Archives December 2012

The butcher, the baker, the candlestick maker, my superpower

After this weekend I will be able to claim myself all three titles above at one point or another in my life.  There were my Weis Market glory days as a meat cutter during my rudderless time as a young adult, the candlestick I made on a lathe in wood shop class in high school, and now a baker after I try to bake my first ever cake from scratch this weekend.

This isn’t just any cake I am going to be trying to make, it is THE chocolate cake.  I will be making both the cake and frosting from scratch following the recipe my mom has followed for decades.  I hope the end result is at least edible.

I am not sure if I ever talked about my super power on the blog before, I may have, but if I did it was a long time ago so it might be new to you.  I turn off street lights.

I have this weird effect on street lights where they turn off when I pass by them.  Now of course this doesn’t happen all the time, if it did I would probably be turned into some sort of military weapon by the government.  However it happens regularly enough that I can’t believe it is a coincidence.

I first started taking notice of this super power in my early 30’s.  I would be driving down the road and notice lights going out even though it was still pitch dark out or I would be walking down a sidewalk and all of a sudden be cast into darkness.

Now if I could only figure out a way to harness my power to for the greater good.  That is always the dilemma isn’t it?

 

Last of the magic numbers

Today is the last of the magic dates we will see for quite awhile, 12-12-12.  We have had a “magic” day for the last 12 years because we are at the beginning of the 21st century.  The next time this rolls around I will have been dust in the wind for many, many decades already.

If doomsayers are correct, I could be dust in the wind much sooner since 12-21-2012 is less than 10 days away.  I have read up a bunch on the various predictions.  You almost exclusively hear 12/21/12 associated with the Mayan calendar expiring on that date and how that signifies some sort of catastrophic end to the world as we know it.

The Mayans supposedly were pretty good at predicting future events so the ending of their calendar has been interpreted as some sort of impending catastrophe.  I have read about Planet X (Nirubu) returning from it’s enormous elongated orbit and how it’s gravitational forces would literally tear the Earth’s delicate balance of life apart. Well if it was coming we would have started seeing it in the sky years ago so I think we are safe at least for now from that particular doomsday scenario.

Another astronomical angle is that day just happens to be one where there is a rare alignment of the planets with the sun that could somehow create some sort of gravitational disaster.

What I do find interesting is the 12/21/12 date is not significant in just the Mayan calendar, it also is an end point for the Chinese “I ching” calendar.  It has had a red circle on the date from the likes of many prophets including, Nostradamus, Merlin, ancient Chinese oracles as well as more Christian main stream sources like the Book of Revelations.

The good news is if you believe in this theory or think it is a bunch of bullshit, we will find out one way or the other very, very soon.

 

 

Gathering goods, Smiling Andy, Empty doorstep

So my plan is to try to make my own birthday cake this year, specifically the famous chocolate cake recipe that came from my mom.  I have never tried to make a cake from scratch before so this should be an interesting experiment.  I figure the old saying applies with a twist “Give a man a chocolate cake and he enjoys it for a few days.  Teach a man how to make chocolate cake and he eats it forever (and turns into a fat ass)”

Hey I won the first round of my fantasy football playoffs despite having Bryce Brown put up a big goose egg on the scoreboard, I was lucky to win since I only scored 85 points.  If I can manage to secure two more wins I could take a home a fat cash prize.  I made it to the finals once before and came up short.

I had a funny dream last night among the various thunderstorms that woke me up multiple times.

I was out running in the Gouglersville area, where I grew up.  For some reason I was pushing a walker with wheels as I was running.  I was trudging up the hill where Jeremy Nelson (a childhood friend) used to live where I spot Andy Reid sitting by the side of the road in a fold up lawn chair.

This wasn’t odd to me because I always saw Andy sitting by the side of the road when I ran but he never said anything to me, instead he would just sit there staring blankly ahead with a scowl on his face, kind of the same look he has at most press conferences.

Well I almost tripped over my walker when this time as I passed Andy he had a big smile on his face and said “Hey, how are you doing? Great game on Sunday huh?” referring to the Eagles big comeback win against the Buccaneers.  I barely was able to spit out “Yea man, way to go” as I kept on running.  End of dream.

When I got home last night I glanced at the front doorstep and saw it was empty.  The sight gave me a moment of pause.  You see, since moving to Florida, December typically means that almost every day there would be a package waiting on the doorstep, either a gift sent to Ali or myself or something we bought for someone else.

I don’t know what it is about seeing a box in front of the door but it definitely injects a little shot of joy juice into the brain.  Well here  I am a mere two weeks from Christmas and the doorstep has remained barren.   This is not something unexpected, I just didn’t really think about it until last night. Just another thing that punctuates just how different life is nowadays.

 

Costco cool, DL day, wake up for win

Saturday morning I was up at 3:45 to head out to time another race.  This is one of my favorite races to time since it is put on by the same people that organize a local PGA tour event.  Since they organize events for a living, working with them for this race is normally very easy. There were a few glitches I had to figure out at the finish line but for the most part things went well.

So during the day Saturday I worked on getting a number of things cleaned up that were bothering me. By the time 5 o’clock came around I had made a good dent in things.

My Costco card showed up in the mail during the day so I thought I would have a rocking Saturday night checking out our local store, I never had been in it.  I asked Ali if she wanted to come along, she never was there before either.

Although when you first walk into the store you get a very similar feel as Sam’s Club with a big warehouse environment, it doesn’t take long until you notice the differences.  The first thing I noticed was the employees seemed really friendly and upbeat.  Perhaps that is because unlike Sam’s Club, Costco employees actually get paid a decent wage (average of $17 an hour) and are provided with health insurance.

As we walked the aisles I noticed that Costco seemed to have a much larger variety of items.  Their food selection was most impressive, as it included a ton of healthy organic choices.

