Friday, December 30, 2011
link, link
Tuesday, December 20, 2011
beets
Beets with Avocado and Orange
Red-wine vinegar
2 medium to large red beets (about 1 pound)
1 2-inch piece black licorice
4 tablespoons fruit vinegar (try raspberry)
1 teaspoon Dijon mustard
1 teaspoon wasabi paste
1/4 cup walnut oil
Salt and pepper to taste
1 orange, divided into segments and cut into bite-size pieces
1 avocado, medium dice
2 tablespoons chopped basil
Boil a pot of water. Add a splash of red-wine vinegar and the beets. Boil covered for 20 to 30 minutes, or until you can stick them with a fork and it comes out clean.
Meanwhile, put the licorice in the freezer to let it get rock hard.
When the beets are cooked, peel and chop them (while still warm) into bite-size pieces.
Whisk together the fruit vinegar, mustard, wasabi, and walnut oil. Toss beets in the mixture and season with salt and pepper. Fold in the orange, avocado, and basil.
Remove the licorice from the freezer and shave atop the salad as you would Parmesan cheese.
Serves six.
CALORIES PER SERVING: 169
CARBS: 15 G
FIBER: 4 G
PROTEIN: 2 G
Friday, December 9, 2011
here's mine.
Monday, December 5, 2011
a thanks
Friday, November 18, 2011
pacing
Monday, November 14, 2011
sneak peek
Friday, November 4, 2011
love stories like these. ahh, the power of running.
Outdoors
Family running a 12,000-mile 'marathon of health'
The eight members of the Chicoine family of Ottawa, Canada, are making a 12,000-mile loop across Canada and the U.S. — largely on foot...
McClatchy-Tribune
The eight members of the Chicoine family of Ottawa, Canada, are making a 12,000-mile loop across Canada and the U.S. — largely on foot.
The "Marathon of Health" is a 12,000-mile journey the family is undertaking to show the world that small steps can make a big difference in our lives from Vancouver, B.C., across Canada to New York City and back across the U.S. and up to Vancouver.
"All of us run every day, all of us, right now, we're running about 100 miles a day," said dad Ed Chicoine. "I'll run about 15-20 miles each day. Sometimes we only go about 60 miles, it depends on if we have something else going on with the media or high school presentations. We love to give presentations. The kids are engaged, they ask questions, and they're the future and they all get it. Whether they act on it is another thing. We're just hoping to get more people in general to take part in what we're doing."
It was Ed's idea to do this "Marathon of Health." After his brother died at 59 of lymphoma, he decided it was time.
The goal is to bring awareness and get at least 1 million people to sign the online petition (www.marathonofhealth.com) by the end of May 2012. The Chicoines want people to pledge to improve their health and eliminate obesity, as well as sedentary diseases such as Type 2 diabetes, stroke, heart conditions and others.
Not all of the Chicoines had been runners, but they decided their dad's message of healthy living and preventive care was good enough for them to take months out of their lives to join in.
His wife Gaye, and their family Tanya, 27, Ben, 25, Dayna, 23, Karina, 21, Jake, 19, and Whitney, 18, are now over 6,100 miles into the mission, and have 7,000 to go.
They started May 8, and right now, Gaye and Tanya are back home running the family's general store and health food store in Ottawa, but the rest of the family is crammed into a two-person RV that has been retrofitted by the family to provide enough bunks for everyone to sleep.
Karina, 21, took a year off from McGill University to join her family. At the starting point of the trip, she had never run more than 3 miles at a time. She now runs 8-10 miles a day and spends the rest of her time blogging about the adventure and crammed into a tiny RV with her brothers and sisters. Some might call that a nightmare road trip.
"Definitely, at some times, it gets trying. Last night, we were all lying in bed laughing there were five of us back in the bunk beds, and we said, 'Who does this? We are grown people, in these tiny little beds in an RV with our family.' It is quite shocking. Sometimes, you need time to yourself and you need to cool down. But running is what keeps us sane."
Karina said the trip has also brought her future into focus. She was planning a career in business, but recently decided that health issues are where she will be spending her energies.
