Q12017 Kindle Reading

To prevent a hectic end of year gathering of reviews, I figured I would just share out some interesting books I have read each quarter. There’s been a reasonable mix of sports related (trail running is a new hobby and focus) with business and sci-fi/fantasy.

Best Business Book

Without question, the new book by Brad Stone, “The Upstarts” is one of the best business books I have read in a while. Brad follows up on his book “The Everything Store” about the rise of Amazon with a look inside the founding mythology of Uber and Air BnB. These two companies are much heralded but not living in Silicon Valley made the reporting seem out of alignment with reality. I still remember being at the Seattle launch of Uber and not really getting it. I don’t know if this was because of the quality of the presentation, or I simply lack the ability to have seen the future of what Travis and Garret were building. What I liked about this book was that it (to the extent that this is even possible) humanizes the founders of these two Unicorn companies, and provides a glimpse inside the turbulent waters of navigating start-up success. I liked “The Everything Store” better, but I am guessing that’s because I was at AMZN when it came out and that company will always have a place in my heart. If you like business biographies, I would strongly recommend giving this one a read.

Most Surprising Find

I wasn’t quite sure what to expect when I stumbled upon “The Stranger in the Woods,” but this is an amazing read. I don’t want to give much away, but I would classify this as a “real life is stranger than fiction” tale about a man who decides to check out of human contact…for 27 years. The tale is amazing to read, and while reading it you will feel as if you are deep in the woods of Maine. What transpires is difficult to fathom, and the outcome is both sad but inevitable. It’s difficult to imagine another happening like this occurring in modern US, though I suppose one could willingly cut themselves off from society in another land mass. However, what made this all the more compelling was that in 27 years this man was completely cut off, but was never more than a stone’s throw from civilization. Stunning work of reporting.

Most Disappointing

Babylon’s Ashes.” I don’t want to subject you to more words on this book, as I feel like I can’t get my time back invested in this series. I would not fault the authors for a slip up, but the overall Expanse universe feels like it got away from what made it interesting and tried to transition to a formulaic whodunit. They forgot this was a sci-fi book, and not a political thriller merely using spaceships. Worse, what was supposed to be a 6 book series has clearly been set up for another three books. I say now that I won’t buy book 7, and I hope I am strong enough not to get lulled back into this series. It’s a bummer of a conclusion to a series that had been on my high alert watch list for so long.

Just Go Read It.

I won’t say much more than “the blueprint is all right there, laid out for you in a 30 year old book.” Donald Trump’s “The Art of the Deal” is more of a bizarre rantings of a business mogul than it is a business biopic or directional guide on doing business in a particular way. Even the opening of the book caught me off guard as it is literally a reading of his daily schedule. In any event, so much light was shed on things that while I am sad at having paid for the book, I am happy that for the price of a movie and a drink I have a much clearer picture of how one person’s mind thinks.

My Kindle Life 2016

It looks like I forgot to do this last year. Not sure why, but it didn’t get done.

Ever since I was a kid, books have been a part of my life. I wasn’t so much a fan of reading, but for as long as I can remember, my father more or less read a book a day. He once told me that he would “rather go hungry than not have book money.” That’s one of the reasons why I loved working on the Kindle during my time at Amazon.

The awesome team over at Goodreads has made it easier to share my year in books by auto-generating a page for me.

While the page is super cool, it’s not something which I can embed in this post, which is somewhat disappointing. To fix that problem, I snipped the following:

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I’ll start with some commentary on this image, and the dive into some reviews. Since starting to use Goodreads back in 2013, I have been creating a new shelf every year to track which books I read that year. This year I read 109 books (which includes graphic novels) which is a nice step up from 2015 where I only managed 72. It’s not quite the 120 I read in 2014 though, so I’ve got work to do if I am going to make continued progress on my father’s tradition. Most of the rest of the reviews are for the books which received 5 stars from me. There are a few non 5 star books, but for the most part if I have a review below and unless I say otherwise, it’s worth reading.

Shortest

This year saw a fair bit of reading related to Real Estate, in an effort to help my wife with her business. That’s the source of my shortest book “The Constant Agent,” which netted 2 stars and is not worth discussion here.