When we got to the toys section my eyes lit up when I spotted a Green Machine.  Growing up the Green Machine was my favorite riding toy.  It’s rear steering configuration while touchy, also allowed you to do fantastic power slides, something any young boy appreciates.

I sat on the display model, skeptical if it would hold a full size adult.  It actually felt pretty comfortable holding my weight.  They have improved the Green Machine in the 35 years since I had mine.  It now sports a rubber front tire, a caliper brake, more precise steering linkage and a transmission style front wheel.  All of this awesomeness only costs $69.99!

There was a strong urge for me to make a totally impractical decision and pick up a Green Machine.  My logical self won out however as I realized that other than a couple joyrides up and down the driveway, what exactly do I need a Green Machine for at nearly 45 years of age? Of course I don’t need it, not even a little bit.  Still, if my logical side is asleep at the wheel for a few minutes the 10 year old that still lives in my head might swoop in and snatch one up.  🙂

I picked up a few items that I actually did need while I was there.  I left the store quite happy I finally decided to ditch Sam’s.

I had the dogs on Sunday.  One of the first things I did was give them both a bath, they stunk.  Trying to wash a dog in the tub yourself is a logistical challenge.  I emerged from the process with thoroughly wet and fur covered clothing.

I knocked around the house doing various things until the Eagles game started.  I was very tired and wound up falling asleep through almost three quarters of the game.

When I awoke the team was in the middle of their typical free fall, allowing the Buccaneers to score 21 unanswered points after the Eagles had a 10-0 lead.   I was not surprised and was quite confident the Eagles were on their way to their 9th loss in a row.  I was quite surprised to witness what came next, a comeback.

I can not tell you the last time the Eagles won a game with literally a last second TD pass.  I am not sure if McNabb ever did it, I don’t think Vick has either.  Leave it to Nick Foles to deliver, hitting Maclin cleanly in the side of the end zone as time expired.  For the first time in two months plus I raised both fists triumphantly as I sat on the couch.  Finally, a reason to cheer.

Foles had a monster day stat-wise, throwing for nearly 400 yards with a couple td’s.  It was really cool to see him deliver and deliver in the clutch, something that Eagle fans value above all else.  However I am also realist.  I saw the sure, game killing interception he threw that was luckily dropped by a stone handed Buccaneers defensive back.  Foles has a lot to learn and it is far too early to hang our hat on his 6’6″ high head.

I remember a very similar scenario years ago when Bobby Hoying dazzled at the end of one season, was appointed as the franchise QB and then drove off a cliff the next season.  Of course I hope Foles is the real deal.  It would be great to have a young QB to build a franchise around.  The one thing that is pretty much assured is Mike Vick’s stint in Philly will be coming to an end.  He has done noting to earn the HUGE contract that was laid at his feet last year.

Andy celebrated the TD pass like he won the Super Bowl.  I am not sure if I ever saw that much emotion out of him, ever.  Is there a chance that Andy could still save his job?  I really don’t see how after the edict Jeff Lurie delivered before this season.  The only out I can see is placing the blame on the number of injuries on the offensive side of the ball.

For sure, all those injuries, particularly the offensive line injuries crippled the team, however, the defense, which remained healthy all year has been mostly dreadful.  The big name free agents that were signed for defense have been major disappointments and that falls on Andy’s shoulders as well as putting Juan Castillo in charge of the defense last season.

I think if somehow the team would once again end the season by winning out it COULD save the Fat Man’s neck.

I need to really get my Xmas shopping done this week.  I don’t like the uncertainty of it all.  I will be hitting various online establishments quite heavily to accomplish the task.

Today I will be renewing my drivers license, something I have not had to do in person since moving to Florida.  The first time I had to do it I could just click a couple buttons online.  Well with new security measures that are now in effect the process is much more invasive and inconvenient.

You used to be able to just walk in with your old drivers license, flash it and get a new one after passing the vision test.  Now you are required to bring with you the following items:

Birth certificate
Proof of SS number
Two utility bills or documents that verify your residency in the past 60 days

I am lucky I even knew where my birth certificate was, not to mention my original SS card.

In a way it will be sad to get a new license with an updated head shot.  I sort of liked having my license garnishing a picture from 12 years ago….

 

 

Late

So I went right from work to South Street for our annual running club Xmas party.  I needed to get there early to serve as the check in desk for the event since people paid ahead of time.  My duties included checking people off our master list and handing them a wristband as well as two tickets for free drinks.  I discovered that being the guy that holds the free drink tickets is a surefire way to become very popular at a party.

Ali showed up a little later and sat down to help with the check in.  It got pretty busy for a little while as the party was well attended.  We had somewhere in the neighborhood of 160 people in the place which was reserved for us alone. (until 9pm)

Like last year they had a huge ice sculpture/shot luge set up.  They were sending vodka shots down the luge.  I think I took 3 shots total, they did not go down smoothly.  It seemed no matter how hard you pressed against the ice with your mouth you still wound up missing some of the shot.  Not that it mattered since the primary function is to make you look silly while taking it.

So I spent a large portion of the evening hanging around the check in desk.  I downed a number of Miller Lites before switching over to some beer called Shock Top per Christy’s recommendation.

They had a nice spread of food there as well including some non-meat items that I filled up on.  I figured it would be smart to at least consume some food this year, something I neglected to do last time.

As the night went on I eventually moved around the room more.  Although my knee is still very swollen, alcohol seemed to be doing a really good job of masking the pain.  I actually got pulled out onto the dance floor multiple times and made a fool out of myself, bad knee and all.  If I am dancing, you KNOW I am very drunk.

Like last year, my Tough Mudder headband made it’s rounds (both of them) for various funny pictures.  It’s amazing how much fun a little orange headband can generate.

Although I don’t go out drinking with the club that much, when I do it seems I typically wind up being one of the last people standing.  Last night this was once again the case as I was in the last group of 5 people from the club.  I had to stay late to sober up, I didn’t drink for close to two hours at the end.  As a result I didn’t leave until about 1:15 am.