"I just realized it's my passion. This is just the beginning. We're talking about doing more," Karina said.
Ed says the family has had its share of small injuries and son Jake once had to take off two weeks but they were all healthy when they started, and they have stayed that way by taking care of each other (Ed is a chiropractor who keeps everyone aligned) and eating real food.
"We have eaten out only three times, and other times we do all our own cooking. ... For dinner, we always have a salad, with lots of vegetables — carrots, onions, tomatoes, celery, red peppers, green peppers we make it as colorful as possible. And 90 percent of time, we'll have either chicken, fish, beef or quinoa, lentils or beans, with a rice or a pasta," Ed said. "We also cook in organic coconut oil and olive oil only. We also eat a lot of coconuts and coconut milk, which has saturated fat for your muscles for energy. In the morning, we use a lot of flaxseed, hemp seed and chia seed, sprinkled on cereal for Omega 3s and protein. ... We make our own drinks with chia seed in water with a little bit of lemon. We don't do any power bars or power drinks, and we find that's helped us tremendously."
Ed said that the rate of obesity in Canada and the U.S. is tremendous, with more than 127 million people overweight, and what scares him is the childhood obesity rate is at an all-time high.
"Canada and the U.S. share the same problems with obesity and degenerative diseases, and 80 percent of health care costs could be prevented with changing health. In Canada, our tax dollars pay for all medical care, and right now, 50 percent of our budget goes to pay for that, so instead of treating disease, I'd like to people to take a little responsibility for getting active."
Ed said the family would like to use their petition as a call to governments to move some money to preventive care and incentives for people to be more active and live eat whole foods.
"We could use programs to give incentives to get people to be more active; for instance, if you did a medical checkup every year, maybe you get a tax break. And to tax sugary drinks — they are the biggest culprit for obesity today. Even the power drinks and energy drinks, it's all sugar. Thirty percent of adults are obese in the U.S., and if you eliminate the sugary drinks, you'd get rid of half of diseases today," Ed said.
He said his family has always tried to live without processed foods, even though whole foods and fresh fruits and vegetables are more expensive then the stuff that comes in boxes or bags. However, he said it has been worth it for his family's health.
"We have six kids who, from birth, have never been to a medical doctor other than for accidents. It works, if you apply it."
Karina said she knows the family's adventure isn't for everyone, and admits to sometimes eating the wrong things and having a few drinks, and yes, even thinking that long-distance runners are "crazy," but that she feels so much better now.
"So many people my generation and younger, we're becoming the fast-food generation, and it's amazing how much my body feels differently when I don't eat that. A lot of people don't realize that's how they feel all the time. We are just asking people to think about doing small things like eating real food, stop eating fast food, change from pop to water, maybe walk to school instead of taking the bus."
The Chicoine family has blogs, videos and health and nutrition information on their website, in addition to their petition. Ed points out that the family is not trying to raise money for anything, but just wants everyone to be more healthy.
"We don't want your money, we just want your support.
Thursday, October 20, 2011
a runner, a mom, and star of one of my fav shows. yes, please!
I'm a Runner: Julie Bowen
The Modern Family actress discusses running—on and off screen.By Dana Meltzer ZepedaImage by Getty ImagesPublished 09/21/2011 Last Updated 09/21/2011Occupation: Actor, Modern Family
Age: 41
Residence: Los Angeles
Editor: Congratulations to Julie for being named outstanding supporting actress for a comedy at the 63rd Primetime Emmy Awards, which were announced after this interview was conducted.
I know that you run a lot...
Well not a lot for Runner's World! People are so easily impressed by running, but I run pretty frequently.
Have you always been athletic?
No. Running was the first thing I discovered that I was any good at. I grew up playing field hockey and lacrosse—prep school sport—and I was terrible at them. I really thought that I was not athletic at all and then one summer in between schools I decided that I would try running. I was about 13, and I started by running about 15 or 20 minutes each day, and then I got to school and it made a huge difference. Suddenly, the run before practice was no big deal and I was like, 'Wait a minute, I can do this!' I still stunk at lacrosse and field hockey. It was horrible. Anything with a ball that I had to catch, it was awful. But, I started being a good runner and then when I switched to my high school, where they had track and field and cross-country, I started doing that and I found out that I was not bad.
