Category Archives: life goals

This is my city. Running is my happy place. Writing is cathartic.

On the Sunday night before Patriots Day I laced up my sneakers and jogged down Norfolk St in Cambridge. I took a left, then cut over to Hampshire and down through Kendall Square. I crossed Land Boulevard, ducked under the bridge and did a quick loop around that weird pond in front of the mall.

Back out by the Cambridge Yacht Club, I picked up the pace and started cruising along the Charles River path. It was dusk and groups of runners were all out doing their pre-marathon tune ups. I smiled with them and with my city and with the gorgeous night and with the perfect day to come.

The skyline was sparkling and, even though I’ve taken this Exact. Same. Picture. at least a few dozen times, I pulled out my phone and snapped it again. “Lookin’ good, Boston,” I thought. “Happy Marathon Eve.”

2013-04-15 18.33.39

Writing is cathartic for me. And I’ve taken the past week harder than I might have expected. So I’m writing.

The where-were-you brief: At my friend’s house, on Hereford and Newbury. I was leaning way out of the first floor window to cheer on runners when I felt the bombs go off. Then we smelled smoke, heard the sirens, saw a marathon of people running back down Hereford collide with runners still en route to the finish. I started refreshing Twitter like crazy.  Someone turned on the TV. We began ushering stray runners into the house. A cop told us to shut the windows.

Some of my medically trained friends ran to the scene. Others comforted the displaced runners with blankets, beverages and food. We checked in with our people. It was awful and confusing, but I was so, so, proud of how my friends inside and the whole city outside seemed to be responding. Truly – it felt like we all just knew that this is how you come together, this is what you do.

None of my inner circle were hurt or killed. I am forever thankful for that. But like everyone else in this truly tiny city, I’m only a connection or two away from those who lost everything. It’s impossible not to feel like this was a personal attack. Like a flap of the butterfly wings and the scene would have shuffled. It could be any one of us devastated.

Last week as the police looked for the killers, with this closeness of our small city heavy on my mind, I found myself repeating Martin Richard’s words over and over: No more hurting people. Peace. It was a loop that didn’t stop. The words just kept playing in my head.

This is my city. Running is my happy place. There is nothing, nothing more pure and innocent and near to my heart than the people who come out and cheer on Patriots Day. I’ve run two marathons and I know for a fact: normal people cannot run 26.2 miles with out the people who watch marathons. Running a marathon is a selfish endeavor and the spectators give selflessly of their time and energy and love simply to help others overcome their own self-doubt. It is beautiful. (A writer that I really like put this in a way that hit home, I’m borrowing from her to help put the idea down in words.)

Who are these evil bastards. You did NOT do this to these amazing people in this amazing city. No.

No more hurting people. Peace.

Meanwhile, I was feeling horribly, horribly guilty. Worse things than this happen all the time. Sandy Hook. Was worse. From a sheer loss of life and catastrophe of the human condition. I think Sandy Hook was worse. And that’s just the most recent. Of course I felt horrible then. But I didn’t dwell on it. I didn’t hunt for news or change my facebook banner and start using supportive hashtags. I didn’t give money. Now I was feeling so guilty and selfish for feeling so miserable and angry. Meta-guilt on the selfish anger on the deep sadness.

On Thursday night I was in DC, at a conference. Still checking Twitter every, oh, 30 to 45 seconds, when I saw that a cop had been shot at MIT.

“Oh, eff.” I tweeted. Not realizing yet that it was connected. What followed and watching the ensuing chase through twitter and the police scanner was a crazy experience in real-time news. Worthy of a blog post in and of itself. But when I finally went to sleep at 3:30 on Friday morning it seemed possible that they might, maybe, figure out who did this. Maybe we’d get some answers.

My alarm went off at 5:30 so I could send a draft of something to a colleague. I kept checking Twitter incessantly and at some point it became clear that the killers now had names. And an address. And – ohwhatinthebloodyhell – they’re my neighbors.

For the rest of Friday in DC I watched my street on the news, monitored the lock down, sent texts to neighbors and checked our building Facebook page. My favorite day, my city, my sport and now my NEIGHBORHOOD?  This seemed ridiculous. Again with the sadness and the anger and then the guilt for being selfish, because of course this isn’t about me and I’m fine and my people are fine, so stop freaking out about the fact that you’ve been living 400 feet from two murderers.  But it was like a vortex for a few days – I just wanted to know more and more about the two killers, try to understand, catch a glimpse of something, anything, that could have tipped me off or shown me a sign. I kept reading even past the point where there was anything new to read. It was all encompassing. I came down with a cold – made myself actually sick over it.

Finally, today, I let go of the guilt part.

During the moment of silence on Monday I went down to MIT and stood in the human chain for Officer Collier. I held hands with two strangers and then walked over the bridge and cried at the memorial near Boylston. I went for a long run tonight and listened to an amazing live radio discussion on WBUR. I decided that it’s pointless to feel guilty about my feelings. There are more positive things to do with these feelings.

I’m going to thank our police officers and first responders without restraint. I’m going mourn deeply for the lives lost. I’m going to try to understand other people, where before I might have just written them off. I’m going to cheer for the injured as they learn to walk and run again. I’m going to do my darndest to get a number and run Boston next year and I’m going to turn right on Hereford and left on Boylston and cross the finish line with a giant grin on my face and I’m going to hug the living daylights out of the first spectator I see.

We’re one Boston and we’re one human kind.