Then when I got home I actually had to fire up the computer to do some work for the race I am timing Saturday.  By the time I showered and collapsed into bed it was a ridiculous 2:45 am.  My alarm clock had no mercy and still went off at 5:30 am like it does everyday.  Yawn…..

Besides timing the race Saturday and catching up on some sleep, I hope to get a number of things back in order over the next two days.  For the last week I have been wobbling along.

You may notice I turned ads back on for the blog.  Please do NOT click on them unless you actually are interested in whatever is being pitched.  I certainly do not want to get my account banned after all the work I put in to getting it up and running.

Party pooper

Last night I spent pretty much the entire evening getting caught up on various loose ends from being out of touch for a few days.  When left unattended for even short periods of time my email inbox quickly fills with a number of “to do’s”.

I need to get a handle on what my game plan is for Christmas.  I already decided I am not sending out Xmas cards, if you normally got one from me in the past this does not mean I suddenly care less about you, it just means that in 2012 I am not in a place mentally to be doing such things.

I then have to come up with an Xmas gift strategy.  I am not sure how heavily I want to lean on the gift card crutch this year but it will surely take an important role.  I have bought exactly one gift for someone other than myself at this point.  I am feeling like I am procrastinating and behind, a feeling I am not comfortable with.  Hopefully during the next week or so I can firmly grab the wheel and get this thing back between the white lines.

Tonight is the running club Christmas Party.  Last year I had a lot of fun and got really drunk. (those two things go together a lot)  I am not sure if my drunkedness or fun level will match last year, my personal circumstances are a quite bit different this time around.  I am still behind the sleep curve from my time with Charlie and my insistence on staying up late to see the mid-season finale of Walking Dead last night.

I got around to ripping my skydiving video from DVD and posting it to YouTube.  If you want to see it, here you go.

Last week I convinced Ali to stop giving Nicki thyroid medicine.  For the past two years Nicki’s annual physical revealed she had very low thyroid numbers. There were no obvious associated physical symptoms with these low numbers but Nicki had just started her shitting in the house issue this time around.  The vet prescribed thyroid meds for Nicki not only because of her numbers but also hopefully to help whatever was causing her to use Ali’s place as a toilet.

Well once Nicki got on the meds I saw a quick and dramatic change in her appearance.  Her coat almost doubled in length and became very dry as well, shedding like mad. She also developed a huge thirst that she has never had before.

Her joint pain seemed to kick up a few notches as well since starting the treatment.  My theory was whatever is drying out her fur  and making her so thirsty is also drying out her joints, making them more painful.

So anyway, Ali stopped the meds.  I can already tell Nicki’s coat is returning to normal although she certainly doesn’t seem any more spry.  Well Ali told me that since she stopped the meds Nicki appears more lethargic, sleeping more than normal.  She now thinks it is because she is off the thyroid meds.  Ali wants to resume them again.

It’s very tough for both of us to see Nicki going downhill.  When I see her plodding along slowly and painfully I find it hard to believe this is the same dog that used to leap over the couch in a single bound as she ran wildly around the house. If I allow myself to think about it for more than a moment I get very sad.

I just want her to get better.

 

 

 

 

 

18K No Way, Spaced out

Our appointment to skydive was at 10 am.  We got there a little early, neither Charlie or I are fans of being late.  We were surprised there was a good collection of people jumping with us.  We thought a Monday morning would be pretty empty.

The check in process was orchestrated by a woman that looked to be a 2 pack a day smoker.  Her youthful energy didn’t seem to fit the leathery, extremely wrinkled face that came with it.

She presented us with a TWELVE PAGE waiver.  No less than four times did we have to sign, initial and date that we basically had no rights whatsoever.  It made the Tough Mudder death waiver look tame.  Hell I may have agreed to donate my liver in all that legalese. It was just over the top.  Well regardless, all of us worked diligently on signing our lives away.

After paying for the jump we all moved out to the main hangar.  Charlie and I were talking to a couple people there.  The one group had a guy that jumped three times before as well as his 55 year old father in law whom never jumped before. They found our Tough Mudder stories entertaining.

We also discovered one of the guys that worked at the facility did the Tough Mudder on Sunday afternoon.  It sounded like he got a watered down version of the course as I expected.  He said the Arctic Enema was just water when he did it and the shock delivered at the end wasn’t too bad.  Obviously the batteries start to weaken after delivering a 100,000 shocks or so.

So we then get to “orientation” .  Charlie and I thought this was going to be a long drawn out thing where you sit in a classroom and they give you a skydiving 101 course.  Nope it was nothing like that.  Instead your instructor/guy you will be strapped to gives you no more than a 5 minute outline of how the jump goes.  In a nutshell he said that even if we forget everything he tells us he will be making corrections and reminding us as the jump is in progress.  Ok, I think.

My instructors name was Nick.  He was significantly smaller than me, I wondered if that would present any possible problems when jumping.

I also got to meet Burtis, a tall South African guy who was going to be my personal film crew.  Burtis seemed like a cool guy.  He shot some brief pre-jump interview footage.

So we were the second set of jumpers.  Charlie and I got to watch the first set go ahead of us and slowly reappear above us several minutes later all with various looks on their face ranging from thrilling to fatigued.

Charlie and I were freaking out when we saw how fast some of the solo photographers descended towards the ground.  They looked on the verge of crashing before managing to quickly flatten out less than 50 feet above the ground.

So now it was our turn to climb above the plane.  I was towards the back of the plane which equated to being the first person out, lucky me.  My seat also happened to be right in front of the opening we jumped out of so I had a pretty freaky vantage point the entire way up to 18,000 feet.  Despite this, I think I did a pretty good job of remaining calm, not thinking about the idea I was going to be hurdling out of a plane in a few minutes.