So have you stuck with running this whole time or has it been an on-and-off thing?
I ran throughout high school competitively, and then I got a lot of injuries. In college, I had to back off a little bit, so I swam in order to repair my aches and pains. Ever since then, I have been delighted to be a recreational jogger. I trained for a marathon and then got injured doing that, so now I am just a recreational runner.
You've said running helped you lose the baby weight the first time around. Did it also help after twins?
Yes, after having the twins, definitely. More than losing the baby weight, it helped me to regain my sanity. When you are in a house with lots of babies, no sleep, and everything is about their needs all of the time, I found that going out for a run in the morning before they got up—even it was just for half an hour—made me feel like I did something for myself. It's wasn't just all about babies, and it made me feel okay.
Did you run while you were breastfeeding, too?
I don't know why I have a surplus of energy, especially early in the morning, but I seem to and I think there was a lot of anxiety; I have a lot of anxiety in general. Life sort of just gets me wound pretty tightly, and there was a lot of anxiety about starting a new job. I was startingModern Family, and all of these new babies, and I wasn't sleeping well. Something that really helped me to get rid of the anxiety, take a breath, and feel calm was running.
Did you use a baby jogger?
I only started using a baby jogger recently. My first son, Oliver, didn't like it when he was little and we're lucky because my husband works at home, so why bother? I would leave him in his bed, and I could go running then. Now though, with three, no amount of babysitters or husbands is enough! Someone is always happy when I take them for a run. So two out of three of them were happy in the jogger.
Does Oliver like it now?
Oliver does now! I run to the school sometimes and I'll bring him along. To school and back takes me about 55 minutes, I have no idea what the mileage is. Going there is slower, obviously, because I am pushing 40 pounds of kid, and going back is faster, so really I don't know what the mileage is. I gave up running for the mileage. Oliver chills out, listens to his iPod, and talks to me a lot. I try to explain to him sometimes that while I am pushing him up this hill, I cannot talk. It's funny because running back from school, I have an empty stroller and you can't tell if I pull down the shade so people must think I am insane. Running there I am careful and I avoid cars and potholes, but running back I am a madwoman! People probably think that I am insane running in traffic with what they believe is a baby. There is actually nothing there.
Do you get funny looks from people?
Oh my gosh, yes! Mostly angry sort of fist-shaking looks like, How can you? Why would you?I know that it's an empty stroller so this is okay.
Do people recognize you when you run now?
I run in this one park in L.A. and I have been running there for years. People say hi, and every time I go running, at least one person says, "I love your show." But it's very nice, and it doesn't feel like I'm getting gawked at or anything. I mean its L.A. You can be Annette Bening and the person behind you can be a porn star, so I am just another person on the hill.
It sounds like you run a lot.
I consider a day without running a crappy day. When I don't get to run, I am a grump, but some days my schedule just doesn't allow me to. I have to be at work at 6 a.m., and if I want to see my kids later at home, there are just days when I don't get to run. But, for the most part, I try to go every day. It usually works out to about five or six times a week or sometimes four times a week. But if it's four times a week, I am a pill. Nobody wants to be around me. Cranky! Everything looks bad, my children seem too loud, and my job seems like fun but not as much fun. Like, I love my job, but suddenly my pants aren't fitting right and everything just seems wrong.
Your character Claire is a runner on Modern Family. Did the writers work that in because of you?
No, I think I play the wife of every runner on our staff. I am pretty sure she's an amalgamation. And, the show's creators, Steve Levitan and Chris Lloyd—Steve's wife Krista is an avid runner and I would say that 70 percent of the time that you see her she is in running clothes. I think that was based on her and it just so happened to be convenient that I enjoy running. I don't think that they would make me do it, if I didn't enjoy it. We did scenes on a treadmill. After doing it for two hours'I guess it's a good thing that I am not a hideous runner.
And you got in a workout at work.
That was a bonus!
Does anything from your own life cross into the show like running?
