a 9:20 mile pace putting her 110 seconds over par.  A 9 minute mile pace is starting to look unrealistic.

Or maybe not.  As Sara begins her descent she realizes she is fully recovered and is in the mood to pick up her pace.  Mile 7 will be the same as mile 4, only in reverse.  But mile 4 was one of her fastest in 8:42.  She would need to keep her pace about 30 seconds under 9 minute miles to finish on par.  This would also require a negative split – running the second half faster than the first.  Possible but rare.  Sara takes full advantage of the downhill slope.  Rather than feeling like she has to run hard it feels more like allowing her body to fall with gravity.  Running fast is effortless, she simply has to allow her legs to go fast.  The two logs over the stream are easy to negotiate as well and the subsequent climb not dramatic enough to slow her down.  Her goal is to beat the 8:42 she ran when this was mile four.

And then she hears what sounds like mountain bikers.  Yep, coming down ahead of her, she can see two of them now.  Her mind races back to her trail etiquette thoughts from mile two.  These bikers need to yield to her.  Sara oftentimes yields to bikers when she is going uphill – assuming she was going slow.  She figured they have the momentum and she didn’t.  It is less of a drag for her to stop than for the bikers who might be enjoying their downhill ride.  Not this time.  The trail is wide enough if they were experienced bikers that she will move to the side but she isn’t yielding.  Uphill or not she has momentum.  They can do whatever.  And they do.  As she moves to her right the two bikers shift to their right and pass at full speed.  The second one shouts there are two more behind.  Fine.

The 3rd biker passes her without stopping as well, but with noticeably more caution.  She appreciates this but doesn’t care so much.  As long as she isn’t being forced to slow down.  This biker also calls her attention to the 4th rider still up the hill.  Sara doesn’t pass this 4th biker until nearly fully up the hill.  He looks to have a good 10 or 15 years over the others who she figures to be around her age – young twenties.  He stops to let her pass so she says, “Thanks buddy.”  But a few feet further and under her breadth she whispers, “Wimp.”  Nice guy no doubt but seriously?  She hopes she never mellows out like that.

She is running across the summit now and her Garmin doesn’t beep until the very start of the decline.  8:30.  “Wow, nice!”  She is nearly half way down before she correctly computes the over/under – she is now only over by 80 seconds.  That should have been relatively simple math but she doesn’t have much blood flowing to her brain, it’s all in her legs.  And her legs continue their strong pace.  This next downhill will be long – roughly a three quarter mile, with the corresponding uphill only a quarter mile.  The opposite of what it was when it was her 3rd mile.  She has to run this hard to take advantage of the negative elevation.  She’ll know after this 7th mile whether or not finishing in a 9 minute mile pace is doable.  She can’t afford to go totally all out – there will be two more miles remaining.  But this has to be her strongest effort.  She imagines it’s a race against a competitor and launches into a race pace that feels like 80% of her full speed.  She probably never ran this fast three quarters into a half marathon but this is only ten miles, not 13.  This is more of a 10K race pace.

Halfway down her legs begin to fatigue.  Not only is this a long downhill, but it grows seriously steep near the bottom and it’s the grade that’s challenging.  She doesn’t want to slow down but can’t help it.  It’s more important to run with an efficient form.  She is still moving at a good clip no doubt but with more focus on stability.  Then she reaches the final 50 meters where it becomes extremely steep and she is forced to slow down considerably.  She brakes her momentum for most of the remaining hill and then lets her body resume some of its speed as she hits the bottom and crosses over the bridge.

The hump in front of her is only a quarter mile and Sara races it like a kick at the end of a race.  She hasn’t forgotten about the remaining two miles but this mile means everything to her at the moment.  She finds that thinking about the big picture sometimes leads to being overly conservative.  You don’t know what your body can do.  Run each episode hard and trust your muscles will recover for the next stretch.  Her Garmin beeps at the quick summit displaying an 8th mile pace of 7:14.  “Good Lord!”  Just like that and with only two miles to go she is now 26 seconds under par.

But she does need to recover.  She is totally out of breath and her legs are growing heavy.  A sure sign of oxygen debt.  But she can’t just massively slow down.  Running downhill will be enough to help her lungs and heart recover without slowing down.  Well, without slowing down much, she definitely has to slow down some.  Sara mostly maintains her pace holding out until she reaches the bottom to assess her recovery.  Upon reaching the stream with the five rocks she sees a crowd of bikers forming on the other side.  “What is it with this creek and crowds?”  Although tired, she puts on a sprint to cross the creek before the group begins to ford their bikes across.  She says thanks and rambles on past them up the hill.  She doesn’t see it but hears the commotion from one of the bikers apparently trying to ride across the creek.  Idiot, just because you can see the bottom doesn’t mean the water won’t carry you away.

Sara feels heaviness in her legs now but her breathing is back under control.  She knows she won’t be able to push hard up this hill as she is on the border line of oxygen debt – her lactate threshold.  She does her best to maintain a decent pace and this feels to her like probably a 9 minute mile.  Pace is harder to judge when you’re this fatigued.  With a mile and a half to go she isn’t concerned so much about recovery as she just doesn’t want to completely bonk.  As long as she doesn’t run into any more crash-pad wearing hikers, she’ll be fine.  She passes several hikers on the trail before reaching the summit but none who cause her to go out of her way or slow down.  Her Garmin beeps at the top of the hill showing a 9:02 minute mile.

She feels good about that.  Sure, she has slowed down a great deal but those were two really impressive miles in a row before this one.  And she is now still 24 seconds under par.  Heading downhill for the final time, Sara knows she could coast in with a final 9 minute mile.  But halfway down the hill the lactic acid is washed from her legs and her breathing is strong again.  She takes off.  Not as fast as that 7:14 mile but fast.  She can taste the end of this run and isn’t ready for it to end.  She feels strong enough for a few more miles.  It’s unlikely she really has any quick access glucose left in her bloodstream.  More likely adrenalin is kicking in.  Sort of odd considering there are no spectators.

The creek at the bottom is the smallest of them all and like the first time she jumps it in stride.  A half mile to go and really only about a quarter mile up hill.  The final quarter is fairly flat.  Sara puts the added effort into climbing the hill without slowing down.  This really does feel like racing to her.  It helps her to understand that as much as she likes competing against other girls, she mostly simply enjoys running fast.  The feeling of her body being that of an animal.  A race horse is her favorite analogy.  She is a fucking thoroughbred race horse and racing feels glorious.  The hill begins to peak and she picks up her pace.