In case you were wondering, 18,000 feet is really, really high.  We were something like 10,000 feet ABOVE the clouds.  You saw nothing but white out the window, the same vantage point you have when sitting comfortably in a 747.

If there wasn’t enough to be freaked out about, the plane itself almost felt like it was prop hanging.  The angle at the back as we ascended felt really severe.  It didn’t do much to make me feel warm and fuzzy about what was to come.

So the engines throttle back and the jump light turns from red to green.  Burtis was the first out so he can film my exit.  He gets out and hangs on the back of the door.

I am pushed forward and am forced to kneel in a position that my right knee was not willing to go into.  Luckily I had other things on my mind that blocked the pain, like looking down.

So I lean forward as Nick instructs me without hesitation, I knew an Arctic Enema approach was the only way to go when it comes to the jump moment.  In a split second I am out in the open falling rapidly away from the plane.

When you first leave the plane you are instructed to keep your hands grasped on your harness.  Then when Nick tapped me that meant I could bring them out to more of a spread eagle position.  When we first exited the plane we were rotating a bit which was disorienting, that settled down pretty quickly.

Now what set in was a sensation I never experienced before.  The air at 18,000 feet is cold and thin.  It felt like I was having a hard time breathing.  We were instructed to try to smile  as we dove, they said if you don’t the wind pressure will make you look like a freak on the video.  Well the wind pressure might have made me look like a freak but it also freaked me out a bit.

The force of a 120 mph wind on your body is something I have never experienced before.  Maintaining a smile was not easy.  Having my mouth open felt like you had a leaf blower jammed down your throat.  It was really an uncomfortable sensation.  In some of the shots from the jump I look like Fireman Bill from In Living Color as the wind blew my lips wide open.

As we were descending both Burtis and Nick were flashing me a thumbs up.  I wasn’t sure if they were checking to see if I was ok or if I was enjoying myself.  Eventually the cloud cover approached.  As we dropped through it I could feel the coolness and moisture from the cloud for a couple moments.  It was surreal that I just happened to be falling through one.

It was funny when I see the pictures and video of the dive, I look like I am being melted by the wind while Nick is just calmly hanging out above with his hair hardly getting messed up.  I guess that is because I was basically a big windshield for him.  Our size difference almost make it look like he was riding a pterodacytl.

So finally the parachute was deployed around 5000 feet, a moment I was looking forward to.  The free fall portion of the jump was honestly pretty freaky.  The pull when the chute was deployed was strong but not as bad as the G’s you get on some high thrill amusement rides.

So now I had a birds eye view of the ground way below me with nothing between us.  That view, while scary, was something I could deal with.  Nick gave me the opportunity to pull the steering lines on the parachute which sent us into a corkscrew pattern.

I felt the stress on my harness increase greatly as we spun around, it made me feel a little out of control.  The spin had the unwanted side effect of starting up a nauseous feeling that didn’t leave me until an hour or two after the jump.

As we approached the ground my job was to keep my legs up until Nick said so.  When I dropped them on command he was hoping we would stay upright but instead I wound up on my ass.  The ground felt good to sit on.

Charlie touched down shortly after me with big smiles on his face where as I had a look of a guy that just slammed a six pack.  From watching back Charlie’s video and seeing his pictures he obviously had less problems than I did up there.

Charlie and I both opted for the less expensive of the two video packages which included all the footage shot by your videographer.  However even though we didn’t pay for it, our instructor was shooting footage the entire time with their wrist based camera as well.

After you land they try to pitch the additional footage to you since it is basically jump to ground coverage of your experience.  I was fine with the 3rd person footage, it did a fine job of capturing my struggles, I didn’t need more of it.

When I talked to the 55 year old after his jump, which was from a little lower 15,000 feet, he said he had an experience similar to mine, he was very anxious to get out of the free fall portion of the jump.  He was not having fun.

After getting our dvd’s that included the finished videos and a number of still pics we were on our way.  Charlie and I fist bumped to celebrate knocking off a big checklist item.  For me, skydiving  wasn’t about picking  up a new hobby or scoring a huge adrenalin rush.  It was about facing a potentially deadly and fearful situation and stepping forward anyway.  It’s symbolism is what I will carry with me moving forward.

Would I do it again? Yes. Do I need to? No, not at all.

So after eating lunch and reminiscing about our experiences with the skydive, we headed over to Kennedy Space Center.  Our plan was to start Monday afternoon and finish up Tuesday since the pass is good for two days, or it used to be when we went 5 or 6 years ago.

So we park and walk up to the ticket counter.  I tell the lady I wanted a ticket but just wanted to verify I could still use the ticket Tuesday as well.  She says nope. She confirmed they used to do that but it changed a couple years back.  If I bought a ticket now it would only be good for that day.

Well it was already one o’clock and KSC closes at 5, it would be ridiculous to spend 50 today and another 50 tomorrow so after conferring with Charlie we agreed to just show up first thing when it opened at 9 AM on Tuesday. I was annoyed walking back to the SSR thinking about the policy change.

I then got more annoyed when I realized I just spent 10 dollars to park! As we headed out I pulled off to the side of the road and walked over to the parking lot attendant that I had just driven past 10 minutes earlier.  I explained to her that we didn’t know they no longer honored the pass for two days and we were going to have to come back tomorrow.  I asked if it would be possible if I could get my parking fee back.

She said she couldn’t do that but she did say all I had to do was flash my receipt at them the next morning and they would let me in.  She said my truck would be easy to remember.  🙂  Cool.

On the way back we swung into the Astronaut Hall of Fame, curious how much it cost.  When I saw $27 per person I winced but then as I looked closer I saw if you bought the $50 KSC pass it included free access to the hall of fame.

I asked the woman at the counter if I bought the KSC pass now, could I go to the Hall of Fame today and then KSC on Tuesday? Yep, no problem.  So that was what we did.

We spent a good hour or so going through the various exhibits.  It was interesting stuff.  The most interesting was the interactive learning area where Charlie and I played some of the games before heading out.

