Categories
awesome movie review

Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter

Try, for a moment, to imagine the most ridiculously awesome thing possible. Imagine a unicorn composed of woven rainbows and cotton candy with hooves of chiming silver bells and a goofy, horsey smile. Imagine this unicorn galloping across a sky made of pie and pudding and baby giggles while Eric Prydz’s Call On Me remix plays in an endless disco loop in the background. And on this unicorn’s back are Lady Gaga and Tom Hiddleston, wearing matching meat dresses, holding hands and singing along while fireworks and magical sparkles burst into being and simultaneously Chuck Norris roundhouse kicks a velociraptor in the face over and over again for all eternity.

Got that all?

Okay. Now imagine something even more awesome.

You can’t.

That’s because you haven’t seen Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter yet. You lack the necessary vocabulary for the sort of awesome we’re talking about here.

Let me put it to you straight. This is not a good movie. God no. The pacing gets weird, some of the characters can’t seem to figure out who exactly they are from one scene to another, and to call some of the dialog cringe-inducing would be a kindness. And it doesn’t actually matter.

Because let’s be honest. You aren’t watching this movie because you want to watch something good. You’re watching it because you want to see Abraham Motherfucking Lincoln kill a shitload of vampires. With an ax. Which he twirls around like he’s in the color guard contingent recruited directly from Hell. You’re watching this moving because it’s shit-eating-grin cracked-out fun.

Which is exactly what it is. Anyone who tries to take this movie seriously (or thinks this movie is in any way taking itself seriously) is missing the point entirely. It’s not supposed to be serious, or good, or compelling. It’s supposed to be a thing that makes you giggle so hard with pure, child-like glee that you think you’re going to strain a muscle in your face.

I paid $10.50 to see this movie and I feel like I got every penny of enjoyment I was owed and more, from the first ridiculous moment of bitty Abraham Lincoln running at a bad guy with a hatchet to the first part of the credits where they make a map of the US out of flowing cgi blood.

Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter is one of those rare movies where what you saw in the trailer is exactly what you get out of the movie. So if you watched the trailer and thought “Hell yeah I want to eat some fucking popcorn and watch vampires with bad southern accents get chopped apart in random moments of super slow motion” then go to your theater, throw money at them, and get on your goddamn magic unicorn.

If me stating: Dude. It’s a hatchet. With a gun in it. It’s a fucking HATCHETGUN, doesn’t make you want to instantly reach through the internet and engage in a serious brofist, this is not the movie for you.

Trust me.

Honest as Abe.

Categories
books science fiction

Embassytown

I’ve finally found a way to love China Miéville.

Which I feel really guilty about. Not loving him before, that is. I’ve tried to read The City and the City and Kraken and I ended up giving up on both books. I couldn’t get into them. The prose was beautiful and simultaneously felt entirely opaque to me.

And for once, this isn’t one I blame the author for. I feel like there’s some sort of inner disfunction that I have going, preventing me from really sinking into the story. I’m a bit lazy as a reader, sometimes, and I tend to give up on challenging things because I’d rather read about people shooting at each other after I’ve had a brain-melting day at work.

However.

I decided I was going to read Embassytown since it’s on the Hugo list, and I’m being a responsible voter. To be honest, I was dreading it a little, since I remember too well beating my head against The City and the City and feeling horribly guilty when I couldn’t do it. Then, when I was asking for audiobook recommendations so I’d have something to listen to on long rides and the amazing Janiece suggested Embassytown. I gave it a try.

Riding along at 18mph and sweating fit to die is apparently a place where I can stop wrestling with prose and just absorb it. I let the words wash over me while I’m building up a good burn, and they just are. It was wonderful, and I finally understand why people have such fabulous things to say about China Miéville’s books.

I’m thinking this might just be how China Miéville’s works are meant to be consumed, at least by me. I think I’ll try The City and the City once I run through my current set of books and see if I like it as much.