Longest

It was a re-read of “Cryptomonicon.” It’s interesting that I found it slightly better on the re-read (4 stars this time around, versus 3 stars last time), but the one issue I have with Stephenson is his utter contempt of brevity. Reamde suffered from a similar lack of editing. I really liked that one too, and I’m not claiming that there was fluff or that Stephenson is padding his word count, but he does tend to go on, and on, and on.

Most Popular

Man’s Search for Meaning,” which netted 4 stars. I feel like that is almost heresy given the much beloved status of the book, but I didn’t connect with it the way I suspect many previous readers have.

Least Popular

Living off the Road,” which netted 2 stars. Given the extremely esoteric nature of the title, and the fact that it is clearly a self published tome, I am surprised that there was even one other reader of it. I have been exploring ideas related to adventure/fantasy camps for age group athletes looking to go have what I call “training vacations.” Part of my research was to come to grips with the idea that if I did this that I could find myself saying “congrats, you just bought a motel.” This book was a pretty raw and thorough accounting of a motel owner. I don’t want that job.

Highest Rated on Goodreads

I am on record as a lover of the manga series “Vinland Saga.” It’s fantastic, and this year added another omnibus title. “Vinland Saga Vol 8” is another outstanding addition to the series. It started in a bit of a disjointed way, though I didn’t re-read any of the titles when this one showed up from my Amazon pre-order. I was so excited I just dove right in. I love this series, and hate that I have to wait a full year for these omnibus titles to come out.

Best Current Events

I was really, really surprised by how much I connected with “The Hillbilly Elegy.” This title popped in my feed during the election cycle, and I took a flyer on it. Without getting too personal here, there are many things from my upbringing which echoed true from reading this book. The author does an amazing job of recreating the imagery and feelings of growing up in an unstable and difficult environment, and the dichotomy an individual feels when they leave for something better. Empathy is a skill which I know I sorely need to continue improving, and I think the country at large could use a healthy dose of it.

Best Business Psychology

Win Forever” by Pete Carroll was a quick read, but gives a really good glimpse into the mind of a great coach. Yes, there were problems at USC. Let’s not have that discussion here. The winning tradition he started at USC, and continued with the Seattle Seahawks has been great to witness. Reading this book doesn’t leave you thinking you are getting a watered down, ghost written title. You hear the words that Carroll uses over and over again to describe his philosophies in the words of his players when they speak to the media. His ethos permeates the team and organization. His philosophy is best summed up as “always compete,” which is to say that winning is a habit, so teams should practice competing every day so that they always understand what is at stake, and always develop the drive to win.

Best Self Improvement

Since starting my year off from traditional work to design the life I want, I have spent a fair bit of time reading various books on how to approach life, happiness, work fulfillment, etc. I really liked “Level Up Your Life.” It’s not the deepest book, and one could argue that it’s not scholarly, but the inner D&D nerd in me loves the idea of designing life around a series of ever increasingly difficult quests to undertake. I love this idea, and have taken to using this model for changing some things in my own life.

Best Non-Fiction (and Best Book)

Hands down, without question, the best book I read was “Sapiens.” Talk about a book that really makes you think, reconsider what you thought you knew, and challenge your mind to reconsider truths. I loved this book, and cannot recommend it highly enough.

Best Sports

I have a tendency to read a bunch of books about sports. Some would be classified as biopics, others are training methodologies, and others are more mental and psychological. “How Bad Do You Want It” was a very good book, but fell short of a 5 star rating. The book that completely blew me away was “The Secret Race,” which is a tell-all from disgraced American cyclist Tyler Hamilton. He is incredibly raw and honest in this book, and it reveals a much more nuanced backstory for the doping challenges of the pro peloton. Even if you don’t love cycling, this is a great book.

Best History

The freakiest moment of reading “Black Flags,” a book about the rise of ISIS, was realizing that the CIA operative responsible for bringing down Al-Zarqawi was not only a neighbor, but our kids were very close friends. For the entirety of the relationship between our kids, I had no idea what she did for work. The book itself is intense and amazing, and really gives a solid footing for the tumultuous times of the last couple of years.

Best Fiction

I am not sure how I found myself reading David Benioff’s (of Game of Thrones notoriety) book “City of Thieves,” but this is a fantastic book. In the strictest of senses, this should really be a non-fiction book, since he is recounting a family story from WWII, but it’s fictionalized in that he is painting a tapestry based on conversations with a family member. This is a great read, and is much more a character study than it is a historical piece. Loved this book.