Monday night we had another dinner at the attached restaurant.  This time Charlie dialed up the fun ordering first a Long Island Iced Tea followed by a drink named Red Death.  I stuck to the more predictable Miller Lite.

So we headed back to KSC Tuesday morning early, a little too early.  We actually had time to kill.  At first I proposed we kill the time by heading past the entrance  of KSC and seeing what was further down the road.  Well we quickly found out what was there was a guard shack that required some sort of security badge to enter the heart of the complex.  I did a less than graceful U-turn across the grassy median and headed the other way.

We wound up just parking in an old lot a few miles up the road where I drank my DD coffee and took a few scenic SSR pictures.

We got to the front gate almost exactly at 9 AM and started exploring.  The park was decorated for the holidays so that added a cool twist to things.

The first thing we noticed was the place was pretty empty.  Evidently early December is a great time to visit the Space Center.

We walked into the rocket garden first.  It’s an impressive array of rockets all mounted in a relatively small area.  We got to walk on the actual walkway that Apollo astronauts utilized to cross the support tower to their Saturn rocket.  That was kind of cool.

Charlie and I had a loose plan of what order we needed to do things.  We wanted to catch the first tour bus at 10 am to get to the Saturn building.  I remembered this building from my prior visit, it has a lot of cool presentations/simulations as well as an actual massive Saturn V rocket hanging in the main corridor of the building, it is simply AWESOME. To imagine human beings can build something this massive and powerful is mind blowing.

I remembered from my last visit  there was another building we went to (LC 39) that included the area where space station modules were built as well as an up close view of some of the launch pads.

I asked one of the workers how do we get there.  She said the building is basically not used anymore since the space station is complete.  She said they only open the building on the weekends and all you can do is just see the launch pads from it, bummer.

After eating lunch Charlie and I hopped back on the bus and rode back to the main facility.  We got dumped off right by the Space Shuttle simulator ride, something we both were looking forward to.    When I was last at KSC they were still constructing the ride.

The ride was cool but fell a bit short of my expectations.  The AV experience leading up to the ride was actually more impressive than the 5 or 6 minutes you spent strapped in.  Basically you get in, you get tipped to a position where you are flat on your back, shook around a bit and then the cargo bay doors open and you see Earth above you, ride over.   Charlie and I both agreed it could have been a little better.

As we walked around I saw they had a building that was housing Santa Claus for the kids.  Well evidently business was slow for Santa.  He was standing by the door waving at me.  I walked inside and saw Santa had no business.  The whole set was there, his chair, decorations and “elves” taking pictures but there wasn’t a child to be seen anywhere.  It was dead as a doornail.

I talked to one of the female elves about how slow it was.  She also gave me some insight about the future construction plans at the space center which include knocking down the big gift shop, relocating it and replacing it with a “misting station” whatever that is.  I told her I would try to send kids her way.  They looked so bored.

So the majority of the rest of our stay at KSC was spent watching two Imax movies, one about the space station and another about the Hubble telescope.  I found both of the films very entertaining.  The huge 3D Imax screens really added to the experience.  The images of space were breath taking and inspiring.  Both Charlie and I enjoyed the films a bunch.

By the time we got out of the last film it was around 4.  We did one thorough run through the massive gift shop where I picked up a few items and then were on our way.  It was a fun day that reopened my eyes to just how awesome space is and how minute we all are in the scope of the universe.  We are specks on specks of specks.

For the long drive home we went the conventional highway route since it would be too dark to see anything anyway.  We managed to cover the 277 miles in less than four and a half hours which included a DD Coffee/bathroom stop along the way.  We pulled into the driveway shortly before 9PM.

So despite the late hour, my need to attend work the next day and Charlie’s 8AM flight we decided to fire up Call of Duty one last time, playing until quarter till midnight.  It was a fun way to close out what was a very memorable trip.

This morning I drug myself out of bed and delivered Charlie to the airport before 7.  I encouraged him to visit again soon, hopefully he takes me up on it.  Charlie may literally be the nicest person I know.

I now get dumped right into the midst of a super busy 3 days…..

 

 

 

Frozen, (brush)burned, shocked, dropped

This will be a two cup of coffee entry I imagine.

I picked up Charlie at the airport early Thursday afternoon.  It was the first time I had seen him since we played in the Rumble in the summer of 2011.  He had never been to Naples since I relocated here in August of 2000.

Charlie had of course seen my house electronically many times but when he saw it in person he got a better appreciation of just how much I have to maintain.  I have lots to do, all the time.

We decided to do a run to the grocery store to pick up a few supplies.  We decided the rest of the night we would just hang at the house, drink beer and play video games.

Charlie and I have a long video game history.  We used to play FPS (first person shooter) games together all the time, dating back to Quake/Painkeep days.  Well I went back to the bedroom and pulled out a still in the plastic wrap copy of Call of Duty Black Ops.

No, this isn’t the game that was just released, this is the game that came out TWO YEARS ago.  I am pretty damn sure I got the game for Christmas in 2010, yes 2010.  It has sat in a drawer in my bedroom all that time.  I just hadn’t found the time/interest to crack it open in those two years.

Well having Charlie in the house couldn’t have been a more perfect reason to break the seal on the two year old game.

So both of our FPS background is almost exclusively on a PC where you utilize a mouse and keyboard to move, aim and shoot.  This combination allows a level of precision that I never have been able to imitate playing a shooter on a console with a joystick.  Charlie was exceptionally good in these games, much better than I ever was.

Well the lack of a mouse did indeed feel weird, it just felt awkward and sloppy.  What wasn’t sloppy were the intense realistic graphics of the game which was enhanced by skull thumping surround sound coming out of my Bose system. Despite fighting the controls, we both had a lot of fun playing late into the night on Thursday while drinking large amounts of beer.