Maybe a little too fast.  She is running 85% full out and isn’t sure she can maintain this for another quarter mile.  If this was simply a workout, she would begin to cool down now but she holds her pace steady.  Soon she sees flashes of cars or people or perhaps both at the trail head through the trees.  She must be within 100 meters, maybe only 50, of the end of the trail.  She cranks into a faster gear and then another gear and then her top end sprint – racing against no one but herself.

The trail head is nearly blocked by a pack of bikers.  They leave her an exit that twists to the right towards her car meaning she can’t simply collapse after entering the trail head – she has to follow the curving path bordered by their bikes and consider how she looks since these are some good looking boys.  She stops her watch upon hearing the beep but doesn’t look at it.  She will as soon as she feels composed but she already knows she broke a 9 minute mile pace.  That accomplishment is hardly in doubt.  Her focus now is on catching her breath before turning around to face this group of riders.  Her pacing requires her to turn in several loops but she keeps her head down until she feels confident enough to look up.

When she does, the pack of eight bikers are all staring at her.  One appears to be taking her picture with his iPhone.  “You taking my picture?”  Her tone was accusatory and pissed-off sounding.

“Video actually, for my blog.  That okay?  I caught you exiting the trail like a banshee from hell.  What’s your name?  I’ll tag my blog so you can find it.”

“Sara.  No H.”

“What’s your last name?”

“First name is all you get boy.”  He looks younger than her by a couple of years and while he appears fit, he doesn’t look competitive and she feels confident talking down to him.  “You’re not my speed.”

“No argument Darlin’.  Google running blog and Sara.  You’ll find your video.”

Sara turns back toward her car for her ice chest of beverages.  She’s as thirsty as a banshee from hell.  She gazes down at her Garmin.  6:58.  “Whoa!”

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Dad

17 Sunday Jun 2012

Posted by Ed Mahoney in Storytelling

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Johnny Mahoney

I have very few memories of my father, but they are all good.  Born in September 1930, he’s pictured here in his ’48 senior year football jersey.  He played tailback for St. Ambrose Academy – at the time both a Catholic high school and college but now a liberal arts university in Davenport, Iowa.

I remember him assuring me Santa Clause was real and driving in the back seat of the station wagon when my mom would pick him up from work.  He’d hand us kids chewing gum after sitting in the front passenger seat.  I didn’t know then that he didn’t drive because of the risk of epileptic seizures from his brain tumor.

I remember him cooking stove-top popcorn and watching television with us seven kids when Mom had her bowling night.  I remember him not spanking me for wandering out in front of cars in our residential street.  I can see him wearing a white t-shirt and at one point using a cane even though he was only in his 30s.  And I remember him being nice to me.  Dad passed away in September of 1967 after suffering with his cancer for ten years.  I was five.  This picture is of him in the Army stationed in Germany during the Korean War.  The Veterans checks I received related to his service helped put me through college.

So most of what I know about being a Dad came to me from father figures.  I had a step father from the time I was 10 or 11 years old.  We weren’t close but Hal taught me about responsibility.  How to maintain my car.  We even fished, but we didn’t share many common interests.  He was an electrical engineer and I have him to thank for being raised in the relative comfort of middle class America.

My first father figure from outside my family was my high school sweetheart’s dad, Miguel Lopez.  Miguel also had an engineering background.  He moved his family from Mexico City to the U.S., first to Wisconsin and later to Austin, Texas where I met them.  Miguel has three daughters and treated them with tremendous understanding.  Having five sisters, I could relate to that.  Once, after being caught in compromising circumstances with his daughter, he cleaned his gun collection in front of me.  Miguel was very much like a teacher, constantly coaching.  He’s still healthy living near Houston.

My final father figure is my father-in-law.  Dr. Collier is about as ideal a father and human as is possible in a man.  And he likes college football which is about all I really look for in any guy.  The example he sets helps guide me to be both a good husband as well as father.  At least I try.  Dr. Collier turns 80 this year.  We intend to celebrate with a family trip to the Lost Pines Hyatt along the Colorado River near Austin this July.  Having lost my father way too young, I very much appreciate having a father’s life to celebrate.

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Puerto Aventuras

19 Saturday May 2012

Posted by Ed Mahoney in Storytelling

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Mexico, Yucatan

Say hello to my little friend.  This iguana seems to prefer sitting pool side with us gringos all day.  Not used to the heat and humidity of the Yucatan, I prefer sitting inside the pool all day.  This is day 8 of my vacation in Puerto Aventuras with friends and we leave for the Cancun airport in a few hours.

Day one travel was uneventful until driving out of the rental car agency.  The Policia pulled us over within the first mile for a gratuitous shake down – ostensibly for not wearing seat belts but the steepness of the fine appeared negatively correlated to my ability to negotiate in Spanish.  Mexico 1 – Ed 0.

The drive to Puerto Aventuras was easy enough, especially since I wasn’t driving.  It’s less than an hour south down Carretera 307.  We met with Doug, the proprietor of Brisa Caribe.  Doug’s an interesting Canadian ex-pat who designed this casa and had it built after a 27 year career in the seismic exploration for oil and gas.  He showed us around and then trusted us to ourselves.  Tina – the German chef – cooked us an outrageous Greek dinner and we enjoyed some night time swimming.  Per Amy – “the beer flowed like wine.”

I tried running Sunday morning but the subsequent swelling in my left foot was enough for me to give up on that idea.  There’s been no noticeable healing after a week of abstention.  I suspect I’ll need to take off a good 6 weeks.  Even snorkeling with fins at Akumal stressed my injury.  Really nice beach and quaint pueblo though.  I saw 3 tortugas and a stingray.  I picked up some nice gifts for the girls at the local shops and finished the visit with an ice cream at Lucy’s.

Karen and I have been able to stay in touch with the girls via a mix of texting and Facetime.  For a prorated $10 we can send and receive 50 international messages per month.  I disabled all Tweets from forwarding to my iPhone along with my data feature.  Brisa Caribe has decent wifi and Facetime allows us to video call Brit and Ellie.  We regret missing Ellie’s 4th grade talent show but Brit recorded it and posted it to YouTube for us to watch.  I also have an international calling plan but have used that sparingly since it’s still 59¢ per minute.  Other than Brit, I think the only person who called me was Karl my tenant.  Not sure why because I told him I was in Mexico and ended the call short.  I called my mom on Mother’s Day of course.  Otherwise I mostly used my iPhone to text my friends on this trip.

