Good Things

Friends visiting from out of town for a wedding:

Girls Outtake Three

Cocktails

[233/365] Cocktails

And people happily gathered ’round a table (or two):

Chatty

Campus views (and a less-humid, clear-blue sky):

[236/365] Back to School

Guilty pleasure reading in bed:

[238/365] iBooks

Puppydog eyes:

Snugglebuddy

More friends gathered to celebrate two friends’ soon-to-arrive baby, beautiful gifts:

[239/365] Hammock

A glass of wine at the end of a long week:

Pinot Noir

Fun gifts in the mail – a happy mixtape:

[240/365] Mixtape!

As usual, click on the photo to go through to flickr.com for more information.

What good things have you got going on?

Classic Movie Round-Up, Part III

It’s time for more new-to-me classic movies, you guys! If you’re new around here, let me explain: I recently got the idea to watch all those classic movies that everyone has seen or should have seen but that I had so far neglected. I asked for suggestions and you guys came through with a ton! These movies don’t have to be old, black-and-white movies from the days of yore, necessarily. Some suggestions I got are more current, and I have also been including some contemporary classics in my round-ups. You can see all the reader suggestions in the comments to this post, and my first two movie round-ups are here and here.

Well! Without further ado (yes, it really is “ado” and not “adieu“):

Paris when It Sizzles – I loved this movie. It was a great mix of witty banter, post-modern meta-fiction, and romance. The view of Paris and the great fashion just made me love it more. I had already seen the contemporary remake of it (Alex & Emma), which I didn’t think was so bad, really, but in comparison the original is approximately forty-seven times better. Truth.

The Omen – Another creepy kid movie in the vein of The Exorcist (which I also saw recently). It’s a good thing I have already seen Rosemary’s Baby or I’m sure that would be coming up soon in my queue, too! Anyway, I liked this one, I think especially because I hadn’t known the story ahead of time so it really was all new to me. Definitely creepy, suspenseful, and intriguing.

Psycho – This is one of those movies that I never bothered seeing because I felt like I already had “seen” enough of it via clips, parodies, and cultural references. What I found out when I finally watched the whole thing was that I had already known what happened at The Bates Motel, but I hadn’t known anything else about the plot at all! That added another level of intrigue that I hadn’t been expecting. Even though I was prepared for the shower scene and the reveal of the Bates family secret, I still enjoyed the hell out of this movie. A classic for a reason!

North by Northwest - Oh mah gah. WHY HAD I NEVER SEEN THIS BEFORE? I loved it just beyond description. I have seen tons of Hitckcock films in my time (I think Psycho and North by Northwest are on a VERY short list of his movies that I had never seen), so I don’t know how this one escaped my attention for so long. It is nearly 2.5 hours, but I never even noticed the time going by. I loved the intrigue, the frustrating Kafkaesque set-up to the plot, the cases of mistaken identity, the espionnage, the stylish femme fatale, the gorgeous furniture and architecture, the witty banter, and the rugged western landscape in the second half. This hit pretty much every one of my pleasure buttons. Five stars for sure.

The White Ribbon – Another contemporary film that made it into my queue in the midst of the classic movie project. This one received so many accolades I figured I could declare it a modern classic and include it here. Plus, it echoes a lot of the creepy-kid qualities of The Omen and The Exorcist (though in a very different context, to be sure). I always enjoy watching German movies because I find it so comforting that even though I don’t speak the language much anymore (I mainly read things like Heidegger and Nietzsche in German for work – don’t be jealous of my exciting life), I can still comfortably listen to the language in a film without having to rely on the subtitles. All that said, I wasn’t wowed with the film. It sort of seemed like something a German version of Paul Thomas Anderson would make. Good quality, well written, and well made, but not my cup of tea. (And way too long!) Still, I’d recommend seeing it because I feel I may be being picky about this. It is definitely a fine film.

Get Ready to Get Sick of Hearing about My Marathon Training.

So let’s talk marathon training! As I was thinking about it, I was putting together a little list in my mind of the races I have run in the past year. I thought I’d include that here as it’s nice to have it all written down:

[110/365] Race Numbers

August 2009: I ran my first ever 5K at the Watermelon Carnival in Mississippi. I ran/walked it in 42:xx. So proud.

October 2009: I ran my next 5K, at the Covered Bridges Festival in Oneonta, AL, and this time without stopping to walk! I finished in 36:20 and was ecstatic with the result.

December 2009: I ran a 12K race on my birthday in Wetumpka, AL. I had wanted to train for a 10K next, but found the 12K on 12/12 to be too irresistible. I finished in 1:19:25.

[44/365] Race Prep

February 2010: I ran a half-marathon! The Mercedes Half in Birmingham, AL. I finished in 2:29:31, just 29 seconds under my goal, to the cheers of my friends at the finish line. A wonderful day.

[93/365] Junior League Art Run 5K

April 2010: I started the month in Auburn setting a new PR of 30:40 at the Junior League Art Run, and I went on to beat that time at the end of the month at the Double Decker 5K in Oxford, MS with a time of 28:07. A good month for getting speedy!

My Transition Area

June 2010: My First Triathlon in Atlanta. I swam (400 m), biked (20K), and ran (5K) my way to a total time of 1:45:55 and had the time of my life.