On Friday I had asked Charlie if he had any interest in seeing Wreck it Ralph, the new Pixar movie that is about video games that I grew up with.  Sure the primary target audience for the movie is probably kids that are 35 years younger than I am but oh well.  Charlie said he was into seeing it.

The movie was mid afternoon.  We headed out early so I could give Charlie a sight seeing tour of the area in the SSR.  We drove down the ultra-rich neighborhoods of Gulf Shore Blvd and Gordon Drive passing one mansion after another.  Charlie was dumbfounded by the size of these palaces by the water.  We also drove by my office so Charlie could see where I have communicated to him from for the last decade plus.

The movie was at Silverspot.  I thought Charlie would like to see Naples high end theater, he thought it was sweet.

I really enjoyed the movie, not only because it brought me back to the games that I pumped endless quarters into as a kid but more because it was just well done.  After all it was a Pixar film, they always do a good job.  It was fun from beginning to end and gets a solid A.

On Friday evening we skipped the alcohol and just grabbed sandwiches from the near by restaurant.  We wanted to be sensible since we were getting up quite early to go to the Tough Mudder Saturday morning.  I set my alarm for 4AM so we could shove out by 5.

Charlie reported he had his second night in a row of minimal sleep.  He gets all worked up when he has big events like this coming up, the same thing happened before we did the Rumble.  Luckily I don’t start feeling nerves until closer to the actual event, I slept fine.

The drive up to the race went smoothly, it was actually the same exit I take to go to Siesta Key, the only difference being this time I headed east instead of west.  The entrance to the race was about 6 miles off the highway.  We pulled in a little before 6:40am and had no problem, unlike others later in the day, but more on that later.

Unlike last year where they had issues with their registration list, Charlie and I both were on the list this time and checked in with no trouble.  We spent the time leading up to the race kind of hanging out and checking out the immediate race area near registration..  The only hydration we did leading up to it was one 5 hour energy each, which was incredibly stupid, more on that later too.

So this year they changed a number of things besides the most obvious thing, the location.  Another change was how you got into the starting chute.  Last year when your wave was next up you walked into the corral area and went.  Well this year they put an 8 foot wall behind the start area.  The only way for you to enter was to go over the wall.

Ok that is kind of cool I guess.  However what wasn’t cool was the dumb idea that they could have teams pose for a picture one at a time before going over the wall.  There were just way too many bodies to do that.  The photographers were soon overrun.

Charlie and I had the same early 8:20 start time Randall and I enjoyed last year.  It really is the only way to go if you ask me for two reasons, parking and course degradation.  When you do the course early you can avoid the brunt of the parking nightmare.  Later in the day the parking situation became absolutely a disaster.  I heard that at one point the traffic was backed up for 18 MILES and some reported waiting 4 hours to park and another 2.5 to leave. Um no thanks.

The course is in much better shape when you do it early.  As thousands of bodies traverse the obstacles, many of which involved piles of dirt, it gets worn down.  Plus many obstacles can develop significant wait times the later in the day it becomes.

Finally, the temps are cooler in the morning, people that started around noon were dealing with temps around 80, not exactly great for traversing 11.5 miles with 22 obstacles along the way.

I was happy to see they had the same enthusiastic guy starting the Mudders this year.  Despite starting wave after wave of people every race he does a fantastic job of making you feel like you were THE special group.  He is just bursting with good energy.

Ok so we were off and running about 8:25.  One thing I noticed almost immediately was the ground was very treacherous to run on.  You could tell most of the path was just mowed for the race.  The ground was very rutty and uneven, exactly what a person with bad knees should NOT be running on.  I spent a lot of time looking down at my feet to try to find anything close to a stable running surface.  I wasn’t very successful.

Neither Charlie or I had really looked at what the obstacles were this year nor the order they were in.  I was hoping the dreaded ice bath would go down very early like last year so I could get it out of the way.  This year I had to wait a bit.

Before getting to the Arctic Enema we had to do a mud crawl under low barbed wire, wade through a lake and under 3 sets of barrels and do and over under log obstacle.  None of them were horribly difficult but it seemed like all three of them had very long runs between them.  This theme carried through out the course.

Last year there only seemed to be two or three long runs in between obstacles.  Most times when you did an obstacle you could see the next one off in the distance.  This year it seemed like there were 7 or 8 long runs with many of them having you running through fields where you saw nothing but others trudging along ahead of you.  I suppose part of this is because this course had 3 fewer obstacles than last year which would equal longer runs between them.  Whatever the cause, I really didn’t like having such long distances between obstacles, especially since the running surface was so hazardous.

Ok so we arrive at obstacle number four, the Arctic Enema (formally called the Chernobyl Jacuzzi)  Out of all of the obstacles last year, this was the most uncomfortable.  Also last year, although the water was VERY cold, there was hardly any visible ice in it.

This year the vats were stuffed with ice.  In fact when I took the plunge it felt like the top 18 inches or so was nothing but ice cubes.  Yes my skin instantly burned and my lungs contracted but I knew that speed was of the essence, I just got the fck out of it as quickly as I could.  Charlie emerged after me with a new appreciation of just how cold water can actually be.

Next up was something they called the Mud Mile which was series of smallish piles of dirt with water filled trenches behind them.  These were more annoying than challenging.  I think what made them more annoying was the long run between them, they didn’t feel like much of a payoff.  The only “challenge” to these was you didn’t know exactly how deep the water filled trenches were.  Some were quite shallow, a couple were knee deep.

Next up was the boa constrictor, an obstacle Randall and I had.  You get in a downward sloping drainage tube, dump out into muddy water and then have to climb another tube that goes up an incline.  This year they made it easier with a rope in the up pipe.  Last year we just had to inch our way up the pipe very slowly.  It did seem the angle was a bit steeper this year which is maybe why they added the rope. (or to address back ups for people that struggled)

Next was something called the Cliff Hanger which was basically a steep grassy hill with a pretty abrupt decline on the other end.  It was another ho hum type of obstacle.