I have absolutely no idea of where the time has gone.  I mostly chilled on Sunday, exploring Puerto Aventuras by walking around, read “The Mongoliad” on my Kindle, and napped.  Tina cooked us another one of her fantastic dinners – this time it was Malaysian curry.  Monday included deep sea fishing.  Tuesday was Akumal and Dave grilled tenderloin for us.  Wednesday was a big road trip to Chichen Itza with Keith and Susan.  I think I hung out and read mostly on Thursday.  We celebrated Keith’s 50th that night while Karen led us all in Zumba.  Karen and I took the ferry from Playa del Carmen to Cozumel on Friday.

The Mayan ruins were so cool and certainly a highlight.  We drove a northern route through Cancun and then west on the 180 tollway.  There were two tolls, one for about $15 and another for maybe $2.  There was another small fee for parking and then we had to buy two tickets to enter.  One from the state and another from the federal government.  Apparently they don’t trust each other well enough to staff a single ticket master.  We arrived early but the crowd was already fairly thick – mostly Mexican tourists.  Entering was quick however and as soon as we walked inside we were within a few shorts steps of the ruins.

Our Mayan guide Luis explained to us how the pyramid was an architectural calendar.  The 91 steps on each side represent the days per quarter – with a final step on top for 365.  The terraces count their 18 months.  Tourists visit on the Equinox because of how the sun illuminates the snake that adorns the edges top to bottom.  Discovering the acoustics was surprising.  They bake the limestone to better bounce voices and stack them large to small stones in order to carry sound up the walls.  We returned on a southern route via Tulum, stopping off in Valladolid for lunch.  We took advantage of that stop to pick up a nice bottle of Mezcal from a Tequileria.

I’ve only been averaging a few drinks per week ever since Moab in a vain attempt to lose weight – which has been successful.  That was closer to my hourly average down here.  This week, fishing was really drinking.  Swimming was really drinking.  Volleyball?  More drinking.  With that said, I rarely felt drunk.  Either the beer here is hops flavored water, or I’ve been sweating out the alcohol as fast as I’ve been taking it in.  I can’t say the same about the Mezcal.  At Keith’s birthday party, the Mezcal flowed like wine.  We polished off those 750 milliliters in 3 nights.

This trip was mostly planned by Amy and Julie and I can’t thank them enough.  Well, actually I think I can as Karen and I bought each of them a little souvenir salsa bowl in Cozumel.  That will have to do.

I suspect everyone enjoyed themselves equally.  Most were religious in their morning runs.  Amy and Julie were in constant facetime contact with their families.  It occurs to me I might be only one without an iPad.  For the most part we did everything together.  Not everyone golfed.  Karen and I skipped the Cenotes for Cozumel.  I didn’t read as much as I thought I would.  I did very little work – mostly processing email from my iPhone.  This has been a true vacation.  I feel bad that this trip worried my mom but fortunately the Cartels kept missing us.  I can’t say enough about how nice La Brisa Caribe is and highly recommend it.  Click on the link above.  Doug has established the perfect vacation home for large gatherings.  And take advantage of having Tina cook for you.  She cost less than most meals out and her food is wonderful.  We mixed up the venues, eating mostly outside.  Brisa Caribe has four different settings with tables large enough to seat a dozen guests.

I’m about ready to hit publish on this blog and get dressed for my last morning in paradise.  We’ll have a few hours to do one final activity before catching our flights home.  The adjustment back to reality will be hard but I’m looking forward to seeing my kids again.  Jack too.  Adios Puerto Aventuras.

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Zumba Party

06 Sunday May 2012

Posted by Ed Mahoney in Storytelling

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karen mahoney, zumba instructor

Karen dances too fast for me to get a clear picture, but you can see clearly enough that she’s smiling.  I’m trying to think if I’ve ever smiled while working out.  Doubtful.  Zumba is dance fitness and it must be fun because Karen smiles throughout the hour long sessions.

She went to a Zumba Party last night.  This was essentially a 2 hour Zumba workout.  Only Zumba would refer to a 2 hour workout as a party.  Karen lead 6 of the songs.  She gets a real kick out of Zumba – whether she’s teaching the class or participating.  When she practices her routines on the living room hardwood, I sit on the couch and watch.  It’s pretty sexy.  This workout has everything going for it.

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Leaving Texas

01 Thursday Mar 2012

Posted by Ed Mahoney in Storytelling

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ABIA, BCRT, hospital, Monica Augustine, travel, Wildflower

I fly home tomorrow from ABIA at 1:30pm on Southwest flight 365. From a foodie’s perspective – one of the world’s best airports. I’ll plan for lunch after passing through security. I have to pay a small fare increase for delaying my return a week – but hard to complain with a $200 round-trip ticket. That’s like a dime per mile. And my return flight is now direct and no longer transfers in Houston.

I had some fairly straightforward expectations of this trip. High-level – spend quality time with my mom. She’s 78 and has more than her fair share of maladies slowing her down. I thought I could get into her routine. Handle things as they come up without the rushed pressure of the holidays. And of course I could become aware of important financial matters – at the level of logging into her online accounts, etc. – as I will be the executor of her estate. I even thought my brother might benefit. He lives with her but has his own house and no doubt would appreciate a month off.

And my expectations were mostly met initially. It’s almost spooky how we both start our mornings with coffee and the newspapers. We even subscribe to the same stuff – local paper, WSJ and Barrons. Although I cancelled my local paper recently because I didn’t have sufficient time to read it. And our favorite network is CNBC. But it’s like a holiday here because my mom has CNBC on 24×7. Ellie won’t allow that at home. My mom and I have totally different personalities, but oddly similar interests – cooking and gardening included.

I even got to hang with her friends. We meet the Desormeaus and Bill Scott for breakfast each Sunday morning and then attend church. I’m now friends with Dave and Barb on facebook. Dave is an ex-IBMer. Both are mile-a-minute New Yorkers who won’t let me buy a meal. Bill turned me on to the free version of anti virus software Microsoft makes available for download called Essentials. I used it to replace Norton AV on my mom’s computer. Norton was slowing it down more than any actual virus or spyware. The result was fantastic and the bonus is it’s free.