I am so similar in a lot of ways to Steve Levitan's wife, I always think it's hard to tell. I think that these things are coming from me, my family, or my life, and then I'll discover that they have been coming from so many other different places but nothing directly. I just like running.
Are you as competitive about running with your husband as Claire is?
My husband and I used to run together and we don't anymore. I haven't gone running with him in years, and I don't know why. Mostly because somebody is sort of on duty and somebody is not, so we both can't go and do it. I would like to say that I am a very relaxed, loving person who is not competitive, but that's a lie! But I run alone, so I don't know. I have a lot of private conversations, a lot of counting steps like, I wanna quit, I wanna quit. Okay, you can quit when you get to 300. It does work.
Do you ever run with your costars?
No, my costars all have their own thing going on. Sofia does a lot of Pilates.
I read in Self magazine that she was afraid to work out with you.
Oh please! Sofia is the best. I'm sure that was made to sound more competitive than it is. We are so different. She is so graceful and athletic and she is a really good dancer, and I am like, "Put on the shoes and go on a straight line." I do yoga. I go swimming. I do that stuff. But it's a totally different time commitment and needs a whole new set of equipment. And I mean, I have seen the best things I have ever seen while I am out on runs.
What's the best thing you've seen on a run?
I remember that my junior year of college, I lived in Italy and I ran there. Running wasn't super big there then, and I don't know if it is now. It's certainly not like girls running through the streets, but I was going through these medieval streets in Florence, and then in the hills above Florence and these tiny little towns that nobody would ever see because there is no commerce there, and past falling-down, old palazzos, roosters crowing in the morning. It was like running through a painting, and I used to think to myself, I wouldn't get to see this if I wasn't the person that got up and ran around in the morning like a crazy chicken with my head cut off.
Do you always run in the mornings?
I don't always run in the mornings, but I am definitely better if I run in the mornings. Well, my job, God bless it, they slap all of this hair and makeup on me, so once I get through the beautifying process, you don't want to un-beautify. So it's best to do it when you're still ugly and makeup-free in the morning.
Do you sometimes run on set?
I have and it is extremely rare because it makes them very nervous. You have to have a very loving and caring makeup team who is willing to redo you and luckily I do. I have said to my ladies, Stephanie and Mary Ann, "I have two hours between scenes. Would you mind if I went running?" And they are so wonderful but there are times that I know it's going to kill them, so I do it very sparingly. I remember being on Ed and Tom Cavanagh would go and play basketball all of the time in between takes. He was dripping sweat and it didn't matter. They just sort of slapped powder on his face and ran their fingers through his hair. But that's not going to be so good for me.
Women go through a lot more!
Yes, we do suffer, but I do have wonderfully indulgent and lovely people that I work with that know that I keep a bag in my car with workout gear. I have a tendency to get dressed in the morning for a run and then start my day, and if I am at the car wash and it's going to take an hour to get the car washed, I'll just run.
Where do you run on set?
Outside. They have a park across the street from where we shoot. There is a neighborhood. I love nothing more than running though the neighborhood and looking at houses. It's so fun to see the way other people live and there are things you don't see when you are driving through the neighborhood quickly. I had a great run once in Africa. I was on safari with my family and it was just the greatest vacation ever, but because of the animals, we weren't encouraged to go off running alone because there were lions. So I would go stir-crazy after a while. The guide drove around this big huge field like four times to stare out at anything hiding in the bush. And then they said I could run for about a half hour because things will come back into the grass. About 20 minutes into the run, I ran past this field with some form of monkey that sounds cute but was terrifying, and they all started screaming so I said, "That's it! No more running in Africa." Because they were not adorable monkeys. They were screaming and I clearly violated something of theirs. Maybe they were baboons. I couldn't tell you exactly what form of primate they were. And you are really feeling high on your horse because you are running around this incredible field. I could hear the lions far away—I knew I was safe—and elephants and it was magical, but then I got chased away by a family of monkeys. It's a good running story, but people who don't run are like, "You are an idiot. You are in Africa. Don't run, what's the big deal?" What cooler thing to do but running in Africa and see stuff up close?
Do you still like wearing old-school nylon shorts to run?