Best Business

I am not a bitcoin user, apologist, fan, or otherwise. I am curious, sure, but I don’t have a long term belief in bitcoin itself. My personal opinion are that there are simply too many infrastructural issues with the base bitcoin platform. With that said, “Digital Gold” serves as a really good reference point for understanding bitcoin, the desires of the creators and evangelists, as well as provide enough information to help the reader build their own point of view about the future of public ledger rights management. A close second in this category is “The Looting Machine.” This is a historical reference on what has been happening in the economies of the African continent, and the nature of economy building in countries which are based on extractive resources.

Most Surprising

Given the number of books I read in a year, there are always that one or two which I didn’t know about, didn’t expect to enjoy, and found myself nodding and appreciating. It didn’t get 5 stars, but “Algorithms to Live By” was a surprisingly awesome read. It’s very approachable for the non-nerd, but even the geekiest reader will find something to love in this one. Also, I had never heard of “Usagi Yojimbo Saga Vol 1,” which is somewhat surprising given the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtle origins, but this was a much appreciated manga title. I meant to read more, and purchased them, but haven’t yet. Fun title though, and very deserving of 5 stars.

Science Fiction

I hate to have to write this, but “Children of Time” was terrible. It started out as a good idea, but just got so bogged down in the bifurcated story structure, and simply couldn’t get to a resolution fast enough. I include this category because “Children of Time,” like “The Sparrow” are sci-fi/fantasy titles which were highly reviewed and recommended and they just did not deliver. I couldn’t even finish “The Sparrow.” It just couldn’t get tot the point. Similarly “Ancillary Justice,” another highly touted book I couldn’t get through. These authors spend so much time with their world building and overly clever plots which have too many twists and turns. I am sure someone will call me unrefined, but so be it.

I’m not sure if I am out of the mainstream on what makes up good sci-fi/fantasy these days, but I found that I got roped into reading high reviewed titles which just plain sucked. “Three Body Problem” doesn’t quite completely fail, but it’s another one that was highly regarded but the execution felt ham-fisted. Some interesting ideas, but the overall execution was poor. Similarly, Ted Chiang’s “Stories of Your Life,” which is the short story upon which the movie “Arrival” was based was another highly touted book. I enjoyed it, and there were some very novel ideas, but not earth shattering wow. This is a long way of saying that I am pretty disappointed in the sci-fi/fantasy books I read in 2016 and really need some winners. I love this category of titles. It’s my favs. I need some great recommendations.

2017 Race Season

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I have a list of “wants” for 2017, and the planning has been in place for some time. However, the first of the negotiated approvals has landed, registration has opened, and we are locked in for 2017. As with the Cape Epic in 2016, Alex and I are going to take on a multi-day mountain bike race. The Swiss Epic is the other UCI race rated HC, which means it will be all the bit as difficult. The goal is to have fun, but also get to the finish line. Training starts today.

The American Psyche

I’m quite sad today. Sad. Disgusted. Angry. Troubled.

I also feel a bit lost. Utterly without answers.

My race has always been an interesting topic in my life. Growing up, I was surrounded by white kids. I went to a private K-8 and high school. During my high school years, I read The Autobiography of an ex-Colored Man. At this point in my life, I have vague recollections of the text, but I finally had a name for how I felt. “Passing.”

For African Americans, the notion of passing is well worn ground. For my parents’ generation, there was the brown bag test. If you were a child of mixed race descent and you showed up at a door, if you were darker than a brown paper bag, you were treated one way, lighter than, another.

Even Spike Lee addresses this topic on School Daze, an unremarkable movie in the Lee canon, but the dichotomy of light skinned blacks and dark skinned blacks haunted me as I left for college.

At the University of Pennsylvania, I become much more acutely aware of racial issues. There was one cafeteria, Class of 1920 Commons, where it was literally whites on one side, blacks on the other. I didn’t get it then, and I don’t get it now.

My light skin has often put me into positions where I hear things not intended for minority ears. Offensive things. Terrible things.

I also have had some pushback from African Americans who tell me, in no uncertain terms, that I don’t know what it’s like to be “black.”

Here’s the thing. Life is hard enough without all of us trying to find ways to separate ourselves from one another. Hurt each other. Kill each other. We all have to get up every day, raise our kids if we have them, go to our jobs if we have one, and hopefully find fulfillment along the way.