My mom generally went to bed early but sometimes she’d stay up and we’d watch the first season of Downton Abbey which I bought for her on DVD for Christmas. What old lady doesn’t like that show? Otherwise I’d do some work or put on my Marshall headphones and listen to a playlist while cruising facebook or blogging. This is a pic of me blogging this post right now – but is indicative of me any night of the week while here.

I also got to cook for my brother and sister a few nights, as well as my mom’s very good friend Irv. The first time I cooked pork chops, I followed my mom’s recipe. The second time I did it my way. Same thing for a couple of roasts. I like my pork chops style more but my mom taught me a thing or two about cooking a roast. She liked my grilled asparagus and steamed spinach with garlic. And I squeezed in the Austin Half Marathon which turned out much more pleasant than last year’s run of the Austin Full Marathon. I’ve been running almost daily on the Brushy Creek Regional Trail – an amazing path that meanders for nearly seven miles along Brushy Creek and Harry Man’s Road.

I have to thank Karen for holding down the fort in my absence. She drove Ellie to her singing lessons on Tuesdays and Saturdays. Held sleep-overs for Ellie’s friends. Took out the garbage and picked up after the dog. Her thanks is that she is now one step higher up on Jack’s pecking order. We called every night but I couldn’t get Karen to match Ellie’s technical aptitude with communication. Ellie would video call me with facetime from her iPod Touch. I used to be concerned Brittany wouldn’t know what an album was. Ellie won’t know how to call without video.

It was Karen who convinced me I needed to take this trip now. Not a day goes by she doesn’t miss her mother who passed away entirely too young. And now the three weeks have stretched out to four as my mom became ill. I had to call EMS to take her to the ER. After nearly a week she was finally moved from ICU to a regular room and she was able to come back home today. Turns out working a week from the St. David’s Round Rock Medical Center wasn’t much different from working from my mom’s house – or my own basement office for that matter. Maybe Dell contributed but their wifi is totally pervasive throughout that campus and even the acceptable use policy statement works lightening fast. That hospital kicks ass over any airport I know of. Man, I can’t even complain about the AT&T signal for my iPhone.

My mom’s tremendous circle of friends all came through for her. Next door neighbor Beverly didn’t just bake me chocolate chip cookies – she dropped off a bag of over three dozen. I’ll be taking some of those home with me. I continued to meet the Desormeaus and Bill for breakfast. And I haven’t been sitting alone at the hospital. Mom has a wonderful support group.

The exercise wasn’t entirely bad for me. It started badly. As I called each family member outside ER the first day, I had to take longer and longer between calls to maintain composure. I called Karen last and couldn’t speak. My throat locked up and when it finally loosened, all I did was basically sob. I doubt I completed a full sentence the entire call. It was fairly pathetic but Karen understood. What was good was that I started to perform my mom’s routine of getting the mail, processing bills, monitoring online accounts. That will help me later on.

I’m excited to return to my family. No doubt this trip was more of a hardship on them than me. They experienced winter. Karen was a single working parent. I missed Ellie’s first science fair where she came home with top honors, but I’ll be home in time to catch her first public singing performance. It’ll be at this sound studio in Boulder but Ellie takes lessons with Monica Augustine at Wildflower School of Voice – a super voice teacher who is already teaching Ellie to compose her own songs. If Ellie lets me, I’ll post video of her performance on my YouTube account.

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Bridal Wreath

26 Sunday Feb 2012

Posted by Ed Mahoney in Storytelling

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garden

Mom’s Bridal Wreath started to blossom last week.  She has been repeating this fact everyday from her bed in the ICU – stating how pretty it is.  She talks about this annually on phone calls and honestly I never really knew what it was.  She described it to me as a shrub in the back yard so I took a picture this morning to show her how it’s coming along.  I can remember us always having these bushes in our backyard and I know they eventually blossom a great deal more than this to where it’s a seven foot tall wall of white.  I used to think it was a white lilac bush which we always had in Iowa before relocating to Texas.

Mom didn’t get into gardening until she moved to Texas in the summer of 1976.  As she relates in this video interview, sure she grew vegetables when she had a young family because one almost needed to in order to feed a family of seven children back in the day.  But she picked up gardening as a hobby she truly enjoyed in Texas with its super long growing season.  She had a tremendous vegetable garden, as one could with a half acre lot.  I can tell you though she clearly prefers flowers over vegetables.  If you garden, then you know this is like cats vs dogs.  I garden myself – to the extent possible in my eighth of an acre lot.  I love growing tomatoes, peppers and giant pumpkins.  And I enjoy talking about it.  My mom’s face lights up when she mentions a blossoming flower in her yard.  Her description of the beauty of a single flower is like a summation of the grandeur of the entire universe within the bloom of a single plant.  When I think of my mom I think of her surrounded by blossoming flowers.

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Telling Time

15 Wednesday Feb 2012

Posted by Ed Mahoney in Storytelling

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Tags

alzhiemers, cats, clock, horology

I’m sitting in direct view of six clocks.  If I were willing to stand up I could easily take in another three.  I’m including the cable box clock in my first count.  It should be noted here that the VCR sitting under the cable box isn’t showing the time in its liquid crystal display.  The old lady who owns this house never learned to program it.  And I wouldn’t even count home electronics but the cable box is remarkable in that it’s the only clock in view even remotely telling the correct time.  Bravo Time Warner.

The grandfather clock pictured here is just one of my mom’s clocks within view.  Even without my glasses I can see from here it’s two hours behind.  Actually, I don’t think the hands are moving.  And that’s a good thing because several of these clocks sound their alarms all at once in a spasmodic chorus of off-time bells.  Dozens of angels must get their wings by the hour around here.  Why do old people surround themselves with so many clocks?

I bet I didn’t even need to inform you I was at an older person’s home after describing the multitudes of clocks.  You would have figured I was at my mom’s house because everybody knows old people collect clocks.  But does anyone know why?  And should I read anything into the fact so many are telling incorrect time?

I know my mom doesn’t have Alzhiemers.  She’s not only a world class bridge player who could very likely kick Bill Gates’ ass, but she’s constantly doing math in her head.  She counts the collections at church in her head while a second person reconciles it on paper.  So what’s the deal with the clocks being off?  My best guess is she is geared to only looking at a couple of the more accurate time pieces in key strategic locations around the house.  I guess I should just be happy she doesn’t collect cats.