No more hurting people. Peace.

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Awkward and uncomfortable: A theatrical commentary

Recommended viewing: Photograph 51 at Central Square Theatre.

It’s a quick 90-minute (pee first, no intermission) play by Anna Ziegler that tracks the period in 1951-53 leading up to the publication of Watson & Crick’s paper on the structure of DNA. I feel like most people by now were at least taught the basics of the story – a number of labs were working out the structure of DNA, but Watson and Crick got there first and shared the Nobel prize with Maurice Wilkins. This prize completely left out Rosalind Franklin, who did most of the x-ray crystallography that eventually proved out the model.

image from centralsquaretheatre.org

It’s a clear injustice, amplified by the fact that Dr. Franklin died of ovarian cancer shortly after Watson and Crick’s paper was published. Despite this, Rosalind Franklin is far from a sympathetic character. She’s actually fairly horrible. The male characters repeatedly insist that they’ve been nothing but “nice” and have done all the appropriate things that “women always like” but she remains hostile and defensive.

Of course it’s clear that acting like a woman isn’t an option – the men have no real regard or respect for any other women in the play, all of whom exist only referentially in vague off-stage locations.

But she can’t be one of those boys either. Watson and Crick are portrayed in a raucous bromance starkly contrasted to Dr. Franklin’s scientific tunnel vision. They share similar backgrounds, similar work styles and have a similar sense of humor. It’s clear that nothing in Dr. Franklin’s upbringing would have prepared her to be a woman in the boy’s club. She’s left in an isolated lab of her own making.

At one point Jim Watson does approach Rosalind to suggest that maybe they’d find the answer sooner working together. But by that point Dr. Franklin has already hermetically sealed off her science.

Photograph 51 was about more than gender, I think, and as we become more gender- and color- and nationality-blind as a society (hopefully) we still have to remind ourselves – maybe even more strongly – that it’s important to actively seek out people with different life experiences, different backgrounds and different points of view. Dr. Franklin was ostracized because she made the men feel uncomfortable and awkward in their own world.

It’s easy (and fun!) to find a tribe and then sit around self-congratulating each other all day. While historically interesting, (and mad props to all the ladies who paved the way in science and business) I left Photograph 51 with a more modern reminder to strive for uncomfortable and awkward situations as often as possible. If it feels easy, I’m probably doing it wrong.

It is impossible to have answers to all the important questions

With the high velocity of change in the world, it is impossible to have answers to all the important questions. Much more important is a deep curiosity about the world and the ability to frame the right questions in profound ways.

- from Five Resolutions for Aspiring Leaders, Harvard Business Review

Truthfully, I love resolutions and hate to see them confined to a few mid-winter days. With that in mind I didn’t plan on a New Year’s resolution post, but something about that quote up there inspired me to write down a handful of ideas for this year.

1. Ask more questions than I answer.

2. Expatriate whenever possible.

3. Act with intention [a perennial and ongoing resolution. progress is slow but certain]

4. Organize my information more efficiently [ugh, suggestions welcome]

5. Be on fire.

 

Good luck out there. Love.

Baby, you can buy my car. Maybe.

I’m putting some serious thought into selling my car.

The math says that with a combination of my feet, my bike, ZipCar, Uber, cabs, the T and who knows, a rickshaw pedicab chauffeured pony, I would save serious cashmoney and still be able to get to all my important and non-important engagements.

Furthermore, I really don’t even *like* driving. And I’ve always said I want to not own a car. Right?

Now that I work less than a mile from my house, it’s a totally feasible proposition. What I’m concerned about, though, is that in six months I’ll forget how damn expensive my car was ($20/day if you’re counting) and start feeling that $40 for a ZipCar is too much to get to Blue Hills for a trail run. Or that it’s not worth it to rent a car for a couple hundred bucks for a long ski weekend. Even though it would work out cheaper in the end than owning my car. And how would I get to triathlons? I’m sure I could bum rides, but that feels like a lot of… work.

Is it worth paying a premium for carte blanche to drive,  even though my car sits in the ($125/month) garage for weeks on end? Am I secretly just a gas-guzzling hypocrite?

Hmmmmm.

On another note. Does anyone want to dramatically overpay for a 2002 VW Beetle?

[I would include a picture of my car here, but the rust spots, dents, dings, burned out headlights, odd grinding noise and giant hole in the rear wheel-well might discourage you from overpaying. Maybe I should just keep 'im. We're made for each other.]

Shoe leather

In 2008, I ran the Boston Half Marathon in 2:10 at a 9.57/mile pace. Today I finished in 1:46 at an 8.06/mile pace. It took a lot (a lot) of shoe leather to get here, but crushing my own expectations under a sunny sky with a bunch of awesome friends? I think this grin says it all:

After the 2011 BAA Half

"You actually just have to fill in some info and click send. It’s really easy. I’m happy to help you through it."

That is how you run a marathon, according to a dear running buddy of mine. And so,with the click of a mouse I’m an official registrant in the Philadelphia Marathon on Nov 20th. 

Lots of moving parts this fall. Let’s roll.

If this doesn’t make your day, well. I can’t help you.

“Some people where I am don’t do anything. Nothing. They just sit. That would be boring to me.” – Hortense Morris, going kayaking for the first time on the occasion of her 99th birthday.

And many more Mrs. Morris, many more.

http://c.brightcove.com/services/viewer/federated_f9?isVid=1&isUI=1