August 2010: The one year anniversary of my first ever road race, I set a new PR of 26:38 at the Watermelon Carnival. So hot I almost died but a great race nonetheless.

[28/365] Nike+ Saucony Hack

And now, I have two more big races on my schedule for Fall/Winter 2010: My main goal is to run the Rocket City Marathon in Huntsville, AL on 12/11/10, which is the day before my birthday and seems numerically to be an auspicious date. About halfway through the training period, I have a half marathon on the schedule: The Montgomery Half in (duh) Montgomery, AL on 10/02/10.

So how does one do this? How does one go from being a person too overweight & out of shape to run all three miles a year ago, to a person getting ready to run 26.2 in just a few months? Well, I have used online training plans quite faithfully. I built slowly up to running 3 miles with Couch-to-5K, and from there I used training plans found online to build up to 12K, 13.1 miles, and beyond. I am using the popular Hal Higdon’s marathon training plan to get ready for my big (26.2 mile!) race in December. I’m in the middle of week three in this plan as I write this post – only about 15 more weeks to go.

The plan is made up of four runs a week plus a day of cross-training (where I might do yoga, weights, bike or swim). Mondays I run a mid-distance run: these start at 3 miles and eventually will be as long as 10 miles. Wednesdays and Sundays I’ll run shorter distances of 3-5 miles. The big day is Friday. Every Friday I’ll have a long run, which will get longer and longer throughout the training period, starting at 5 miles and eventually getting up to 20 miles. There are a few “step-back” weeks where I’ll back off and run fewer miles to help my body gradually adjust, but the general gist is that the runs just get longer and longer and longer until I either die or run a marathon. Hopefully the latter.

This is why people tell you that the race you are training for is just a “victory lap.” The hardest part of running a marathon, they say, isn’t running the 26.2 miles on race day. It’s running the 435 miles you run in training before race day ever rolls around.

Oh, hang on. Four hundred thirty five miles? Or, to put that in numbers again, 435 miles?! Holy crap, y’all. I just added up all the miles in the training plan and that is the number I got. Holy motherfucking CRAP.

So yeah. That 26.2 will most definitely be my victory lap. A victory over the steaming hot and humid hundred-degree Alabama August temperatures in which I have started my training. A victory over the 110 pounds of body fat I have lost since I started Couch-to-5K (and calorie counting) in June 2009. A victory over everyone, including myself, who ever said I wasn’t athletic.

[174/365] Free

And if you’d like to read more about fitting in strength training and cross training while training for a marathon, please to go check out my new post at Sports & Wine and leave a comment if you have any ideas!

Keeping Busy

The first “week” of school (half-week, honestly) has come and gone and it doesn’t even feel like it really happened yet. I say that mainly because I only taught one day so far, but also because I feel like the summer term never really ended but rather continued on, joining seamlessly and without pause into the fall term. I’m not complaining, though. I like to keep busy right now.

It’s going to be a busy weekend, too: my friends Golightly and Deebeecoooper are both in town this weekend, there’s a wedding to attend, and the social functions have been piling up as well.

Last night I met my friend Brunbec at the local hippy grocery store for a wine tasting and to shop for snacks for our happy-hour-at-the-pool evening. Of all the people gathered around the wine guy quaffing samples, I was the only one to get asked for ID. My friend’s mom even joked about it, going, “What? This professor at the university gets ID-ed and no one else does?!” But in defense of the wine guy, I did roll up wearing a tee shirt and a denim miniskirt and looking a little unkempt.

[231/365] Wine Problem

As you can see, I also clearly had no idea what I was doing and got behind on my tastings, winding up with two samples at one time. Oops! Drinking problem!

(Can we also note the sheer size of my forehead there? Don’t get too close to me lest you get sucked into its orbit, never to escape!)

We ladies from the department + out-of-town guests spent the evening snacking, drinking, and floating around the pool, as we love to do in summer and as you have heard about countless times if you are a regular reader ’round these parts. What can I say? It’s the perfect way to relax, cool down, and shed the stresses of the week.

This morning I am about to head off to Saturday morning yoga with the girls, and then lunch, and then the wedding, reception, and post-reception cocktails. Busy, busy, busy!

I do owe the blog a post about my fall marathon training plans, so maybe I will get around to that later this weekend. I should also have a new post at the Sports & Wine blog coming up soon, so I’ll link to that when it happens. I know y’all are on the edges of your seats there.

Hope you’re having a lovely weekend, friends!

New Health & Fitness Blog

Back when I was first starting to run again and to try to lose weight, I started reading Bodies in Motivation, a fitness website run by one of my favorite bloggers, Linda from All & Sundry. The writers there are regular women discussing food, health, and fitness in their lives. Some are trying to lose weight, some are training for their next big race, and others are just trying find a healthier way of life. I’ve always enjoyed reading the site and through it I have found a lot of the blogs I now follow.

As of this week, I am now one of those bloggers! The blog I’ll be writing there is called Sports & Wine, a kind of cheeky Ben Folds Five reference and a reminder of the fact that I’d like to find a way to balance the sports and leisure sides of my life. I’ll be writing a bit about my race training, my efforts at weight maintenance, and my quest to make all the healthy changes I have made into lifelong habits. My first post is up now. I hope you’ll check it out (and say hello) as well as take a look at the rest of the site. There are a whole bunch of cool women over there with inspiring and funny stories to tell.