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Travel Day

04 Saturday Feb 2012

Posted by Ed Mahoney in Storytelling

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Tags

Austin, barrons, bloody mary, marshall iphone headphones, retirement, safety net, WSJ

The blizzard Friday didn’t change my day much.  Weather doesn’t impact a basement commute.  But having Ellie home from school all day sort of made it feel like a Saturday. I laundered clothes throughout the day and started packing after dinner.  I don’t travel much anymore but I’m still fairly efficient at it.  Except I couldn’t find my Garmin or my Nikon’s mini USB cable.  I did find my IBM badge.  Could have used that for my Wednesday afternoon meeting at the Diagonal data center.

I lost my focus packing and gave up once I had all the clothes cleaned and folded.  Figuring I had time in the morning to pack, I sat down to listen to a Diana Krall playlist with Karen.  We sat until about 11:30 in front of the fire while the snow continued to fall – Karen sipping her white, me quaffing my red.  600 flights had been cancelled out at DIA but I assumed I’d be good to go in the morning.  The shuttle was scheduled to pick me up at 8am.

I had time to read the Journal in the morning before the van showed up at the curb.  Karen woke up to send me off with a hug and kiss.  She’ll be a single working parent for the next three weeks.  Today even she’ll be driving Ellie to an activity in Boulder at 11am, which she’ll do every Saturday while I am gone.  Ellie’s activity is 2 hours and Karen intends to go to the studio to work on her Zumba routines.  She’s teaching now a 30 minute class every Monday-Wednesday-Friday in Louisville.  She only has a few students to date but expects the class to grow quickly.

The shuttle driver was talkative.  I’d guess him for about 70 years old.  He had no reluctance in asking all about my trip.  Told him I was visiting my mom and he wanted to know her age, then her health.  Guessing this guy isn’t in tune to HIPAA.  The only way to keep from giving up my SSN and bank pin code was to start asking him questions. Found out his brother is 79 and a long haul truck driver for 40 years. Maybe I’m just more in tune to old people right now, but this guy is old and working.  His brother is older and working.  I stopped by McDonalds as the van exchanged me to the bus and a lady easily of retirement age served me at the counter.  Are old people refusing to retire or am I just overly sensitive given my trip to visit my mom?  They must be hedging their bets in case Romney gets elected and takes away their safety net.

I rode on a bus from the Interstate the rest of the way to DIA.  I was surprised to discover this bus had wifi with a great signal.  Nice.  I took full advantage using my iPhone.  My next surprising observation was as I sat down at the Southwest gate.  Absolutely everyone within sight who had a laptop had an Apple MacBook.  Hmm.

Seating on Southwest is a free-for-all and I got the aisle seat in the first row and no one took the middle seat.  I ordered a Bloody Mary and finished my Saturday edition of Barrons.  Then I started a new piece of fiction on my Kindle – Fear Index.  Good read. After reading 15%, I set it aside for a song writers’ genius playlist and listened wearing my Marshall headphones while drinking a second Bloody Mary.  I was relaxed and feeling pretty good by the time the flight landed in Austin (ten minutes late) and my brother picked me up outside the baggage claim area.  The weather here is cool and comfortable.  Karen called me to let me know I should crash my brother-in-law’s Super Bowl party on Sunday.  Sounds like a plan.

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Basketball Jones

27 Friday Jan 2012

Posted by Ed Mahoney in Storytelling

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Sebesta

Who  doesn’t like high school basketball?  Basketball was so big in my hometown as a kid in the ’70s that Cheech and Chong’s Basketball Jones was the top song of the year.  Going to the high school games in small town Iowa was the equivalent of Friday night lights in Texas for football – the gymnasium would be packed and the atmosphere raucous.  Having my older brother play on the team made it that much better.

I’ve gone to a couple of Niwot High School basketball games this season to watch my neighbor Henry play.  The crowd is a bit thinner than my memories as a kid in Iowa, but then that’s usually the case in Colorado as everyone is outdoors performing their own activity.  At this time of year that would be snow boarding or skiing.  Tonight though was special.  The crowd was larger than average because Niwot was playing cross town rival Silver Creek.  These two teams are fairly evenly matched.  Niwot is maybe better on paper however all but two seniors are injured making the teams more on par.  In fact, Silver Creek is visibly taller and they have a couple of football players.

Silver Creek completed half time with a small lead.  And by the end of the third period had a ten point lead.  But the fourth period was Henry time as he scored ten points and led Niwot to a one point victory.  The lead changed like a million times in the fourth.  Well, maybe less considering the final score was 49-48.  But it was back and forth.  It was so exciting all the fans were standing and the student section rushed the floor at the final.  Karen and I sat with Henry’s parents and several neighborhood couples.  We all went together afterward to the Pump House for drinks and dinner.  Great live sports night!

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Oh Dada

25 Wednesday Jan 2012

Posted by Ed Mahoney in Ellie Rose, Storytelling

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Ellie Mahoney

That’s what Ellie says when she doesn’t know what else to say to me.  When she thinks I’m being silly.  When she’s caught on to my joke, which she can do with an uncanny ability.  She said it tonight and Karen called attention to it as sounding so sweet.  I can’t reproduce her cadence in speech without playing audio in this blog, but it’s pretty sweet.  And I love hearing it.  I was a bit down at the end of the day and it made my night.  Ellie says it with a fair amount of frequency and nothing makes me feel better.  It’s the equivalent of her telling me she loves me – which she also does often – but it’s more sentimental.  It’s Ellie saying she feels good being with me.  There’s nothing sweeter.

Brittany did something similar.  She would call me Daddy.  Ellie calls me Dada and Karen Momma, while Brit always said Daddy and Mommy.  But Brit always spelled it Dady with one “d” instead of two in the middle.  I think she was in high school before I called her on the misspelling and she informed me that she was well aware of the grammatical error but she’s been misspelling it for years to purposely continue the cuteness of it.  When did it switch from being cute to me to being cute to her?

This picture to the right is from Ellie’s first day of 1st grade – 3 years ago.  She’s matured so much since I can’t describe.  Her vocabulary is nearly on par with mine.  I can sense the sophistication forming in her.  Has she already reached the point like Brit to where she purposely says things knowing it will make me feel better without me catching on?  Do I think of her as a 1st grader when she is oh so much more schooled?  When do kids start playing their parents?  Doesn’t matter I guess when it’s all with best intentions.