I am horrible and I don't know where this sort of sloppy aesthetic entered my world, but it always seemed very strange to me to buy workout clothes. Growing up, they just didn't do that, so I still have a tendency to wear my husband's shorts. I have gotten better. I have a few pairs of running tights now, but for the most part, I don't care what I look like when I'm running at all as long as it's comfortable.
Everyone else in L.A. seems to care so much!
Well I should care because there are paparazzi around some of the time. Once in a while there will be a picture of me and I think, Hmm, maybe its time to retire my husband's basketball shorts, but I really don't care. I just can't seem to make myself care about what I look like when I am working out. I used to work out like a slob. I used to do yoga in slob clothes, and then I realized that you can't. In order to get all bendy twisty, you need your clothes to be tight-fitting so that you are not tripping over yourself. I get it. But running, as long as you're comfortable, who cares?
Do you listen to music when you run?
I do. I have some playlists for when I am running, but I alternate them with Fresh Air from NPR. I listen to pretty much all of it. I don't think I've missed one in a year or so. I just don't know why that makes me happy. I guess it sort of distracts my mind. I'll put on music sometimes if I want to change it up and get all excited to run up a hill. Generally, I like to not think when I am running, and when I am listening to something interesting about science or art, I don't think. I just listen.
Like a book on tape?
I have done that, too. My sister has me listening to a book on tape now but it has not caught my fancy, so we won't mention it.
What book?
Its called Cutting for Stone and it's written by a doctor. My sister is a doctor, and I call it doctor porn. It sounds like he is writing porn but its like, 'His fingers probed her liver delicately.' And you are like, "Gross!" I think she takes it from a different point of view. When someone is talking about their sobbing scapula or whatever it is, she knows what they are talking about and it means something to her. She keeps telling me to stick with it.
When you were on Weeds?
That was so much fun because I never get to play bad girls, and I got to be such a bad girl. I was terrible. It was super fun.
Did you ever run with any of the cast members?
No. Well first of all, I am a bit of a loner on the running circuit, so I am not prone to running with people because I am afraid that they are going to run too fast and or I am going to be too fast. I'll run with my sister the doctor—she is like one of my closest friends—or my cousin Katie, but only people who I know are not judgey.
How old is Oliver now?
Oliver is 4 and the twins are 2.
You were talking about a marathon where you got injured. What happened?
Nothing dramatic. Twenty miles into my training, I was just running perfectly happy on a nice long run and all of a sudden, my hip felt like someone stabbed me with a knife, and sure enough, I had torn my labrum. It's the rotator cuff of your hip, and there is no fix for it except to stay off of it for six to eight weeks. I was on crutches, and I had to swim. It was a drag, and I didn't like it. That's when I had one kid under one and I couldn't carry him. It stunk, and it scared me enough that I really do want to do a marathon, but I don't know. Being injured is so awful. [Younger sister] Annie said to me, "Would you rather be someone who can casually run until they are 90, or someone who ran a marathon and could never run another step?" So I would rather be the person who can run until I am 90. I just wouldn't want to do permanent damage. That's not to say that I don't run, but I don't want to push it to a point where I can't run and I get hurt.
What marathon was it?
L.A.
Do you ever run around your neighborhood at home?
I love running near work. There are a lot of hills where I live, and that's really good and challenging and it makes you feel like Superman. I love running in Hancock Park because it's my fantasy to live there. I can run for like an hour there just running up and down and looking at the houses. Real-estate envy. I just love that. I would love to run at the beach, but its just too far. When I am up in Santa Barbara, I do run at the beach.
You have a place in Santa Barbara?
My parents have a house up there and, when we visit them, I run at the beach a lot. It's nice, although I do find running at the beach here like running on the highway with all of the people. There are so many people and it's fine, but sometimes it's nice to have a little solitude.
What's the best running advice you've ever gotten?
My running coach in high school said that when you are running downhill just fall, and still to this day I think of that when I am running downhill. Just like, don't try to control, don't try to rein in the energy that the gravity is giving you.
What do you eat the night before a big run?