My experience isn’t unique per se. It has put me into strange places where I hear how people talk about race in America. Where they talk about how they really feel, when “other” ears aren’t listening. So much of what I have observed seems to stem from a lack of connection and understanding between people. These same problems extend to many of the religious wars which have occurred in the past 2,000 years.

Removing the black white nature of the most recent killing of Philando Castile, there should be little reason for Americans to be afraid of their law officers. We aren’t making the police officers jobs easier by allowing anyone to have a gun at any time. However, jumpy cops should no more be afforded the right to have a weapon than any other person who is ill trained or ill prepared to handle a weapon.

All of the cop-on-black crime of late is pissing me off. We are at a unique point in history where there is no way to whitewash the news any longer, sweeping these things under the carpet. Live streaming, for better or worse, plus cell phone cameras have and will forever change the name of the game.

With that as preamble, I have been thinking quite a lot about the American psyche. Why are we having these problems? What is driving it?

Initially, I hypothesized that there is a general level of discontentment which is uniquely American. That makes me even more sad. What follows are some Google autocomplete for queries.

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It was that third entry that caught my attention. According to Google, the third most likely search about kids is why they hate their parents. So I asked myself, “who else is worried about being hated?” It turns out, a lot of Americans.

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Seriously. What. The. Fuck. About the only thing that assured me that this wasn’t a bug in Google, was the next two. It is also super creepy and a whole lot of ewww. Incest and child abuse. Awesome.

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The post was originally going to be about just this odd behavior of Google autosuggest. However, this morning, while ruminating about the most recent cop-civilian crime, I wondered what the same experiment would reveal about the relationship of Americans to cops.

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Look at that last one. “Why do cops kill black.” The logical finishing word there is “people.” Corruption. Cheating. Excessive force. Killing blacks. And donuts.

This is where we are as a country. It scares me. It makes me angry. It makes me sad.

Is this a uniquely American problem? To answer that, I used the same feature on Google, but for different countries. I started with Canada, as it’s our kind neighbors to the north, and English is a first tongue. For the purposes of brevity, I am reducing the list of searches.

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So Canadians have some similar worries, though the differences are interesting. Farting kids. Canadian husbands appear to have far different perceptions of their relationships with their wives. Whereas Americans wonder why their wives love them, Canadian men wonder why their wives don’t love them.

What about the UK?

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Apparently the kids don’t fart, wives do. But UK parents do not worry about their kids hating them.

I have a conversational level of Spanish, and so I decided to do my best to tackle this problem in other languages. There are going to be some issues with this approach. I am not a native speaker, so I am doing direct translations, and will likely miss things like nuance or alternative words. With that said, I wanted to look at Spain and Mexico next.

Spain.

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So in Spain they are worried about their kids not wanting them, not growing, grinding their teeth at night, and not having friends.

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Wives are worried why they are not understood, not desired, not touched, and not being slept with. Ouch.

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Husbands worry about being lied to, not being made love to, not having relations with them (twice). Also yikes.

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Workers worry about not being appreciated, being ignored, treated badly, and getting scolded.

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Coworkers are wondering about being bothered by their co-worker or dreaming about them.

Mexico.

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Worrying about why their kids use the bathroom (translation issue?), not being obedient, not eating, and not speaking at age 2.

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Wives would like to know why their husbands don’t want to make love, kiss them, have relations with them, and no longer touching them.

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Husbands wonder why their wives are angry all the time, is indifferent to them, doesn’t want them, and is angry a lot with them.

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Employees wonder why their bosses don’t value their work, doesn’t take them into account (presumably for their work), touches their arm, and ignores them.

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Coworkers wonder why they aren’t spoken to, are bothered by the people they work with, dream about them, or like them (presumably in a romantic way).

So it would seem that even our Spanish speaking friends have similar issues, though some are slightly different. Creepy arm touching bosses, and yelling wives notwithstanding, what was clear to me from just the Spanish speaking auto-suggest was that we have far too much hate in the world, and not enough love.

Google provides some pretty amazing tools, including their translation site. So I tried my hand with French and German as well. I have no proficiency in either language.

French.

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I might be using the wrong word for kids. Or French parents simply do not care what their kids think.

Screenshot 2016-07-08 at 5.09.47 PMWives are wondering why their husbands don’t love them, tells them wrong (translation issue), drinks, and hide things.