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Big Girl Pants

03 Tuesday Jan 2012

Posted by Ed Mahoney in Storytelling

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evicted, resilience

Happy new year for some, but not for all.  My daughter is facing an eviction from her Denver digs due to the actions of another roommate.  The roomie threw an out-of-control New Years Eve party that resulted in unruly guests vandalizing the lobby.  You expect these things in college.

This is not how you want to start the new year.  Facing eviction, loss of your security deposit if not fines and even potential police charges.  Poor Brit came home shortly before 2am from her restaurant job to discover the party and did what she could to contain the situation.  But then one of her other roommates wasn’t even there and is equally a victim.  Regardless of degrees of culpable wrong-doing, four girls stand to start the new year off on a bad foot.

Brit is overwhelmed emotionally.  She’s never faced anything like this before.  And how is she handling it?  She put on her big girl pants.  She met with Detectives today to serve as a witness to the party crashers.  After being told in the morning by apartment management to expect eviction, she went out looking for a new apartment.  And before the day was over, she worked with the management team on another plan to only have the party-thrower evicted and allowing the three others to stay.  In 24 hours, she has turned this thing around.  She didn’t take it sitting down.  It’s not over yet but Brit has demonstrated she can take control of events seemingly out of control.  Dad’s impressed.

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A Runner’s Year in Review

31 Saturday Dec 2011

Posted by Ed Mahoney in Storytelling

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Amazon Kindle, Austin Marathon, covered calls, Moab Half Marathon, Zilker

Zilker Tree2011 wasn’t really about me.  I had an 18 month old nephew survive a heart transplant.    He’s now 24 months old and I suspect Little L will dominate the next decade, and that’s okay.  My mom is getting on in years with more than her fair share of ailments, but she maintained a fairly steady pace and I was able to visit her during the Austin Marathon and on Mother’s Day as well as Christmas – which is more than usual.

I had some personal achievements though.  Top of the list was completing the 500 mile Colorado Trail with my buddy Rob, and it wasn’t even on my calendar at the start of the year.  Second was finally trading options.  I consider investing/trading as much a hobby as anything because I enjoy it and trading options is something I’ve read numerous books on but had never done until 2011.  I’m not a day trader by any means – I might do several trades per month – but I spend a great deal of time reading financial news and books.  I maintained decent fitness in 2011 which was a goal.  I ate healthy foods.  I would argue I didn’t accomplish my exact goals on running.  I wanted to increase my speed but instead opted for hiking.  I also gained a few pounds after having lost weight in each of the preceding four years.  Lastly, I didn’t start on another 2011 goal of writing a book.  Most of my new year’s resolutions will be to further unfinished 2011 objectives.

I want to spend more time with my mom so I’m considering living and working from her home in Round Rock for a month or so.  She can make do on her own but it’s not wise and my brother lives with her now.  Of course Steve has his own house and maybe he’d appreciate me giving him some time to live there.  Ideally, I’ll do this in the late winter / early spring.  I just returned from Austin yesterday – the picture above is of Karen and me checking out the Tree at Zilker Park.

As for running, my plans are to run a series of half marathons – mostly trail runs in the mountains.  I’ll start with Moab in March.  I still need to correct my plantar fasciitus, but I don’t expect that to limit me too much.  And I’m going to make a concerted effort to trim down my abdomen.  Enough is enough.  I’m also going to move our elliptical into my office to work out on during conference calls.  The idea being this will replace the snacking I do currently.  I might do that tomorrow.

I’m going to increase my trading focus on options.  All I actually did last year was sell covered calls which is easily the least risky type of options trades.  The only risk is that you can’t sell a stock that is losing value until the expiration date.  And you won’t likely recognize gains over the strike price.  This isn’t important to me because I generally sell stocks after 10% gains and I set strike prices at 10% for my covered calls.  This has worked out well for me as I handily beat the market in 2011.  For 2012 I intend to begin buying options rather than simply selling them.

My last big goal will be to write a book.  At least start a book.  Blogging keeps my writing skills exercised but I haven’t written much fiction lately and would like to tell a story.  This is going to take discipline.  I could be wrong but I suspect I’ll get a great deal of satisfaction from writing a book.  I don’t care about the publishing aspect – I’m not trying to become a novelist.  I’ll just upload it to Amazon.  Related to writing is reading and I’ve already downloaded a series of books to my Kindle to keep me busy in that area.

I am happy with 2011 and feel pretty good about 2012.  At least I have plans.  One of my neighbors told me last night he intends to make quarterly resolutions for 2012 thinking they will be more obtainable.  Interesting concept.  I’m going to ask my friends and neighbors at the NYE party tonight what their goals are.  I usually find I’m not very unique and expect to hear numerous goals on health and fitness.  I’m curious as to what people’s work and career goals are.  I need to put some focus on that as well.  I had a really cool project in 2011 and have an idea of what my primary task will be for 2012, but it’s not well defined yet.  I like to manage my own career versus being tasked and I need to put some focus in that area.

For all my plans, 2012 is still unknown and whose to say what will happen.  I actually like the prospect of the unknown.  It’s exciting.

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Leave the Light On

29 Thursday Dec 2011

Posted by Ed Mahoney in Storytelling

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Jena Mahoney, Midland Railroad Hotel, Paper Moon, Pilsner Urquell, Raton Pass, Wilson Kansas

Returning from Austin to Longmont for the holidays, we are retracing our route through Kansas.  We intended to stop in Dallas to visit the Gillis family which already placed us on I35.  Otherwise we normally take Hwy 183 to Amarillo for the path through Raton Pass.  The reason for revisiting the blizzard drive is that we want to stay another night at our lodging discovery – the Midland Railroad Hotel.  It’s just so comfy.  For the same price as the rotting Holiday Inn on I40 in Amarillo, we get cozy atmosphere, charming and caring staff to chat with, and amenities that would make the everyday business traveler salivate.

Karen made the reservations on the road after departing Dallas so we would have a good arrival estimate.  The staff remembered us – no doubt because we share surnames with the proprietors Heddy and Thomas Mahoney.  After a 13 hour 700 mile day, we reached Wilson, Kansas and were given the keys to our old room – 313.  And it’s a real key to an antique 5 panel oak door.  No key cards at the hotel used to film The Paper Moon.  After dropping off our bags in the room, I descended into the hotel basement to the Sample Room Tavern.  There, Jena Mahoney – pictured – served me a Pilsner Urquell and conversation.