By the way? The actual book itself is very interesting. The aliens he came up with are utterly fascinating. There was a place or two where I could have done with a little less exposition, and some of the speechifying at the end went on a little for my tastes, but I found the characters compelling and the culture interesting. So I definitely recommend it. In audiobook format, of course.

Categories
feminism

Avon called and I didn’t answer.

Someone leaves Avon catalogs in the ladies’ restroom that’s nearest my office. I have no idea who. Sometimes I look at them, because, you know. Anyone who claims they’ve never wanted a little reading material in the bathroom is lying, or possibly just made of plastic.

The Avon catalog is something I manifestly Do Not Get. Its contents are a complete mystery to me, with the possible exception of the nail polish. At the age of thirty-one, I still have no idea how to put on makeup as anything more than an abstract. I have two sets of makeup, both of which were bought for weddings with the help of friends (one for mine, one for my friend Marie’s) and they sit in a little bag in the corner of the linen closet, exiled for all time. For both those sets of makeup, I had to have someone actually apply it to my face, because I’m utterly incompetent at it.

As far as I can remember, my mother never wore makeup when I was growing up. (And still doesn’t now.) Perhaps that’s why it was never a thing that was on my radar. A friend I had in grade school had one of those awful play makeup sets, and I recall spending one afternoon messing with it before the charm was completely lost. Maybe I had more overtly feminine [coded] moments when I was even younger, but if so I can’t remember them any longer.

I have this weird, occasional pang where I wonder if I ought to make it my business to learn how to wear makeup properly, build up a little stock, actually do the thing occasionally. Considering it’s not something I actually want, that fleeting thought never experiences any kind of follow-up. It could be that I’m just that lazy. It could also be that I don’t like how makeup feels on my face, and I don’t really like how it makes me look not myself – that can’t be Rachael, she doesn’t wear lipstick.

It’s not just the makeup that I don’t get. It’s the jewelry. I have eight earrings which cannot be removed without using pliers, and I never get around to wearing anything in my earlobes, the only place earrings can be easily changed. The only other jewelry I ever wear is my wedding band and my Thor’s Hammer necklace, because that’s like an automatic tic where I roll out of bed, turn off the alarm and slip the leather string over my head. A catalog full of cheap but cute jewelry, little bits of shiny that are meant to be combined with specific outfits leaves me utterly mystified. I want my shiny utilitarian, daily wear, and by preference not all that shiny.

It’s also the dresses, the obviously disposable shoes that are very pretty but would functionally be horrific to wear. I don’t want to think about running stairs in those things. And don’t the fake flowers glued on to the sandal straps make your feet itch? Every now and then when I’m at Lane Bryant, desperately trying to find a shirt I can wear for work that doesn’t make me feel ridiculous because it has ruffles on it, I try on a dress and feel utterly silly.

All of these things, I just don’t understand. My happy place is a tank top, jeans, and Pumas. Or bike shorts and an Arrogant Bastard jersey. So why is it that every now and then, I have this weird, almost guilty pang, as if something awful in the back of my brain is whispering, you’re a girl, you should get this stuff.

It’s total bullshit, of course. It’s just fine if there are people who like shiny and makeup and brightly colored things. It should be just as fine for there to be people who don’t. And it should be fine that I’m one of those people. So where does this thought even come from? Alien mind control slug? It doesn’t even feel like something I’d think, and it never goes further than me trying on a dress, looking in the mirror, and going Oh hell no.

Sometimes I like to imagine that maybe there’s a boy out there who got my societally mandated portion of shiny and makeup. I hope he looks utterly gorgeous. And I hope all of his friends are as understanding of him as mine are of me and my complete inability to even want to wear eye shadow.

Categories
bugs texas texas scares me

Roly poly interlopers

Just today, I’ve removed three pillbugs from my apartment. I have no idea where they’re coming from, but they really like to hang around my kitchen. Maybe they’re hoping for a cup of tea. Or a beer, it’s pretty hot out even in the morning.