I am horrible. I eat healthily, but I am just as apt to have a bowl of cereal for dinner as I am to have, like, chicken and a salad. And a lot depends on what my kids are eating and what I eat off of their plates. There are times when I eat their whole dinner, Dino Bites and French fries, but my default mode is that I eat pretty clean salads and chicken. It used to be salad, salad, salad, and now it's Dino Bites, peanut butter and jelly, and whatever. It's fine. I don't really care. Some of it's not bad. I did rediscover French toast.
How do you know when you've had the perfect run?
When it's an hour later and I don't want to stop and I feel energized. I walk back into my house with sort of a happy buzz, and I feel psyched to take the garbage out. I can do all of this stuff. All of the mundane stuff that can get on your nerves seems like an easy thing to do. It's not like I suddenly do something different, but the stuff that I am doing seems much more manageable and fun.
Do you have a running ambition?
The marathon is my running ambition, but otherwise my running ambition is just to continue to run healthily and without injury because I hate injuries.
Thursday, October 13, 2011
as a runner & a creative, i like this!
The Creative Brain On Exercise
BY JONATHAN FIELDSThu Sep 29, 2011For more than thirty years, Haruki Murakami has dazzled the world with his beautifully crafted words, most often in the form of novels and short stories. But his book What I Talk About When I Talk About Running (2008) opens a rare window into his life and process, revealing an obsession with running and how it fuels his creative process.
An excerpt from a 2004 interview with Murakami in The Paris Review brings home the connection between physical strength and creating extraordinary work:
When I'm in writing mode for a novel, I get up at 4:00 a.m. and work for five to six hours. In the afternoon, I run for ten kilometers or swim for fifteen hundred meters (or do both), then I read a bit, and listen to some music. I go to bed at 9:00 p.m. I keep to this routine every day without variation. The repetition itself becomes the important thing; it's a form of mesmerism. I mesmerize myself to reach a deeper state of mind. But to hold to such repetition for so long--six months to a year--requires a good amount of mental and physical strength. In that sense, writing a long novel is like survival training. Physical strength is as necessary as artistic sensitivity.
Murakami is guided by what the great scholars, writers, thinkers, and creators of ancient Greece knew yet so many modern-day creators have abandoned.
The physical state of our bodies can either serve or subvert the quest to create genius. We all know this intuitively. But with rare exceptions, because life seems to value output over the humanity of the process and the ability to sustain genius, attention to health, fitness, and exercise almost always take a back seat.That's tragic. Choosing art over health rather than art fueled by health kills you faster; it also makes the process so much more miserable and leads to poorer, slower, less innovative, and shallower creative output.
As Dr. John Ratey noted in his seminal work Spark: The Revolutionary New Science of Exercise and the Brain (2008), exercise isn't just about physical health and appearance. It also has a profound effect on your brain chemistry, physiology, and neuroplasticity (the ability of the brain to literally rewire itself). It affects not only your ability to think, create, and solve, but your mood and ability to lean into uncertainty, risk, judgment, and anxiety in a substantial, measurable way, even though until very recently it's been consistently cast out as the therapeutic bastard child in lists of commonly accepted treatments for anxiety and depression.
In 2004 the esteemed New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM) published a review of treatments for generalized anxiety disorder that noted thirteen pharmaceuticals, each with a laundry list of side effects, but nothing about exercise. In response, NEJM published a letter by renowned cardiologists Richard Milani and Carl Lavie, who had written more than seventy papers on the effect of exercise on the heart, eleven of them focused on anxiety. That letter criticizes the original article for omitting exercise, which, the writers note, "has been shown to lead to reductions of more than 50 percent in the prevalence of the symptoms of anxiety. This supports exercise training as an additional method to reduce chronic anxiety."
Ratey details many data points on the connection between exercise and mind-set; among them the following:
- A 2004 study led by Joshua Broman-Fulks of the University of Southern Mississippi that showed students who walked at 50 percent of their maximum heart rates or ran on treadmills at 60 to 90 percent of their maximum heart rates reduced their sensitivity to anxiety, and that though rigorous exercise worked better. "Only the high intensity group felt less afraid of the physical symptoms of anxiety, and the distinction started to show up after just the second exercise session."
