
Saturday, March 29, 2008
A stroll through Central Park

Monday, October 29, 2007
The marathon completed!
It's always an experience to ride these buses, which provide a $35 round trip between NYC and DC. One looks for a small crowd of people with bags (usually six or eight people if one arrives ten minutes early) waiting on a streetcorner. It's important to verify with at least two others who speak English that all are waiting for the same bus. At the appointed time, or even a few minutes early, a white, generally unmarked bus will round the corner. At this point, people come out of the woodwork to fill the bus. I'm always impressed with how a group of ten people expands to sixty when the bus pulls up!
On arriving to DC after a thankfully uneventful trip, I descended to the Chinatown Metro station and stood a few minutes baffled by the array of ticket choices. It seems one pays based on the distance traveled, rather than a flat fare as in New York. It's necessary to save the ticket to exit the Metro as well. I decided on the all-day pass for $6.50 and walked to my train.
The Metro, I must say, was eerily clean and quiet. It reminds me much more of London's Underground than of the Metro system's older domestic cousin a couple hundred miles to the north. The trains glide up to the platform as soft red lights flash along the edge, warning the absent-minded straphanger stand back for the approach. The stations feature huge barrel-vaulted ceilings reminiscent of New York's 168th Street station, only newer, cleaner, and starker. On board the carpeted train, I saw two people, at once, stand and insist that a woman with a toddler take their seats. (Have I changed so much after 16 months in the city? Have I grown so callous, so aloof? My feeling is that if there is as little as one open seat in the car, the young mother can take that one and seat the child on her lap. No reason to give up MY seat!)
Alison lives off the Cleveland Park stop on "The Red Line." I was amused hearing the locals call the lines by their respective colors on the Metro map. In New York, tourists are easy to spot as they wrestle with maps in blustery Midtown, ride pedicabs through Central Park, or career* through the streets on double-decker buses. But an even surer way of being nailed as a tourist is to call the 1 Train, "The Red Line," or refer to the 4,5,6 subway as "The Green Line." Silly Washingtonians! To be fair, I guess they have no need to differentiate between express and local lines.
Alison's neighborhood was charming. She lives in a four story renovated building just a couple blocks from the Metro stop. The walk their takes one past cafes with sidewalk seating and an old two-story firehouse. She parks her silver convertable Mini Cooper in a dilapidated brick stall off the alley, and her granite-countered, wood-floored apartment is home to two cats, one if which is probably the fattest I've seen.
I left my bag at Alison's before meeting up with Adam & Ashley, and friends Ernest and Sharon back downtown. We rode to Ernest and Sharon's house in Arlington where we rested for the afternoon. Adam, Ashley, and I watched college football and dozed in front of the TV while Ernest and Sharon attended a Halloween party. Since it got late, I crashed on the living room couch for the night rather than spend an hour trying to get back to Alison's.
The alarm clocks rang early the next morning! We parked near the Pentagon and joined the throngs of runners and well-wishers in the march around the gigantic building under the cool, pre-dawn sky. After a long wait for the porta-potty and a generous application of anti-chafing lube, Adam was ready to begin.
Adam and Ashley before the race.
Adam and his cheering section. From left, Sharon, Ernest, Ashley, Adam, and Jonathan.
The starting line. It took at least fifteen or twenty minutes for all the runners to pass through!
The first stretch!
We waited for Adam at mile 9, but somehow all four of us missed him! And that, in spite of real-time tracking available online: Adam's dad would call Ashley periodically with updates; the service also will text-message cell phones with updates on the runners' progress. Sadly, we weren't able to see Adam again until the finish line. Here's his final approach:
Wearing a medal proudly!

