Tuesday, July 26, 2011

Dorkin' Out with Team Garmin-Cervelo

Forerunner 110
So I have a bit of a crush on Thor Hushvod and I am happy to finally have given myself a moment to blog about it.  Watching Le Tour this year has been inspiring me to "take the high road" i.e. do some climbing on my morning commute.  It also encouraged me to set goals and develop a winning team, so I was stoked when team Garmin-Cervelo won the team competition in Le Tour.  At my bicycle club Winter Holiday Party last year, we did a white elephant gift exchange and I got a DVD called Beyond the Peloton.  That's how I got the crush.

Anyway, I got a Garmin Forerunner 110 as a gift from my husband last month and so far it is pretty cool.  I can easily see the route if I upload the data to MapMyRide, which I had been doing before manually and sometimes it would take quite a bit of time to remember where I had gone.  The Garmin works for both running and biking (that I have tested) but all my workouts seem to upload with a "run" default setting and I have not yet figured out how to change that.  Other than that it beeps at me at each mile.  That's kind of encouraging.  I track my workouts under the username fb.KayK.679.  Then I can see if I'm overtraining in one area or another (biking/running/aerobics).  Also I can track my weight and mood and how that corresponds to what I've been doing.  At least that's what I use it for.  I used to post my workout stats to a Leaderboard with another club member, to compare things like distance, calories, pace and weight, which was also pretty motivating.  Supposedly you can swim with the Forerunner 110 too, as long as you don't dive.

So should I retire the Nike+ device (see prev posts RE: elation, frustration, realization, and commiseration)...  Well the watch/USB fob logged 89 miles, the shoes have 231 miles.  So it worked about 38% of the time, give or take my accuracy in uploading workouts manually.  The Nike+ system seems in retrospect more geared to Apple users and I am not one of those.  No iTunes for me, but for those who do, it has the potential to coordinate your playlist with your run.  So I guess I may give in to my Garmin.  Especially since the Nike+ was not compatible with cycling.  MapMyFitness has all kinds of features besides cycling, so overall I am happy with that platform, even though most of my profile is cycling-related and I access it through MapMyRide.  I know they have a good iPhone app, but I use my Sanyo SCP-2700, which is just as good for me.  Speaking of triathlons, I dropped my phone in the jacuzzi in La Jolla, took it apart, let it dry out for 3 days, put it back together and it is still working fine.  The Nike+ wristband has been a handy watch even when it didn't work for uploading run data.  I don't think I'll trash it just yet.

While I'm doing a technology review, [ahem, avoiding writing my dissertation] I might as well tell you about my Shell Eee PC. "Easy to learn, easy to work, easy to play" (Eee) is the company motto and I think they did a good job.  I've had it since before I went overseas (over a year).  It has been my video phone for Skype (low-cost international) calling and videoconferencing.  I've written my dissertation on it, thanks to a large hard drive (250GB).  I am addicted to multitasking and the Intel Atom processor has yet to overheat like my previous Tablet PC.  Which my dad and I tried to fix like this, and then had to take it in for service to get a new mother board put in.  I installed Google chrome for browsing and use pretty much the entire Google suite of cloud computing solutions.  And just now, I had forgotten to save the entire above writing and it restored itself.  It weighs less than 4 pounds with AC adapter and I can take it everywhere on my bike.  Obviously I use it to track my wellness activities.  Also I use it to back up photos taken with my phone.  All this technology supported my husband and I while living apart for the past year and a half.  I tagged this post "green" because the Eee PC's annual electrical consumption is less than $3.

I tagged this post "weight loss" because I am back in a size 8 for wedding season.  Hurrah!

Monday, July 18, 2011

A liberated woman!

GREEN STATS from MAPMYRIDE.com Since 02/18/2009
Total Workout Days: 496 
Distance Traveled: 4,547.33 mi.
Gas Saved: 252.63 gallons 
Money Saved: $879.15 
Carbon Offset: 4,890.9 lbs. of CO2
Total Burned: 203,916 (kcal)


My bicycle liberates me from a dependence on gasoline.  My bicycle liberates me from excess body fat.  My bicycle liberates me from sitting in traffic jams.  My bicycle liberates me from anxiety and depression, bringing me closer to my friends and relatives.  The bicycle liberated women from having to wear 35 pounds of heavy dress (as was common prior to 1890s, before the golden age of cycling, around the time of the founding of my bicycle club). 




Viva Le Tour de France!

Wednesday, July 6, 2011

Crossroads

You know how sometimes a concept gets stuck in your head and you can't shake it and you don't know why or how it got there?  It's times like those when I put pen to paper (so to speak) or in this case fingers to keyboard.  If I can't flush out the meaning by exploring my own thoughts, then there's no hope for me as a writer.

So the theme of a crossroads keeps popping into my head.  In the context of life, research, birthdays... thinking about each aspect of my life seems to land me at a crossroads.  Got me thinking about the blues, i.e. Robert Johnson, selling my soul to the devil for a mess of talent in one specific medium (guitar or chromatography or writing for example).  Let's say this is the dark side of being at a crossroads, being somewhere mystical (between worlds).  Desperation, confusion and danger seem to previal in this concept of a crossroads.  Criminals and those who took their own lives were traditionally buried at crossroads.  I wonder if there is any astrological significance to this day or week...

I was also thinking about crossroads in terms of travels, knowledge and ideas.  Certain places become wealthy of thought by being geographically positioned at a crossroads.  Different cultures encounter each other and exchange of wisdom is mutually beneficial.  The same could be said for academia and our IGERT training program being a crossroads between traditional disciplines.  This seems to be a rosy view of the meaning of a crossroads.

Finally we come to discuss my birthday.  Finding onesself "at a crossroads" implies that one is literally in crisis.  A crossroads is a turning point, with an unpredictible outcome.  Personal crisis occurs when events trigger extreme tension and stress within an individual which require major decisions or actions to resolve.  Crisis can also mean "a testing time" or "emergency event."  I would say the culmination of my life's educational phase and entry into professional work is such a type of crisis.  Not to mention preparing to defend my dissertation, which is a battle of its own.  Becoming truly an adult, potentially a mother, and owning up to my new status in society... I am at these crossroads.

There's also somewhere in my psyche poems by Robert Frost and the ethos of the Cowboy Way in contrast with Kit McCallum where the twentieth century message of choosing to take the "high road" is updated to something more like "choose the best road for you or make your own road" rather than bending to society's pressures regarding which road is the best.  I'm not sure how to choose where to go from here, to be honest.  I guess I need to slow down and keep setting aside time for myself to think and process everything that is going on in my life right now.

The crossroads is represented visually by the christian cross and the mandala, which are useful in meditation practice for focusing attention and according to Carl Jung help the artist work towards wholeness in personality.  My dear roommate has encouraged me to draw lately.  Perhaps the mandala is the way to go.