- A 2006 Dutch study of 19,288 twins and their families that demonstrated that those who exercised were "less anxious, less depressed, less neurotic, and also more socially outgoing."
- A 1999 Finnish study of 3,403 people that revealed that those who exercised two to three times a week "experience significantly less depression, anger, stress, and 'cynical distrust.'"
Ratey points to a number of proven chemical pathways, along with the brain's neuroplastic abilities, as the basis for these changes, arguing that exercise changes the expression of fear and anxiety, as well as the way the brain processes them from the inside out.
Studies now prove that aerobic exercise both increases the size of the prefrontal cortex and facilitates interaction between it and the amygdala. This is vitally important to creators because the prefrontal cortex, as we discussed earlier, is the part of the brain that helps tamp down the amygdala's fear and anxiety signals.
For artists, entrepreneurs, and any other driven creators, exercise is a powerful tool in the quest to help transform the persistent uncertainty, fear, and anxiety that accompanies the quest to create from a source of suffering into something less toxic, then potentially even into fuel.
This is not to suggest that anyone suffering from a generalized or trait (that is, long-term) anxiety disorder avoid professional help and self-treat with exercise alone. People who suffer from anxiety should not hesitate to seek out the guidance of a qualified mental health-care professional. The point is to apply the lessons from a growing body of research on the therapeutic effect of exercise on anxiety, mood, and fear to the often sustained low-level anxiety that rides organically along with the uncertainty of creation. Anyone involved in a creative endeavor should tap exercise as a potent elixir to help transform the uncomfortable sensation of anxiety from a source of pain and paralysis into something not only manageable but harnessable.
Exercise, it turns out, especially at higher levels of intensity, is an incredibly potent tool in the quest to train in the arts of the fear alchemist.
Still, a large number of artists and entrepreneurs resist exercise as a key element in their ability to do what they most want to do--make cool stuff that speaks to a lot of people. In the case of artists, I often wonder if that resistance is born of a cultural chasm that many artists grew up with, where jocks were jocks, artists were artists, hackers were hackers, and never the twain would meet. For more sedentary solo creators, historical assumptions about who exercises and who doesn't can impose some very real limits on a behavior that would be very beneficial on so many levels. On the entrepreneur side, the excuse I've heard (and used myself) over and over is "I'm launching a damn company and my hair's on fire. I don't have time to work out." The sad truth is that if we make the time to exercise, it makes us so much more productive and leads to such improved creativity, cognitive function, and mood that the time we need for doing it will open up and then some--making us so much happier and better at the art of creation, to boot.
Excerpted from Uncertainty by Jonathan Fields by arrangement with Portfolio Penguin, a member of Penguin Group (USA), Inc., Copyright (c) 2011 by Jonathan Fields.
[Image: Flickr user Thomas Hawk]
Tuesday, October 11, 2011
Fundraising Opportunity
One way you can get the community involved and raise funds for the program, is by allowing your community’s race participants to donate money towards Ready, Set, Run! Add an option to your race registration (5k, half-marathon, marathon) where participants can select a monetary amount which will go towards the RSR program. The money can go towards participant registration, facility costs & other overhead, race registration, etc. Be sure to explain the program and how the funds will be used. Here are a few examples:
Add a small donation to your registration, make a BIG difference. Ready, Set, Run! is a youth running program that takes kids through a character development curriculum while training them to complete a 5k run. Your donation will go to the registration fees for kids in OUR community to participate. ___ Yes, please add ($5, $10, $25) to my registration fee
Help a kid participate in this race! By donating ($5, $10, $25) in addition to your race registration fee, you will enable a child in the community to participate in this race. Our community hosted a Ready, Set, Run! program where kids trained to complete a 5k, your donation will help them complete their goal.
Become a HERO. By donating ($5, $10, $25) in addition to your race registration, you will enable kids in your community to participate in Ready, Set, Run: a national youth running program that covers character issues and prepares kids to complete a 5k. You donation will go towards the program costs: registration, overhead, and race fees. Be a HERO, get kids running!
Friday, October 7, 2011
Friday links
Thursday, September 29, 2011
words
Tuesday, September 27, 2011
tuesday greetings.