Next up was the first set of Berlin Walls which is basically an 8 foot high wall you run up to, grab the top and pull yourself over.  I was able to pretty much just walk up to it, do a small hop and grab the edge.  My pull up prowness made getting over it pretty easy.  I wasn’t sure if Charlie would be able to get over without a hand since he is much shorter but he was able to run up and over it without a major issue.

Next up was something they didn’t have last year, the electric eel.  It was a low crawl obstacle on top of wet black plastic.  Overhead were straight, narrow rows of wires.  The goal was to stay low and straight.  If you failed you were nailed with a painful shock which we heard being delivered to several people.  Luckily Charlie and I managed to escape without being zapped.

Next up was the wood carry.  Unlike last year where you carried real logs on your shoulder through chest high water this year you carried sections of 12″ x 12″‘s along a 1/4 mile course through some woods.  The next obstacle was more wood based, climbing over and under some logs, followed by more small dirt piles and trenches, nothing too exciting.

Next up was the ball shrinker, I kind of like this one.  They have a metal wire wrapped in black pvc strung low across a body of water.  You hang upside down from the wire and pull yourself across to the other side.  As you get towards the middle of the wire it sags and your body gets more and more submerged into the water.  I was able to pull myself across without issue, Charlie had some problems with his head going under.

Right around this time Charlie started having issues with his calves cramping.  We stopped to allow him to stretch them out.  We realized how stupid it was to not plan for this ahead of time by making sure Charlie was well hydrated.  He has a history of cramping, including when we did the Rumble several times.

Not only did we do zero hydration the morning of the race, the night before I think all we had was one Diet Coke each.  It really was dumb of us to not plan better in this regard.

Well not only were Charlie’s cramps getting progressively worse, my right knee was a total mess at this point. I could hear noise in the joint with every stride and it was just one big ball of soreness. So although it was too bad we had to stop and/or walk a lot once Charlie’s cramping set in, with the way my knee felt I really didn’t care.

The next obstacle was the 15 foot high jump into muddy cold water, after the Arctic Enema this was not a big deal.

Next was a bigger set of Berlin Walls, 9 footers instead of 8.  These had a small, thin board you could use to push upward if you got the timing right.  Charlie mistimed it his first attempt, plowing into the wall.  On his second attempt though he cleared it, cramps and all, without any assist from me.  It was really impressive.

The next obstacle was another mud crawl under barbed wire, the repetition of obstacles was definitely a negative.  Crawling on my sore right knee was an even bigger negative at this point.

The next obstacle was the wounder warrior carry.  You are supposed to take turns carrying each other somewhere around 100 yards.  I carried Charlie but convinced him it would be stupid for him to try to carry me with the way he was cramping.  He still wanted to try but thankfully he listened to reason.

The next obstacle was a dark trench crawl where portions are pitch black, requiring you to navigate by touch alone.  I tried the best I could to do this on two hands and one knee as it was very uncomfortable at this point to be crawling at all.

We were now getting towards the homestretch.  We approached the Funky Monkey, one of the Mudder signature obstacles.  It is a set monkey bars that first go up before going down.  To make things more interesting they grease the bars.

I used the same strategy as last year utilizing the slower, but safer method of one rung at a time instead of going hand over hand.  Charlie used the same method for the ascending part of the bars but tried to switch to hand over hand coming down and wound up falling in the water.  He wasn’t happy about that.

The next obstacle was called balls to the wall.  It was a much higher wall than we faced earlier,  If I were to guess I would place it at 15-20 feet high.  It had small footing strips nailed across it and a large knotted rope to pull yourself up with.

For me the obstacle was easy, for many women, the upper body strength required made it very tough.  I helped a woman get up before I went by letting her use my hand as a modified seat until she could pull herself all the way up.

The only obstacles left were Everest and Electroshock therapy, two more signature obstacles.

Last year Everest gave both Randall and I trouble.  Not only is the 1/4 pipe high and steep, it’s slippery.  Last year I required the helping hand of fellow mudders to grasp onto me and pull me to the top.  This year I got a better run at it and found a section that was pretty dry, I was able to get to the top rather easily.

Charlie made it as well however as soon as he got to the top he laid down in pain.  Both of his calves were balled up in knots.  I just tried to move him slightly out of the way so he didn’t get run over by oncoming mudders.

We stayed up there for a bit while he tried to get the cramps to subside.  He used the two by four steps on the other side to help stretch out his legs as we slowly descended.  I felt bad for Charlie, I knew he felt bad about the cramps.

So finally we were at the end, facing the final obstacle, the famous electroshock therapy chute.  To be honest, last year I didn’t think the obstacle was bad at all.  I ran straight through with my arms as a shield and only received one shock on my arm.  The shock wasn’t severe, it kind of felt like a strong static shock, it burned but that was about it.

Well this year they made it much more miserable.  Instead of flat terrain in the chute they added small hills with water in between them.  There was no way to sprint through the chute without falling on your face with this layout, meaning you were more vulnerable to the shocks.

On top of this they apparently turned up the juice SIGNIFICANTLY this year. (or we just got a fresh set of batteries)  I got shocked three or four times on my back and they were major shocks.  Not only did they burn, my entire upper body convulsed as the current was delivered. It felt like someone plugged an AC cord into my body.  I managed to stagger out of the chute without falling.

Many people were not so lucky, going down after getting shocked only to be rewarded with another shock a few feet ahead. Charlie actually blacked out momentarily after one of his shocks and fell.  Yes, they were that strong.

We crossed the finish line, had some schwag shoved at us at grabbed our one free beer which we drank while sitting on a spot of open grass.  We were both beat up. Even though we just finished I could feel my knee blowing up like a balloon.

We had someone take a post race pic for us. I look to be in way better condition than last years race where I had dried blood on my face and dirt everywhere.  The black shirt I wore this year did a good job of hiding the dirt.