Pillbugs are the least offensive arthropods I’ve encountered since moving to Texas. There’s the giant cockroaches that everyone tries to pretend are okay by calling them palmetto bugs, but let’s not kid ourselves. There’s the tactical mosquitos. There’s the thing in my bathroom that I crushed with a wad of toilet paper this morning that we will not speak of further. There was the other thing that I encountered in my shower, which I mercifully can only remember as a mahogany-colored blob (I wasn’t wearing my glasses at the time) that I beat into a disturbingly large smear with a shampoo bottle.

I’ve got fond memories of pillbugs from growing up. What kid hasn’t had fun poking these little guys and watching them curl up into little grey-black, segmented pills?

Pillbugs are crustaceans (so they have blue blood), they breathe through gills (but spend all their life on land), and they’re exceedingly cute. They also tickle if you let them walk across your skin, kind of like millipedes. They also eat their own poop (to recover excreted copper), but thankfully have not done so in my presence.

Apparently the ones in Texas are mostlyArmadillium vulgare, which I’m pretty sure are the same ones we have in Colorado. I think it’s pretty neat that their family name is Armidillidiidae, which I’m guessing was named for armadillos, since those can also curl up into a ball. Though unlike pillbugs, armadillos aren’t nearly as cute and can apparently seriously fuck up your car if you run over one. Armadillium vulgare is apparently actually a European pillbug, so it’s a transplant.

Oh yeah. And they’re in order Isopoda. Which means they’re related to these guys, which I think is another argument for returning pillbugs safely to the wild habitat of the courtyard garden outside my window. Because I don’t want one of their big brothers showing up while I’m in the shower and chittering at me in a menacing fashion to indicate its displeasure that I stepped on second cousin three times removed Rita.

Though of course, there’s also the parasitic tongue-eating isopod that makes me glad I’m not a fish and oh god I wish I could unsee that.

Suddenly pillbugs seem… less cute.

Categories
fitness for fat nerds

Fitness for Fat Nerds: Close Encounters With Nature

Since I started exercising regularly, I’ve learned a thing or two about our six-legged insect overlords. First, there’s way, way more of them than there are of us, and we should be thankful every day that they’re still susceptible to the business end of a wadded-up tissue. Second, insects really, when you come down to it, want to be inside us.

This is both more and less disgusting than it sounds. Less, because at least if you live in my part of the world you don’t have to worry about horror movie-esque things like blowflies. More, because it means you spend a lot of time blowing insect parts out of your nose. That’s how they want to get in, you see. You’ll be trotting along on a trail, nodding along happily to some Katy Perry song (because hey, you’re listening on ear buds it’s not like anyone else can hear you and judge) and then out of nowhere something composed of seventeen wings and approximately a thousand legs will fly up your nose. As you are inhaling. And you’ll feel it catapult directly into your sinuses.

If this followed the format of my normal blog posts, now would be the time that I’d give you a bunch of great tips on how to avoid this horrifying eventuality. Sorry, kids. It’s going to happen. Make your peace with it.

Sure, you could avoid close encounters with nature like this by, for example, never leaving the house. If you can manage to do all your exercising inside and still find it interesting, more power to you. That’s not something I’ve ever managed. There aren’t enough books and bad TV shows in the world to make me enjoy running on a treadmill. But if you exercise outside, it’ll happen eventually. Probably sooner rather than later. There are a lot of bugs out there. A lot of them. They’re all like tiny, six-legged old school samurai who have been raised with a romantic philosophy of death, and each and every one of them wants to commit suicide using you.

The first time I ever ran on a track, a small moth darted out of the field and flew up my nose. That was an awesome way to finish my last quarter mile, let me tell you. The first time I ever did the 19 mile trail ride down to Denver on my bike, I inhaled something around mile eight, and it was disturbingly (yet, I’ll admit, fascinatingly) intact when I blew it out of my nose eleven miles later. I had to spend a long moment staring at a puddle of my own snot and wondering if my sinuses have some kind of TARDIS-like quality, where they were actually bigger than my entire head in order to fit a bug that size.