I didn't have too much time to hang out afterward; the others dropped me off in Chinatown for me to catch the bus back. As I waited, I ran into Becky and Carolyn, two friends from Baylor who both then went to church with me in Dallas. Becky lives in Washington now, and Carolyn was up visiting her.
It was a fun, but tiring, weekend. I arrived at my 125th Street station around 2200. It was somehow comforting to be back to the density, the noise, the dirty, screeching subways, and the cool night air of New York City.
Congratulations, Adam!
Saturday, October 27, 2007
The Marine Corps Marathon
Sunday, July 29, 2007
Calm before the storm
I worked Monday through Friday nights (1900 to 0800), and then was off for 24 hours until Sunday morning. Today I'm working a 24 hour shift before reporting for duty in the ICU at 0700. The day has been filled doing little things like adjusting patient-controlled analgesia orders, pulling out epidurals, checking on a patient whose epidural accidentally came out while her blood was anticoagulated (we wanted to make sure she didn't have the potentially devastating complication of an epidural hematoma), and adjusting an overly confused and somnolent patient's medications. (Oxycodone is worth a shot to minimize unwanted side effects.)
Yesterday was a good day. After coming home, I quickly changed and went for my long run in Central Park. Two loops around made as 12 mile run. The first loop was done in 52 minutes (what I felt was a gentle pace), and the second loop, though I felt I pushed harder, took 55 minutes, bringing my total time to 107 minutes including water breaks. I'm not unhappy with this time, though I would like to work toward eight-and-a-half minute miles. And given the warm, humid weather, this was a good chance to practice disciplined hydration. I noticed that chugging six or seven gulps of water every couple of miles makes a big difference.
Because I've worked up a little more gradually to this long run (compared to the half-marathon I did in April), I believe it was a little easier on my body. Sure I was sore afterward, but I didn't feel as much of an old man as I did after increasing my distances very quickly. I'm beginning to appreciate the wisdom of training carefully to avoid injury.
And lastly, a quick update about my black runner's toe. I will spare those with a more delicate constitution a picture. Evidently it is common for runners to develop bruising both under the toenail and at the very tip of the digit. Most often, it is caused by shoes that fit too snugly, though increasing distances too quickly may also contribute. Both of these factors may apply in my case, since I tend to buy shoes that fit well. At one point, I was worried I would lose the toenail on my right second toe since it lifted as easily (and painlessly) as one might lift the hood of a Chevy. However, the brusing seems to have healed a bit over the last few days, and the toenail is reaffirming its grasp on the little fleshy nubbin.
The rest of the day was spent packing, going through paperwork, and in the evening Mauricio brought a movie over: Wes Anderson's Rushmore. I fed him one of my Trader Joe's BBQ Chicken pizzas, leftover salad, broccoli, and pineapple juice. (Mauricio really likes juice, I have discovered.)
Monday, July 23, 2007
Running update
- a 4.9 mile "tempo" run in Central Park (8:07-minute miles),
- a five-mile treadmill "hill" run (3-4% grade at 8:34-minute miles),
- a ten-mile "long" run along Riverside Park on Saturday (8:54-minute miles),
- and a six-mile "easy" run on Sunday (8:14 minute miles).
My easy run didn't turn out to be so easy. I found myself trying to keep a good pace and really pushed myself up Cat Hill just pass the Boathouse. Only a handful of runners passed me on the six-mile course which tells me my pace is decent. (One was bare-chested and wearing a heart-rate monitor, so I'm not going to worry about him.)
Runners' World magazine's online training log helps me keep track of my progress. One of the best features is an integrated google-maps feature that lets me plot my route, and the computer tells me the distance I ran. I suspect the ten-mile run was actually farther, given that the running path's multiple twists and turns are not well reflected on the route I traced along the Hudson River. In that case, my time per mile should be even less.
It might be a stretch, but I think a goal coming into focus would be to do the marathon in 3:30 hours, which would be eight-minute miles. I definitely have a lot of work to do between now and October 28. My friend Adam, who also happens to be running the Marine Corps Marathon, has made that his goal. It would be great to be able to run with him.
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* I usually think of Saturday as the last day of the week. I find myself disliking corporate calendars that start the week on Monday since it seems very work-oriented. My online training log, however, places Sunday as day 7. (Seems theologically appropriate for a day of rest, but I'm not sure that's what they had in mind.) Hence, my running week ends on Sunday.
Sunday, July 22, 2007
* Running & Gypsy
A near perfect Saturday:

- Waking up to sunshine streaming in the window; no alarm
- Ten mile run along the Hudson River
- Nap (one hour)
- Lunch. An episode of The Office with audio commentary.
- Nap 2 (thirty minutes)
- Doing this and that around the apartment
- Picking up last-minute tickets for Gypsy with Patty LuPone, a must-see according to roommate Clay. I talked Mauricio into coming. (This was easy: "Hey Mauricio, do you want to go to a musical?" "Sure.")
- Lounging around Midtown waiting for the show.
- Light dinner of feta-cheese-on-puff-pastry pie and hot tea
- Gypsy. The show was okay, but Patty LuPone as the lead role, Rose, was outstanding. She carried the show, and the audience knew it as it gave her an immediate standing ovation and round after round of applause which filled the historic City Center theater.
- Sitting two rows behind Rebecca Romijn. (I didn't recognize her at the time without her blue Mystique costume.)
- Quizzing Mauricio on the nuances of the English language. Of the non-native speakers I've encountered, Mauricio has by far the best vocabulary; indeed his command of the language is better than most native speakers I know. I wasn't even able to stump him with the the word recidivism.