We did not have the luxury of being able to pay for a hot shower this year.  Instead Charlie and I had to try to get “clean” by spraying off with a garden hose.  It at least got the surface dirt off but we were both still pretty cruddy.

We then took a spin through the greatly expanded gift shop area.  Evidently picking up Under Armour as the new lead sponsor meant a lot more souvenirs.  I stayed conservative buying a glass, a window sticker and a luggage tag.  How that added up to $35 is beyond me.  Thievery.

Well by this time I was feeling very dehydrated.  Being offered a 12 ounce beer and nothing else to hydrate after a nearly 12 mile mud race sounds crazy doesn’t it?  Well that was the case.  There was NO free water to be had ANYWHERE.  The only way to get water was to wait in one of the two 30 person deep lines at a food stand and pay something like $5 for it.  That was fcking ridiculous, and hazardous.  I could hardly believe it.

The only free liquid I could find anywhere was at the EAS tent where I inhaled a bottle of chocolate muscle milk.  I was really pissed they had no free water.

Seeing those long food lines discouraged Charlie and I from eating there, it would have cost a small fortune to do so anyway.  So the only thing I wanted to do yet was get another set of post Mudder pull ups in, hopefully building on the 18 reps I got last year.

They actually had two pull up bars set up.  One was being run by some sponsor where they were keeping score of the most reps.  However the bar was a shitty design and they were allowing absolutely awful form reps to count including half reps and full fledged X-fit style kipping.

I instead opted to use the same wobbly Air Force pull up bar I utilized last year.  Although they weren’t keeping official track of the most reps they were handing out prizes based on the amount of reps you could do.  I saw that the top tier of 20 reps scored a set of sunglasses so that was what I was gunning for.

I did the first 19 reps consecutively and then paused briefly before pulling rep 20.  If I hung I could have probably squeaked out 25 reps but I didn’t feel the need.  I beat last years effort and scored the glasses, good nuf.

I convinced Charlie to give it a try as well.  He knocked out a very solid full 13 reps, earning himself a towel.

We both decided we were ready to head out, we would grab some food on the way home.  We began the very slow and limp filled walk back to the truck.

As we left we saw first hand the horrific traffic situation that had developed.  The traffic was backed up all the way up to the interstate.  Some people had gotten out of vehicles and were running to the event.  I read later that many people simply were unable to get to the race site because of the delays and packed it in.  Imagine paying that kind of money to do a Mudder and then not being able to even get on site because of poor planning?

So as I was talking to Charlie about this year’s event compared to last years event I told him I thought this event was harder.  However as time passed I think my evaluation morphed a bit.  Physically, the toll the race took on me was greater but that was almost entirely because of the terrible running surface.  It literally destroyed a right knee that was shaky going in.

The two biggest obstacles from last year, the ice bath and electroshock were considerably more intense, however as a whole, the obstacles were not as good as last year and there were fewer of them, contributing to the many long and boring runs.

So although the race was “harder” for me than last year it wasn’t better.  When you add in the horrible delays with parking/traffic and the lack of any water for finishers and you have some pretty big warts on this years event.  I did like the upgraded Mudder headband and shirt though.

When we got home the first order of business was to take long hot showers.  As I I was thoroughly scrubbing, I was working my man parts when I felt a burning sensation.  I look downstairs and see what almost looks like a brush burn on the business end of things.

Like it wasn’t bad enough that I had a blown up knee and a couple dozen bumps and cuts elsewhere, now I had something wrong with my penis.

It looked bad, at first I had this horrible fear that I picked up some sort of crazy disease from the dirty mudder water and it infected my junk.  However when I told Charlie about it he suggested it probably came from the liner of my swimsuit which upon further inspection made sense as it was a crosshatch pattern that matched the liner.

There were a couple points in the race where I was perched on top of either a wall or logs that could have pulled the liner hard against my southern regions.  I wore the same shorts last year without incident.  I guess from here on out all Mudder attire will include compression shorts underneath the top layer.  Luckily it appears to be healing fast.

Saturday night Charlie and I crashed, both really beat from the race.  I took a nap with an ice bag on my knee.  When I woke up I ordered pizza from Hungry Howies.  This theme of bad eating continued throughout the weekend.

I introduced Charlie to Walking Dead, starting with episode 1 of season 1.  In total we watched something like 5 or 6 episodes while he was here.  It’s such a good show I totally enjoyed seeing it again.  Charlie thought it was very good as well.

Sunday morning we had some time to relax since we weren’t going to leave until around 2 for Titusville.  I went and picked up the dogs so they could hang with us until we left.  When we did head out we just left the dogs at the house, Ali came out after work and picked them up.

We decided to take a scenic route to Titusville, cutting up the middle of the state instead of taking the conventional I-75 to I-4 highway option.  Going the way we did actually shaves 60 miles off the distance although it takes about the same time due to the slower speed and going through various towns.  However we both figured what the hell, we are not on a timetable and we are cruising in the SSR, why not slow down and enjoy some scenery?

Speaking of the SSR, Charlie got some appreciation of why I find the truck so endearing.  I treated him to the occasional 5000-6000 rpm power shifts where the engine is just screaming a perfect beastly note as it presses you firmly into your seat.

Driving itself was quite the challenge with my bad right knee.  I literally could hardly bend it at all by the time Sunday  rolled around.  If I wasn’t popping Advil like candy I don’t think I could have driven at all.

The drive took us about four and a half hours with a couple stops, not too bad.  The Holiday Inn where Charlie reserved a room was quite nice as well, clean and modern.

Sunday night we enjoyed a dinner in the attached restaurant. We had one of our many “who is going to pay” disputes.  Charlie is such a nice guy he wanted to pay for almost everything.  At times I had to resort to sneak paying for stuff when he wasn’t looking.

This is a good point to break so you can digest the rest of the story at your leisure. Life at 18,000 feet is not so great….