If you’re going to be out for a long time in a place where you’re worried about ticks (or mosquitos), bug spray isn’t a bad idea. (It also helps to wear long sleeves/long pants even if it’s kind of hot; that’s how I hike, since it prevents sunburn as well.) But DEET doesn’t seem to stop the suicidal little bastards that just want to fly up your nose. Maybe the desire for the sweet release of death overpowers the chemical stench.

All you can really do is carry a bit of kleenex with you, if you even have a pocket to put it in. Or make peace with blowing your nose using leaves if the sinus tickle is blinding you. Or use your sleeve. That’s what sleeves are for, people. You’re just going to sweat through them anyway and presumably chuck your shirt in the laundry basket as soon as you get home.

Honestly, I’d much prefer to eat my bugs than inhale them. There’s a lot less snot that way. Hey, meat on the hoof, right? Because that’s also going to happen, especially if you ride a bike. You’re going to eat bugs. Go with it, and swallow quickly, because going 20mph down a narrow trail you’re sharing with pedestrians is not a good time to get distracted by little things like some extra protein in your diet.

And let’s be honest. If you’ve ever eaten a Cheeto, you’ve put something far more disgusting than a gnat in your body. 

Categories
for fun Loki NERD texas

Loki’s Continuing Adventures in Houston: In Which There Is Pie

Another day, another hive of pitiful mortal activity to be subjugated.

Everything is, indeed, bigger in Texas. Loki is forced to wonder for what the mortals are compensating.
Loki demands that he be brought the fiercest champion of the House of Pies.

“All of your precious strawberry jam is mine, mortals! AHAHAHAHA!”

More strawberry jam, or perhaps the blood of his wounded foe? You are defeated, Monte Cristo – COUNT on it.

Loki first takes a moment to simply roll in the bounty of pies offered unto him by the trembling waitress. He expects no less.

The Monte Cristo did not prove a worthy foe. He demands a new champion, the so-called ‘house specialty’ of this temple of pies.

A mighty battle ensues.

“Admit your defeat, cursed Bayou Goo!”

The noble pie’s stillness is answer enough. Loki takes a moment to savor his victory before succumbing to a food coma.

Next time, House of Pies. Next time.

Categories
Uncategorized

Angry

 

I have anger problems. When I tell people this, most of the time they don’t believe me. I often hear, “You seem okay,” or “You smile an awful lot,” as responses. There’s an expectation that there will be some sort of cartoonish outward sign, like I should be constantly throwing Donald Duck-style tantrums, or screaming at people. It’s not like that at all.
Imagine carrying a balloon in your chest. Sometimes it’s small, and light, and you don’t really notice it’s there. At any moment, the balloon could expand and then you can’t breathe, can’t see because that’s all there is in your world.
But it’s not a balloon in your chest. It’s a scream, made of rage and hatred. Maybe you could call it a battle cry if you want to, but even that seems too civilized. It’s primal and terrible and it never goes away.
#
I’m in junior high. It’s between classes and the halls are jammed full of students, to the point that we can’t move. There’s a girl behind me that I’ve never met before. She calls me a fat bitch and stabs me in the back with her pencil, once, twice… seven times total.
This is normal. This is how I am treated all the time. I get called a fat [insert expletive of choice here] and shoved around because no matter what I do, I’m always in the way. It’s always that I’m fat and smelly and a cunt, like my very existence is an insult to anyone with an even marginal level of popularity.
I want to scream at her, hit her, because it’s not my faultI can’t get out of her way. But I also don’t want to get in trouble. I know what my parents expect of me, and can only guess what might happen to me if I actually start a fight. So I let her do it, I swallow and swallow against that lump in my throat until I can’t breathe, and I let her shove me against the lockers so she can squeeze a scant few inches ahead of me.
#
I used to have the Donald Duck-style tantrums. I still do occasionally, though they’re few and far between. I lose my temper and throw books, or punch walls, or scream. I hate myself for it when I’m done, because I know it’s the definition of immature. But there’s always that knot of anger in my chest, and sometimes I can’t swallow it down any more.
I’ve scared my cats, and my husband, and my friends occasionally. When that happens I hate myself for that too.
I’ve gotten better lately because I’ve gotten in to exercise. Most of the time, when I can feel that endless scream trying to break free, I have the presence of mind to go for a run, or ride my bike, or do kung fu exercises until I’m dripping with sweat and my muscles are just burning.
When all that anger is too big for my heart, I put it in my hands and feet.