Friday, September 23, 2011
finding kind
Thursday, September 22, 2011
Steps
Friday, September 16, 2011
and the list goes on...
Thursday, September 8, 2011
media blitz
Friday, September 2, 2011
Grant Opportunity for school sites. RSR would be PERFECT for this!
Win $50,000 in Clorox’s Power A Bright Future school grant program |
Parents, teachers and administrators across the country can nominate their school for a chance to win a grand prize grant worth $50,000 or one of four grants worth $25,000 through the Clorox Company’s third annual Power A Bright Future program. Power A Bright Future celebrates all activities, from academic to extracurricular. Clorox seeks nominations to help provide resources to school programs that give kids the opportunity to grow and develop. The four categories – Play, Create, Explore and a Judge’s Choice – all focus on different aspects of educational experiences. These grants will be awarded to help fund important programs in schools that are vital for educational development. Click HERE to enter the contest or to obtain additional information. Nominations will be accepted until Oct. 17. Voting will take place Oct. 24 to Dec. 9 and winners will be announced in January of next year.
To view a video highlighting last year’s winners click HERE. |
Posted:8/31/2011
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Monday, August 22, 2011
finding your pace
Thursday, August 4, 2011
on a personal note:
Monday, August 1, 2011
SO COOL!
Wednesday, July 20, 2011
Ready, Set, Run! youth 5k program launches; now available worldwide |
Following successful implementation at several pilot sites across the country, the National Alliance for Youth Sports (NAYS) is launching Ready, Set, Run! to all youth-based programs across the country and on military bases worldwide. Ready, Set, Run! prepares children ages 8-13 to run a 5k in 12 weeks. While they build endurance and stamina through play-based activities, the children also go through character development curriculum that equips them with the goal-setting mentality that will help them throughout life. Other topics covered include enhancing confidence and self-esteem, respecting authority, dealing with peer pressure and fueling their bodies with proper nutrition. The curriculum is based on two 1½-hour sessions per week. Since it is a turn-key program complete with curriculum and materials, Ready, Set, Run! is easily added to the offerings of any youth-based program, such as those conducted by park and recreation agencies, Boys & Girls Clubs, independent youth sport organizations, military bases, home school groups, youth running clubs, YMCAs and afterschool programs. “Ready, Set, Run! offers a low-cost, fun and educational fitness program that provides children with the opportunity to learn and enjoy running,” said Erin Niemeyer, recreation coordinator at the Redwood City (Calif.) Parks, Recreation, and Community Services Department. Niemeyer chose to participate as a pilot program because she was looking to fill a need parents had for an activity that would increase their children’s overall fitness level and address important topics like confidence and teamwork. The program is designed to challenge youngsters as they progress through the curriculum. According to Ron Talain, a Ready, Set, Run! coach at Redwood City, “The kids showed definite improvement during the course. I felt gratified to see the kids improve and proud to see those that saw the program all the way through to the final run.” “It was great being a pilot site because we found this program to be innovative, fun and much needed in our community,” added Niemeyer. Ready, Set, Run! was a hit with both youngsters and adults at the Franklin Park Borough in Pennsylvania as well. “This has been a fantastic program,” said Jim Watenpool, parks and recreation director at Franklin Park. “The things I have seen the kids do in supporting and respecting each other was amazing.” “I like the fact that the kids had to work to obtain their goals – that it wasn’t about competing, but pushing themselves,” added one parent from Franklin Park. While Franklin Park Borough’s recreation department features a wide selection of programs for children of all ages, they did not have anything similar to Ready, Set, Run! “This program added another dimension to our programming,” Watenpool said. “It afforded us the opportunity to reach some children that were not interested in participating in any of our other programs.” “We’ve had incredible responses from entire communities where we tested the program,” said Kacey Lake, director of Ready, Set, Run! “Kids enjoy it and it really gets everyone it touches motivated to make healthy decisions. We can't wait to get more communities involved and change young lives through running.” Click HERE for more information about starting Ready, Set, Run! in your community and to review sample lessons from the Coordinator and Coach manuals, or email readysetrun@nays.org. |
Posted:7/18/2011 |