Tuesday, June 12, 2007
More milestones and angina
Four miles at 1% grade: Done today, on treadmill, in under 32 minutes.
On Saturday I ran the big loop again in the park with Justin and Ezer, My time was right at 52 minutes, which is a full minute slower than my best time; then again, it was considerably warmer and very humid Saturday morning.
The last half-mile or so, leading up the hill to the corner of Central Park West and 110th Street, I really started pushing myself. Within 100 meters of the end, however, I started feeling chest tightness that radiated to the neck and nausea! The sensation stopped nearly immediately once I slowed my pace.
I know what exercising at 15-16 METS feels like, and I believe I was doing considerably more than that, given the grade of the hill and my speed. But still, the experience brought about a good deal of existential clarification when it comes to the concept of angina. I suspected that I was feeling a demand ischemia.
I mentioned this experience to one of the ICU Anesthesiologists, who scoffed at the idea that the pain was cardiac in origin. He mentioned chest wall tightness. I'm doubtful. Theoretically, if the heart rate were not limited by intrinisic properties, someone young like me might push his heart rate to the point where the organ demands more oxygen than can be delivered. This doesn't mean I have coronary artery disease. Just a heart that can beat faster, perhaps, than it should.
It's hard to imagine someone feeling the sensation I felt (but sustained and not relieved by rest) and not take himself immediately to the hospital! Scary!
And if you work for Aetna and happen to be reading this, my identity is obscured for a reason!
Monday, April 30, 2007
How to spend a weekend without cracking a book

- Home fellowship group at Andy & Anna's on Friday night. Andy was back in town from Abu Dhabi.
- Running with Ezer in the park Saturday morning. We waited for Andy to join us for about ten minutes at the 72nd Street entrance, but unfortunately he was kept up at night by Montezuma's Revenge.
- Visiting the small but quaint Inwood Farmer's Market with Adrian and Wendy. We let Max play in the nearby dog run in Inwood Hill Park afterward.
- Visiting the new Greek and Roman exhibit at the Metropolitan Museum with my mistress home fellowship group--Dustin, Mavis, Mauricio, Carrie, and Cindy.
- My first trip to the Metropolitan Opera to see Puccini's Turandot with Hansen and his friend Bori. I've seen a number of operas, but have never seen so many "stops" pulled out for a finale! (I suppose when The Met wants to wow its guests, it has the ability and the know-how to do so!) The highlight of the opera was the haunting voice of Liping Zhang, singing the part of Liu. Her arias, though not as intrinsically magical as Nessun Dorma, were exquisitely sung. So much so, that when I considered buying one or two on iTunes, I was disappointed by the recorded arias themselves. I think it was simply her voice that infused the music with energy and crystalline beauty.
- Church and nursery duty on Sunday.
- Blind date Sunday afternoon. I thought meeting for lunch would be a casual first date, but unfortunately that didn't work out because of our schedules. So we met at 5:00 at Columbus Circle. I'd brought some things for a picnic in the park, and was later told by some of my lady friends that a picnic in the park is not a casual, low-pressure first date. Oops.

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Saturday, April 28, 2007
Marathon update
We ran about 1.2 miles to the park, and then two big loops of 6.2 miles each. The hardest part of the run was about 7.4 miles into it, just as we were beginning the second big loop. A number of factors converged to make this stretch remarkably painful, primarily in a respiratory sort of way:
- Psychologically, I realized I was only at a half-way point and still had a large loop left to run.
- This stretch is one of the steepest uphill parts of the loop in Central Park.
- I had a little remaining upper airway congestion from the week before.
- Being half-way, I decided to eat the high-carb chocolate gel packet Ezer had given me, making breathing very difficult.
The end of the run, however, was marked by a sense of exhilaration that comes naturally after a run (endorphins?) as well as being happy to have run farther than ever before.
Thursday, April 26, 2007
Spring has arrived

After work today, I went home and changed before heading down to Columbus Circle to begin another tour of Central Park. 6.2 miles, 52 minutes. The park today, Thursday, April 26, was amazing. I hesitate to describe it because I know my words won't be sufficient. It was like taking a jog through a beautiful postcard. The weather, of course, was close to sixty degrees, and the afternoon sunbeams slanted in over the rooftops along Central Park West. The redbud, cherry, and dogwood trees were blooming. Faint floral scents were in the air (except for in the southeast corner where I smelled the horses). Yellow daffodils were still blooming, as were the tulips and yellow shrubs. A short detour up on the Reservoir path granted me sweeping views of the skyline over the still blue water. In short, it's hard to imagine a more perfect running path. Today, perhaps as never before, I appreciated this jewel in the heart of the urban jungle of New York City.

(I found these photos of the park on the internet. They capture a bit of what the run was like, only it was beautiful scene followed by beautiful scene for nearly an hour!)
Monday, April 23, 2007
Marathon Milestones
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S1 4 miles in 32 minutes (done)
S2 4 miles in 30 minutes (done today with a time of 29:17! Granted, it was on a treadmill)
S3 4 miles in 28 minutes
S4 6 miles in 45 minutes
S5 8 miles in 60 minutes
Distance Goals
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D1 4 miles (done)
D2 6 miles (done 4-19-2007)
D3 8 miles
D4 10 miles
D5 14 miles
D6 18 miles
D7 22 miles
D8 marathon
Friday, April 20, 2007
Another post-call day and a running milestone