#
I’m at a football game in high school. I’m tall enough and big enough now that I don’t get casually shoved around any more, and I’ve stopped trying to pretend I’m smaller than I am. Shrinking in on myself has never gotten the insults to stop, and if I stand up straight and square my shoulders, if I glare and go at everything with aggressive sarcasm, people usually leave me alone.
This method doesn’t work on everyone. There’s a boy a grade or two ahead of me in marching band, and he hates me. I don’t know why. Maybe it’s the sarcasm. Whatever the reason, at this football game he slaps me across the face, three times.
But it’s even more insulting and confusing then that. He makes it a game, where he says, “Watch my hand, watch my hand,” snaps his fingers, and slaps me with the other hand. No one’s ever hit me before like that, and at first I don’t know how to react. It really doesn’t hurt that much – it’s just humiliating. And that’s how it’s supposed to be. He laughs at me while he does it, because I’m obviously too stupid to understand what’s happening. Then I grab him by the coat and grind my heel down on his instep. My best friend drags me away before I can do anything else.
This is the only fight I’ve ever been in, and it wasn’t much of a fight.
But I hit things all the time. I hit walls until my knuckles bleed, or slam them with the flat of my hand until the pain is so intense I have to stop. I bruise my feet and toes by kicking bleachers, and trash cans, and more walls, because I don’t know the right way to kick yet and I just don’t care. I pretend that it’s the walls laughing instead of the people around me.
Maybe that’s fair, since it’s the walls trapping me in this place, filled with people who hate me because I’m weird, and nerdy, and fat, and queer, and different. Because I hate makeup and I don’t care about clothes and just want to be left alone to read my Xanthnovels in peace.
I don’t know why they just won’t leave me alone.
#
If you’re angry and a woman, you’re a bitch, or a joke. You get called shrill or accused of being hysterical. They ask you if you’re PMSing, because obviously there’s no real reason a woman could ever have to feel angry.
If you get really angry, the kind of anger that’s so overwhelming that your eyes fill with tears (because that’s all crying is, the reaction to any emotion that’s too strong to process, happy or sad or mad) you get smirks, or that thing where they step back and hold their hands off as if jokingly fending off an attack.
Guess they’re afraid I’ll use my girly, pink fingernails to scratch the word unfair into their scalps.
#
I’m already sitting at the lunch table; the pretty girls come sit next to me. I’m hunched over a fried chicken sandwich. I’m wearing flannel and my hair is cut short. Maybe that’s why they feel the need to point out that I’m fat and gross, and why they call me a dyke, a lesbo, a queer bitch.
I don’t actually know what some of those words mean, at this point. Only that they’re obviously bad.
But there is something else I’ve started figuring out. They’re not calling me those things because they’re true. They’d find something else nasty to say if I was skinny and wore makeup and had parents who could afford designer clothes.
They’re calling me those things because they like being mean, and I look like an easy target.
That makes me angry too.
#
Things that make me angry:
Bullies
The phrase “dependence on foreign oil”
Liars
Bullies
Feeling trapped
Charlatans