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Husbands wonder why their wives don’t want to make love to them, lie to them, not getting pregnant, and being wrong.

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Employees wonder why their bosses aren’t dragging them (translation issue), and not firing them. The last one is about the employee stapling their boss, so I’m guessing this is also a translation issue, or they have some serious Swingline action going on in France.

Much like our Spanish speaking friends, there are some very similar themes, though they are missing out on love, farting, and yelling.

Germany.

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Parents in Germany wonder why their kids hurt themselves, hurts (in general?), understand what they are saying, and sleepwalking.

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German wives wonder why their husbands are doing things to them, or hurting (unclear if this is hurting the wives or hurting in general).

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German husbands, on the other hand, wonder why their wives don’t have desire for them, have no pleasure (sexual or in general?), or want to sleep with them. The juxtaposition of the German husband and wife issues is quite polar.

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Employees have a strange relationship with their bosses. I am guessing this is large a translation issue, but the wonder why their bosses are interested in them, burnout, or kidnap movies. So, yeah.

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Coworkers wonder about what to get their coworkers for Christmas, and expect of them. This one didn’t appear to work as well for translate.

I guess I expected more provincial answers to surface from each of the individual country explorations. Lots of anger, hate, suspicion, etc. That was sad to see. Really sad.

Which brings us back to the relationship of the citizenry and the police force. Would we see similar issues to what we saw in the USA?

Canada

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UK

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Spain & Mexico

Strangely these were identical for both google.es and google.mx

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Are corrupt, can’t vote, are womanizers, and eat donuts.

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blank, don’t pay tickets, not able to enter universities, and not able to vote.

France

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blank, called chickens (slang thing?), are chickens, why 22 cops (not sure about this one - maybe some recent event, or has something to do with squad size?)

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blank, why the police rather than the police (translation issue), why municipal police (likely to do with different types of police), and why they come to a home.

Germany

Cops doesn’t translate.

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why police are blue, no longer green, ??, blue light. I was so hoping that “warum polizei arnold” was a strange reference to a terminator cop.

There’s a little bit of corruption and abuse of power in Canada, some in MX and ES, but nothing about killing people. The European countries seem to have quite a positive relationship with their officers. Which begs the question: why?

What is it about the police forces in the Americas? I don’t have any answers. I am curious to hear others’ opinions. I often hear that we have militarized our police force, but I don’t have enough of a sense of what the police forces are like in other countries. I do know that the first time I saw a semi-automatic rife, it was being worn by a police officer in Mexico.

My speculation was that it has to do with the diverse set of cultures, values, and ethnicities coming together in these police-citizen relationships. Is there common ground between those who are citizens and those who are sworn to protect and serve?

How often are the police members of the communities they are policing? Never mind if they are the same race, or ethnicity; how often do they live in the same neighborhoods, and are emotionally invested in the well being of the relationships they have with the citizens they are supposed to be protecting?

At the risk of sounding like a hippie, which as a die hard capitalist I am unlikely to ever be called, we need more love and understanding in the world. Husbands loving wives. Kids loving parents. Bosses loving employees - well, not “loving” them in the way that some of the searches suggest they would like to love their employees.

Technology is an amazing thing. With freely available tools, I was able to write this article and publish it to the world, complete with translations in languages I don’t even speak. Cell phones with cameras connected to social networks allow for instantaneous capturing of life events, for good and for bad. Technology can help solve many problems.

My challenge to fellow tech entrepreneurs: instead of more ad tech or another social networking app (which, if we are being honest, is really about selling ads, not some altruistic coming together in a social cohesion), what can we do to bring more love and understanding to the world? To our communities?

To the cops out there: stop shooting black Americans. They are American citizens. You are sworn to protect and serve them. I’ve never been a cop, and have no idea what the stresses of even a common traffic stop must be. That said: stop. killing. black. americans.

As to the gun rights folks. For a long time I have believed that the 2nd amendment was an important one to uphold. When it was written, a good man could fire 3 aimed shots in a minute. The armed militia was meant to be able to oppose a governmental army. However, that army had similar weapons. If we as a people decided to go to war with our government, the outcome would be quite bad for the citizenry. The weapons aren’t even close in comparison. The only way it would be fair, or close to it, is if we ended up fighting a similar war to what is going on in the Middle East, with IEDs, and illegally imported weapons, at which point we’re no longer talking about a 2nd Amendment issue.