I now know the town of Wilson has approximately 900 residents, Thomas is an airline pilot, Jena’s brother is in the Air Force while another brother builds planes at a nearby shop.  Jena talked about the hotel too.  Her dad purchased it roughly a year earlier at auction and they are steadily establishing a presence among Kansas travelers.  It goes without saying that I highly recommend the joint.  It offers all the key business amenities from pervasive wifi to an early complimentary breakfast and late night tavern, while also capturing the ambiance of a B&B for a weekend destination.  We returned.

There’s something about this place that makes you feel comfortable.  Guests talk to one another like students in a dorm.  The lobby living room, the dining room tables, and the tavern are designed to bring strangers together.  Jena asked us about our holidays and shared her plans with us.  She’s excited for the murder mystery party the hotel is planning for New Years.  It will be a 1920’s gangsta costume party.  Sounds worth staying for.  But we have to get Brit back to Denver for work and we have our own neighborhood party to attend.  It’s been a nice vacation.  Hope all my readers have enjoyed the holidays as much as I have.

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The Blizzard Drive to Austin

19 Monday Dec 2011

Posted by Ed Mahoney in Storytelling

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I35, I70, Midland Railroad Hotel, Wilson Kansas

Gorgeous weekend, but we left for Austin on Monday to accommodate Brit’s work schedule.  After learning of the pending weather, we delayed our morning launch to buy new all-weather tires for the van.  Hard to say that was not a good call, but it’s possible we might have been able to stay in front of the weather system had we departed Denver two hours earlier.  We attempted to flank the eastern side of the blizzard by driving I70 through Kansas, but had to pull off the highway 50 miles short of I35 in the charming farm town of Wilson, Kansas.  This was after seeing a good twenty or so cars in the ditch, many whom had only recently passed us at higher speeds.  I slid after passing a car and clipped a mile marker sign with the passenger-side mirror.  This was when I finally acquiesced to Karen’s plea to pull over.

And so we are now ensconced in the historic Midland Railroad Hotel in Wilson, Kansas.  The proprietor is Heddy Mahoney – no relation.  Heddy married a Mahoney but is of German descent – her name shortened from Hedwig like the owl in Harry Potter.  Upon shaking her hand as she told me her name, I had a flashback to The Shining and imagined I might go insane while riding the storm out.  I was still tense from the white-knuckled drive.  Heddy went on to say the kitchen and tavern would be closed due to the blizzard.

Being the first to abandon the highway we got to choose our room.  It’s turn of the century with more oak than the lost woods of Killarney.  Among the oaken furniture and paneled walls are two rooms separated by an antique bathroom.  Ellie immediately set out to hunt for ghosts where upon she discovered the Sample Room Tavern in the hotel basement.  The tavern is so named from salesmen riding the Union Pacific 100 years ago whom would display their wares in the basement.  Upon this discovery, Heddy apprised us that the cook just arrived and the hostess was soon to follow.  We could dine on the tavern menu at 5pm.

The Sample Room ministered satisfying pub food and nerve calming libations.  And get this, free wifi throughout.  I’ve experienced many a business hotel that could take lessons from this establishment.  I caught up on email and am now studying road conditions and weather forecasts.  Looks like a couple of causalities from a rollover an hour behind us on I70.  And the roads should be open tomorrow but the storm won’t really clear until mid day.  We can likely make it to Austin tomorrow, but there’s no guarantee.  We’ll adapt.  I can do some work in the morning.  Hopefully the kitchen will be open for breakfast.

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2011 Holidays

16 Friday Dec 2011

Posted by Ed Mahoney in Storytelling

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Tags

Christmas, party, Zumba

Wow, am I ever ready for the holidays.  Put a fork in me because I am done for the year.  I just finished for the day – it was supposed to be a half day but I couldn’t get it all done in 4 hours.  Now that I’m officially on holiday, I can sit back and get all introspective on 2011 and think forward to celebrating the holidays with family.

I’m sipping a Heinenken Light and watching Jim Cramer after having squeezed in a short run.  Soon, I’ll go buy some fondue dipping food for tonight’s Christmas party.  The beauty of my neighborhood parties is there’s no risk of drinking and driving, the women are all hotties and the guys can out-cook Emeril.

Tomorrow, I might put up some lights on the front porch.  I’ve never been this late before but work has been unreal.  You’d think a guy who works from his basement could get more done around the house.  I have a little more shopping to do tomorrow.  Karen and I will have to coordinate schedules because we’re down to one car.  Karen was rear-ended the other day so the Accord is in the shop.  The lady who hit her was in her 80s; Karen felt sorry for her because the lady was afraid she would lose her license.

I need to finish up mailing out Christmas cards too.  Karen got about half of them done.  She’s busier now because she started a new HR job last week.  And she’s dancing Zumba every day.  There should be plenty of time this weekend to get everything done.  We’ll send the dog to the ranch and line up a house sitter.  Monday we’ll head out, picking up Brit in Denver along the way, to Austin for the holidays.  Party on!

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Looking Back on the Colorado Trail

16 Sunday Oct 2011

Posted by Ed Mahoney in Storytelling

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Collegiates, Colorado Trail, Mesa State, Mt. Elbert, Mt. Massive, pocket shots, Robert Graham, Round Rock, Starbucks VIA Ready Brew, Tumbleweed

High PointA full two weeks after completing the Colorado Trail, I’m ready to look back.  It’s late Sunday afternoon and I have a rack of lamb butterflied and marinating.  I’m having my ass handed to me in fantasy football by Henry, a high school senior.  And the Cowboys and Patriots are playing a close game in the 4th quarter tied at 13 each.  Tumbleweed told me I’d go through some emotions after we finished the trail.  I guess he’s right.

Tumbleweed is none other than Robert Graham – a friend since high school where we ran Track and Cross Country together at Round Rock High School.  He lives now in Grand Junction, Colorado running the recreational sports program at Mesa State.  He was going to hike the CT this year with or without me, but he invited me to join him on the initial segments which start near Denver.  This was early spring, April 2nd to be exact.  The foothills of the Front Range presented us with ideal running conditions through deep, shady forests over soft dirt trails padded with pine needles.  We estimate we ran as much as half the distance on the first CT section of 5 segments.  The CT is organized in 5 sections of 5 segments each, except for the last section having 8 segments.  The 2nd section was mostly under snow which limited our running opportunities.  The 3rd section was the Sawatch Range which contains the Collegiate Peaks – so named because many of the peaks are named after universities like Princeton, Yale and Harvard – and was awesome for trail running.