Humiliation
People who hurt animals (bullies)
People who hurt other people (bullies)
Injustice
Getting tailgated
Feeling stupid
Being patronized
Misogynists/racists/homophobes
Bullies
#
I finally find a sport I’m good at, in my junior year of high school – power lifting. I get trophies, and it’s the most amazing feeling in my life. The women’s team is small, but we all at least respect each other, even if I haven’t really made any friends.
At this point, I’ve given up on making friends. I just want to survive.
We’re training together in the weight room after school. The other heavyweight is doing bench press. The blond girls (they’re not on the team) that are doing bicep curls with the lightest possible weights whisper to each other about how she’s fat, and hairy, and is probably a man. They giggle.
I hate that sound.
I already know that other girls say things like that about me. I tell myself that I don’t care. I’ve finally found something I’m good at, something I like, and I won’t let them ruin it for me.
But it’s so goddamn unfair that they’re trying to shit all over it anyway.
#
The anger that lives inside me isn’t some sort of holdover from high school. Fourteen years would be a long time to hold on to slights received from people whose names I no longer even remember. Rather, that was where I learnedto be angry, like an emotional immune response.
That’s why it’s never left me. Because I still see and experience things that make me angry, every day. When you grow up, the bullies don’t disappear. They just get slicker, and smarter, and more subtle.
I talked about this with my mom one day. We were shopping for pants I could take off one-handed, since I’d just had surgery on my shoulder. In the car, I admitted to her that I still have anger problems, that I know it isn’t a healthy response.
She told me: “If you’re angry maybe that means they didn’t win, because in the end, they couldn’t make you hate yourself.”
No matter how much name calling and shoving and bullying I received, I never really bought into the lie that it was somehow myfault those things were happening. I knew that it was stupid and unfair for other people to expect me to transform into someone else entirely to please them. And I also knew that even if I could somehow make that happen, it wouldn’t make a damn bit of difference, that I didn’t want to be one of those people anyway.
Maybe this is what winning feels like.
That doesn’t make it easier, when I’m struggling to remain calm, when some jackass is pantomiming that he’s afraid I’ll explode because I want to hit him so badly there are tears in my eyes. But I won. I don’t hate myself. I know the people who wasted a lot of their time and energy trying to make me miserable were the ones in the wrong.
I not only know that it wasn’t my fault, I feel it.
#
I never really liked the Hulk as a character. I always thought his super power was kind of dumb, and that the idea he was some sort of intergalactic trump card (oh yeah? We have the Hulk!) was poor writing.
But there’s an amazing running joke in the Avengersmovie, where people keep asking Bruce Banner how he stays calm, making the assumption that his apparent cool is the opposite of being angry. Then at the end of the movie, Captain America tells Bruce Banner, “Now would be a good time to get angry.”
Bruce replies: “That’s my secret. I’m always angry.”
That, I loved. I still may not like the Hulk, but I love Bruce Banner because I know that feeling. I am that feeling.

