I had off Friday but I earmarked that day as they day we would do some server upgrades at work. I envisioned it being a very simple upgrade as I had done it many times before. I had no worries about getting done before the 5k that evening. Of course, nothing went as planned. I had issue after issue with the upgrade and after being there 7 hours I had to bag it and roll back because I had to get home to get ready for the race. It was frustrating as hell. The initial fix for the issue would have been to copy some new drivers off the floppy. I discovered that FDD’s are no longer standard equipment on Dell servers as my brand new box didn’t have one. I tried using a USB drive to get around it which worked initially but did not work when I tried running the Win 2k upgrade routine. So I took off and then had to run to the grocery store and get home. I pulled in about a half hour before we had to leave. Then as I get out of the car I feel pain in my right knee. I am like, WTF!, where did this come from? My knee has been fine for months and then the day of the race, for no apparent reason, it starts to hurt? Luckily it subsided before the starting gun.
We got to the course about an hour before race time and were immediately taken back by how many people were there. It was a BIG event. As we walked towards the registration desk, we passed an old man, 70’s or 80’s old that wore the number 1, we wished we knew his history. We got signed in and we both were getting more excited about the race. We walked up to the bridge to look around. We walked a bit of it to get loose, as we did we saw dozens of runners running already to get loose. The bridge looked a bit formidable with a long hill towards the middle. We don’t run inclines, so seeing this put more doubt in Ali’s mind. I pounded a Red Bull to try to shake some of the cobwebs from being up late the night before, even so, I found myself yawning regularly.
As start time neared, the horde of runners moved towards the start line. One thing I noticed immediately that overall, the running crowd is a much healthier looking bunch than the volleyball crowd. I’d say a good 80% of the people were lean. There was a wide mix of people from 10 years old to 80, people pushing strollers and even one guy carrying his kid in a backpack. We made no effort to move up in the crowd and were ok with starting near the back of the back. The gun sounded and we were off, sort of. At first people were almost running in place until things started to move. The first quarter mile or so was very tight as you tried to just not bump into other people that were shoulder to shoulder with you. Soon it opened up a bit and we were able to find some free lanes to run in. It was very cool to be in our first race, at night, on a bridge. I found that running inside this mass of humanity was very motivational and gave us extra energy. Ali was running a very good pace, much better than I expected. It was good enough that we passed many more people than passed us. At the 1 mile mark, Ali was going strong as we passed the time keeper. Our time was surprisingly fast, faster than what we would run on a flat track. We hit the hill and Ali plowed right through it, hardly losing a stride. We were amazed when we saw the race leaders, on the way back already at the 10 minute mark. (winner ran it in 15:55) They were hauling major ass.
We hit the halfway turnaround and Ali was still doing well. We had found our stride and were running more or less with a group of people. We hit the other side of the hill and Ali was winded but still managed to get through it without slowing down much at all. Before we knew it, we were within a half mile of finishing. I could tell Ali knew she could do it, do what she told me the week prior what she thought she had no shot of doing. I was very proud of her. As we got closer, our pace actually quickened. Towards the end we had enough breath to discuss the woman who was running while talking on her cell phone. The last couple hundred yards were downhill to the finish which further helped our pace. Even though we were squarely in the middle of the back, there were tons of people surrounding the finish line, cheering everyone on, it was fantastic. Ali said she almost felt like crying as she came to the line. She did it, and pretty easily at that. Our time was 34:21, a strong pace for her. My pre-race estimates put our time at 37 minutes or more so I was really impressed. On top of that, our actual time was probably in the 33’s because the time started when the gun sounded, yet it took quite awhile till we actually crossed the start line. After grabbing some water and some bagels they provided, we went back to cheer on the last few people that crossed the line, the last of which crossed at the 56 minute mark.
They had an after race party with music and where they hand out awards for 1st through 3rd in each age class. We hung out for a bit and then headed home, thrilled with the entire experience. Ali was lukewarm about running in a race before Friday. After Friday, she was on the local track club websites, looking for what race we will run next. It is really cool to see her into it like that. She signed us up for a run on Thanksgiving day, a 4 miler! It will be a challenge but I am confident she can do it. Running is a different kind of thrill for me than volleyball is. Instead of cause and effect battle with other players, running is more a mental battle with yourself. It’s a different kind of challenge that influences other aspects of your life. I think it builds a sort of confidence in yourself because the mental toughness running encourages, only helps other aspects of your life. I only hope my twice repaired knee doesn’t let me down. So far it has been a non-issue. (besides the Friday glitch)
The weekend was a pretty relaxed one in most ways. We are entering dry season so the grass isn’t growing very fast, so we didn’t have to do the regular mowing routine. However the extra time was used by Ali to mow the back 2 acres for hopefully the last time in 4 months. While she did that, I spent a good 3 hours inside cleaning the floor surfaces through out most of the house with the steam cleaner. Everytime I do it I say to myself I need to do this once a month as I look at the black water I pour out of the waste tank, it is that nasty. We probably spent about 4 hours on Saturday, and another 2 or 3 on Sunday doing house stuff but the rest was basically free time.
I did some hardcore WoW’ing. I started a new character, a rogue. A rougue is unique because he can disappear and sneak around enemies undetected. I wanted to make this character for no other purpose but to go into enemy territory and make life miserable for horde players. I look forward to sneaking up on unsuspecting victims and taking them out before they even know what happened. I found a new way to expedite the process of leveling up characters, use 2 accounts. No, I am not paying for 2 wow accounts. I am using Charlie’s, when he isn’t using it. So I have 2 WoW windows on my screen at once. On one screen I have one of Charlie’s higher level characters on it, on the other I have my lower level character, who is set to just follow Charlie around. So I run Charlie’s character through the quests, killing things in a fraction of the time it would take me to do it with my low level character. It allows me to complete stuff that otherwise would require me finding others to help me, solo. Exciting stuff huh?
I am ashamed to admit I wasted 4 hours of my life watching Cat 7. I should know by now that if a natural disaster movie is made for TV, it sucks. Big screen versions of these movies I enjoy but every made for TV version of this scenario has consistently been terrible. CAT 7 was filled with actors that mostly made their fame earlier in their careers. Randy Quaid was in this. The years have not been kind to Randy, he is a big, fat, old looking, ugly man nowadays. A far stretch from the Christmas Vacation Randy I loved. Shannon Dougherty was in it also, damn what a mess. I hadn’t seen her in awhile. She now has nasty old lady face, it was scary. The movie was filled with bad acting, ridiculous story lines and improbable outcomes. I felt bad for waking ALi as I laughed out loud at one of the final scenes. Old Randy and nasty Shannon who were teamed up as storm chasers during the movie, went back to the bar where Shannon worked. Randy sees a picture of Shannon pouring drinks in a guys mouth and say’s something like, “Ah I didn’t know you had a bit of redneck in ya…” Then Shannon says, “It sounds like you are hitting on me..” Then Old Randy says “Well, do I have a chance?” and Nasty Shannon says “No, (pause), if you don’t stop pussyfooting around you don’t..” Then they enagage in an incredibly disturbing open mouth kiss. It was f’in incredibly moronic. I kept it on the Tivo so I could show Ali the scene.
I finally got around to ripping the AFHV scene I sent in at least 15 years ago. The quality is shit. I couldn’t dub directly off the Tivo so I had to shoot the TV screen which causes the top half to appear greenish. Then the quality is further distorted by the compression to get it on the web. Still, you can get the gist. Check it out here.