I love trail running and those first outings were so epic that I kept showing up for subsequent hikes.  I quickly changed my commitment from the first two hikes to joining Rob until we reached Copper.  I didn’t think I could afford the time to continue beyond that, but then Karen told me to keep going.  What a good wife.  She knew I was enjoying myself.  And of course, by the time I climbed the highest and second highest peaks in Colorado in the middle of the Collegiates – I was committed to finishing the whole enchilada.  Completion required 6 months – from April 2nd to October 2nd.  We hooked up on 13 weekends consisting of 25 days of hiking; we covered 486 miles and counting the three 14,000 foot peaks we climbed, nearly 100,000 vertical feet.

Previous to this summer, I was not a very experienced hiker or camper.  Nothing like a little repetition.  I bought a one man tent and can now set it up (and dismantle it) in the dark in a few minutes.  I first went snow shoeing just this year in January.  I now consider myself highly experienced at the sport.  I even took my family snow shoeing in Breckenridge over spring break.  Related to this I have become comfortable with trekking poles.  With the right snow, I’ve learned the poles are sufficient without the snow shoes.  But in deep snow, the poles are absolutely required for safety.  They help to extract yourself after post-holing – which is when a leg sinks deeply into weak snow.  This is common around buried trees.  Still, I got to the point that I prefer to not carry trekking poles on long hikes.  While they increase your balance and strength on snow, they become an annoying burden on long hikes.  It helps though that all new models are now collapsible for portability.  I am confident reading trail signs including trail blazes and can skip across streams without breaking stride.  I even performed a yogi bear by hitching a ride and changed my shirt at the table of a restaurant – I’ve become true trail trash.

The one man tent, snow shoes and trekking poles were all new gear for me.  I also bought a new sleeping bag near the end of the trail as the temperature was dropping and I wanted better light weight gear for back packing.  Speaking of which, I bought a kick-ass back pack.  That thing is like an RV if not a house.  We back packed enough that I became very familiar with all its pockets and features.  Probably my favorite gear was my head lamp which my brother-in-law gave me last Christmas.  Those things are handy.  I can’t say I liked any of the trail food.  Even the pocket shots – while extremely convenient booze – taste pretty bad.  I think the only trail/camping food that I was seriously pleased with would be the Starbucks Via Ready coffee.  Those are a keeper.

I did discover some good eateries.  I’m not going to re-list them all, I did a good job of reviewing and linking them in my blogs.  A typical hike would burn several thousand calories, so food tended to taste pretty damned good at the end of the day.  Still, some restaurants really were superb.  As far as that goes, I enjoyed learning all the back roads and less-traveled highways.  I discovered Colorado with a view from the top and it was a kick.  Immediately after completing the trail I recall thinking just how much I love Colorado.  Actually, and admittedly I might have been a bit manic if not delusional, but I was totally in love with my life at the end.  Being able to do something like this is special and I’m extremely fortunate to have the health and the family support to be able to have done it.  I know that.  Life is good.  With that said, the picture above is me at both a low point and a high point.  Not counting some of the peaks we climbed, this is the highest official point of the CT – I believe at 13,200 feet.  But I was suffering from dehydration and subsequent altitude sickness.  I am laying down in this pic because I seriously could not stand anymore.  There were many moments like that.  This was not easy but I remember the challenges as much as the views, as much as the discovery of new towns and restaurants.  I’m not coming close to properly describing what an experience this was, but oh well.  The Cowboys just lost and it’s time to sear that lamb and roast a Sunday dinner.

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Breakfast

15 Saturday Oct 2011

Posted by Ed Mahoney in Storytelling

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bacon, buster bars, DQ, eggs, toast, velveeta

Man, I woke up hungry this morning.  Ever since completing the Colorado Trail, I’ve been eating non-stop.  Although to let you know if you read my DQ Buster Bar confession on Facebook the other day, I did not eat all 2760 calories in that box.  Ellie and her girl friends discovered them in the freezer before I could finish them off.

My typical bagel just wasn’t going to cut it this morning.  Ellie had a sleep-over last night so Karen and I had a date night and went to Tortugas – my favorite restaurant in town.  We came home to an empty house, Jack notwithstanding, and I played a genius playlist triggered with Nora Jones.  It was a big night and so I woke up hungrier than usual.  I thought about walking over to the Two Dog Diner.  Paul invented breakfast.  But part of the satisfaction in food for me comes from making it myself.

I gathered my ingredients.  Four eggs.  Bacon.  Toast.  Mrs. Renfro’s Green Chili – yum.  But where’s the cheese?  I really felt like cheese.  All I could find was Velveeta.  Well why not?  After the hamburger, I would say Velveeta and microwaveable popcorn are America’s greatest contributions to world gastronomy.

I cooked the four slices of bacon first.  When they were done I poured the grease onto Jack’s dog food.  If I’m hungry, he must be too.  Then I broke the four eggs into the same pan as the bacon.  I couldn’t find a spatula so I used a wooden spoon and scrambled them.  Salt, pepper, green chili and last to go into the pan a little Velveeta.  I buttered the toast and topped off my coffee.  I’d already finished the paper so there were no distractions between me and my food.  Damn that was a satisfying breakfast.

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Return to Molas Pass

25 Sunday Sep 2011

Posted by Ed Mahoney in Storytelling

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Colorado Trail, CT, million dollar highway, Molas Pass

I’ll be returning to Molas Pass off the Million Dollar Hwy Thursday to complete the 70 miles remaining of the Colorado Trail.  From the day I started hiking outside Denver with Tumbleweed to the day I exit the trail into Durango will be a full six months.  About the only regret I have is that I never brought along a nicer camera than my 2.5 MP iPhone 3Gs.  The pics are okay though and I’ll publish a photo album from my blog’s CT Cronica series when it’s all done.

I’m surprised at how massive an event this little hike has become.  I’ve gained years of hiking and camping experience; along with handy snow shoeing skills.  No doubt I own considerably more gear.  I feel very fortunate for the family support.  Karen is good to me.  A little bummed I have to travel to Miami the next day – that’ll curb my celebrations previously planned for Durango.  Sucks when work gets in the way of my personal life.  Still, it’s been epic.  Can’t wait to wind this puppy up next weekend.

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Ed Mahoney is a runner, author, and cybersecurity product director who writes about endurance, travel, and life’s small ironies. His blog A Runner’s Story captures the rhythm between motion, meaning, and memory.

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