#

There was something else I said in that conversation with my mom. That sometimes I felt like I don’t have a right to be angry, because these things happen all the timeto so many kids, and often worse. It’s not as if I’m some kind of special case that suffered more abuse than my fellows.
She said: “Maybe that’s why you shouldbe angry.”
She’s right. That we accept it as a matter of course that people constantly try to destroy each other is base injustice. I should be angry.
And so should you.
Categories
write-a-thon writing

It’s that time again!

The Clarion Write-a-Thon is now accepting writer sign-ups! So as you’ve no doubt already guessed, I’ve signed up.

Last year I wrote the rough draft for Fire in the Belly and even met that goal a bit early. However, I know I can churn out large walls of text on command, so long as I have a compelling story to write. I’ve done NaNo enough to know that, and the fact Clarion gives you six weeks instead of 30 days actually makes it a little more relaxed as far as pace goes. So I’ve set myself a goal that feels much more challenging – I’m going to write a short story a week, for six weeks.

As far as word count goes, this seems laughable compared to pounding out over 100k words in six weeks. But to me it sounds pretty intimidating because I have a hard time keeping it short, coherent, and interesting. I need more practice with short stories, so this will be my chance to do just that.

Oh yeah. And I’ll keep working on the current novel draft during that time too. Not sure if it’ll still be King’s Hand or if I’ll have moved that one to the percolating pot and gotten started on the next thing, but we’ll see.

Of course, the write-a-thon doesn’t actually get moving until June 24, so I can always change my mind and crank my writing goal up a notch. We’ll see. Maybe if you all heckle me enough, I’ll do it.

Either way, please consider supporting me in the write-a-thon!

Categories
fitness for fat nerds

Fitness for Fat Nerds: Running Quick Start Guide (2)

We’re going to get ever so slightly more advanced here, so if you haven’t read part 1 take a look now.

Sorry it took me so long to get back to this, my fellow fat nerds. I’m now settled in Houston for the summer (yay, internship) but it’s playing hell with my ability to run because good god have you seen what they call air here? It’s like a gelatinous solid dropped straight from the Devil’s microwave. I’m more likely to concentrate on biking and weightlifting this summer (once I’m cleared by my physical therapist, that is, argh!) so is there any interest in reading about those, too? Let me know.

Anyway, let’s dive in.

So you’re starting to run. You’re shuffling and doing intervals and maybe pushing yourself up to 20-30 minutes as a stretch, but it’s rough. What other tricks might a fat nerd have to make getting up to speed less torturous?

Well, to start with…

It’s not a race.
Really. We get this horrible thing in our brains because of PE in school, I think, where we believe that if it ain’t fast, it ain’t running. And there are quite possibly going to be jocks lapping us at any moment, ready to yank our pants down and laugh mockingly as they go flying by.

Let it go. Just let it go. This isn’t a race. Slow down.

If you’re running in an area where there are a lot of other people, it’s okay if they pass you. Don’t feel bad. Unless they’re assholes, they’re just cruising on and minding their own business and giving no shits about how fast you’re running. Do them and yourself a favor and give no shits about their speed either.

You need to learn the difference between pushing yourself an pushing yourself too hard. If you push yourself too hard for speed, you’re more likely to end up with an injury, which is a very frustrating thing that’ll stop you from running for a while. Sometimes you’re going to want to challenge yourself with your pacing, which is awesome, but don’t kill yourself. And you know what? Sometimes it’s awesome to just cruise along, take your time, and feel good.

You’ll be able to relax and have a lot more fun if you’re not worrying about your speed. Once you’re over the initial weeks of soreness that tend to haunt the first few weeks of new exercise, running should leave you feeling good, not exhausted and full of existential and muscular anguish. Find yourself a comfortable pace and stick with it.

Which brings us to the next point:

Keep it light and quick.
Pacing-wise, this has really worked well for me. First off, you want to keep your steps light. It’s a lot easier on your joints, trust me, and you have no reason to be pounding the ground if you’re not being chased by a ravening zombie horde. Until you’ve got a good handle on how a light impact feels, it helps to leave off the ear buds for a while and just listen to your own footsteps. Concentrate on making as little noise as possible while still trotting along. Sometimes it takes a while to figure out, and that’s okay.

The other thing that helps is that you make your steps quick. Which means by necessity taking smaller steps. There’s an excellent description of this technique at No Meat Athlete (thanks Chelsea for turning me on to that) and I encourage you to give it a read. This also helps you run more lightly.

Now, over at NMA they’ve got you shooting for 180 steps per minute. I don’t think I’ve ever done anything that fast in my life. I feel good and relaxed at around 160 (I use Carmalldansen (speedy cake remix) as my pacing song, of all silly things) but I’ll work my way up eventually.

Because while you want to shoot for a fast pace, this is another thing where it’s not a race. Work up to it. You’re not going to jump off your couch and immediately hit the ground running at 180 beats per minute. (Or if you do, let it be know that I hate you. A lot.)

Once I get my pace set, I tend to run independently of whatever music I’ve got going. However, if you want a little pacing help, check out Podrunner. There’s a really nice selection of mixes at different bpm.

Don’t look down.
Another army guy trick: keep your chin up. You know what the ground at your feet looks like – you saw it a few seconds ago when it was farther away. You don’t need to look at it again, it hasn’t changed in that short amount of time.

This is a thing that will help you with breathing. If you look down, you tend to hunch, plus your airway’s kinked and you can’t suck wind as effectively. So just keep looking ahead and trust in your feet. You do it all the time when you’re walking.

This also, I note, helps keep you from running into tree branches.

Not that I’d know anything about that.

The only exception I’d make to this rule is if you’ve hit an extremely rough patch on a trail, or if you’re negotiating the sloppy remnants of snow in the late winter, things like that. If the terrain is actually dangerous, pay it as much attention as is necessary. You should only have to look down for a few seconds. If you need to stare at the ground any longer than that, you might want to reconsider the location you’ve chosen.

While you’re at it, don’t hunch your shoulders. Really, just relax
This is a thing that happens to me sometimes when I’m really tired. I tend to hunch my shoulders and try to pull myself along with my arms, since my legs obviously aren’t doing their job. If you feel your shoulders creeping up toward your ears, if you’re not standing up straight, fix the posture issue. That’ll help you breathe too.

I always had a problem not being sure what to do with my arms when running, since everything feels fairly weird at first. The key really seems to be that you want to (a) be relaxed but (b) not so relaxed you’re flailing. Don’t clench your hands, keep your elbows bent comfortably, keep your shoulders relaxed and swing comfortably from there.

Which has proved problematic for me recently, since I’ve had such issues with my right shoulder. Thankfully, those seem to have been resolved by the surgery and everything appears okay now that I’m allowed to run again. But when you can’t move one of your arms properly, you start to realize just how much your arms are involved in the entire process…

But anyway. Don’t tense up. Every bit of energy you use to be tense is energy you’re wasting on fighting yourself instead of running. Relax. And if you’re tensing up because you’re that tired or in pain then STOP. You have my permission.

Cheat Codes
Still none. Sorry.

Categories
for fun Loki NERD texas trip report

In which Loki moves to Houston (with Rachael): a tale told (mostly) in pictures

Loki, for reasons entirely his own but no doubt both devilish and nefarious, decided to move to Houston on the backs of his two hapless mortal minions, Mike and Rachael.

They departed Denver bright an early on Sunday morning.

The scenery quickly became less interesting.

And then Kansas.

Which both claimed I-70 was its main street (Loki scoffed) and had more than its fair share of road construction. “Tiresome,” Loki commented.

As prairie dogs were so numerous as to warrant their own towns, and apparently came in varieties that grew up to 50 feet tall, Loki considered their merits as a secondary army.

Even gods require food.

Perhaps the most curious variant of corn available in Kansas.
The proximity to a gas pump let Loki feel even more evil and powerful, though he wasn’t quite certain why.
“Kneel before me, mortals of Oklahoma,” was Loki’s only comment. Being that there were no people in sight, but quite a few cows, and all the cows were in various states of prostration, he found that acceptable for the time being.
Though even he grew weary after a time.
Loki noted a distinct lack of both the wind sweeping down the plains, or the waving wheat smelling at all sweet.
Camp was made and Mythbusters was watched.
On the morrow, Loki kept close watch on the mortal hotel clerk.
Oklahoma’s finest were suitably intimidated by his presence.
The God of Mischief may be temporarily appeased by a cherry limeade. But only temporarily.

“We shall see who is truly alarmed, pitiful mortal device!”
At last, the apartment was reached, and Loki’s minions set to carrying his many belongings inside and arranging them to his satisfaction.
While for his part, Loki defeated a sandwich in a most epic battle of wits and strength.
And rewarded himself with a sugary confection after.
“I shall have my internet, mortal cable technician, or I shall know the reason why!”
At last, things temporarily arranged to his satisfaction, Loki rested. 
Goodnight, Loki.