I was at a party a few weeks back. Someone walked in with a gun on his hip. He wasn’t a cop. He did not have a conceal carry permit. Apparently the state allowed open carry. Until that point, I had never seen this before. It was weird. And super uncomfortable for everyone at the party. No one there knew this person, and he walked in with a gun. When I am on the road, I know with a high degree of confidence that the people in other cars have licenses issued by the state after passing a test with mandatory training. Why are we not doing the same with weapons. When any person, in any mental state, can walk into a shop and buy a guy, I don’t feel safer at all.

Put another way: find every mentally unstable person you can. Find every drunk you can. Find every person who has a score to settle. Find every teenager you can. Now give them all a car and set them loose on the road in a small city. Then get in your car and you go out. Tell me how safe you feel. Now, replace “car” with “gun.”

This post was all over the place; I get it. I just had a lot on my mind, and tried to piece it together into a cohesive narrative. I am sure an editor would have a field day with it. I can’t wait to see the comments and feedback.

Life Nudges Week 4

Kids Sports

I was going to sell my old triathlon wetsuit. It’s not worth a ton, but it’s worth something. I had the posting up on Craigslist, but in the interest of trying to provide Life Nudges wherever I could, I had the following text:

This is my old sleeveless wetsuit. It’s a solid starter suit, and it’s a very inexpensive option for a novice triathlete. I am willing to let it go to a parent of a racer under 18, or a racer under 18, for FREE (i.e. $0), as a way to encourage more youth triathlon participation.

About a day after I posted this, I realized the answer was in my own backyard. The family that runs the local youth tri club team on which my daughter participates has a 12 year old boy who appears to love the sport, and is quite talented. I wish it had occurred to me to offer it up to him before I posted, but perhaps it was the act of posting, combined with the language used, that got me thinking about how to fulfill the destiny of this wetsuit to be used by an aspiring young athlete. I can’t want to see him racing in it.

Gratitude Week 4

Just one for this week, as it’s pretty important.

  • Functioning Marriages - I have been fortunate to be married to the same woman for just about 15 years. We’ve been together for 17. We can, and do, talk about anything. We don’t have any secrets. The vast majority of divorces are tied back to money issues. We put a stopper in that one very early on in our marriage with a simple two-spouse-approval rule. Any purchase over $500 required both of us to agree. Due to our ongoing conversations about each of our concerns, interests, fears, etc, my wife understands how much I need this time to decompress. And she has been 100% supportive. It’s pretty amazing that she let me leave for our family vacation a week early to get some mountain biking in, as well as take my 5 days of silence in the woods. This years edition is British Columbia, Canada. It will be me, my bike, my kindle, and my computer (strictly for coding, no internet access for facebook or email) for 5 days. Human interaction will be kept to a minimum. I will be engaged in a silence retreat (no use of my own voice) during that time. She gets me, and she allows me this time. I would do the same for her. Our mutual understanding of, and respect for, each other allows this. I can’t imagine being with anyone else. Life is hard enough to get through when you don’t have a functioning marriage, and I know that I am incredibly lucky to have one.

Life Nudges Week 3

Kids Sports

My kids were in camp this past week. Boulder being Boulder, they were in a rock gym camp. They loved it. There were a bunch of kids there who didn’t have the same high opinion.

One kid in particular was eyeballing the wall and kept saying to the counselor that he was afraid to fall. They were bouldering.

As I had just dropped of my kids, I was walking the gym to make sure they were good. My son was right next to this kid. I didn’t want to interrupt the counselor, who was explaining to the kid that he didn’t have to worry about falling.

So I climbed the wall. And fell. On my back. It was a nice cushion floor after all.

I turned to my son, said “that was fun, have a great time today,” and left.

I didn’t stick around to see what happened with the kid, but I hope he got the right message from that and had a great time.

Garmin Love Letter

Dear Garmin -

Hey girl, how are you doing? It’s been a while since I have told you I love you. I love you.

Why? Come on now, don’t play games.

When I needed you the most, you were there for me. You took a hit for the team. You literally put yourself in harm’s way to save my behind.

We haven’t always got along. Your firmware plays games, and your GPS linkup can be…wait, I’m identifying satellites. 🙂

I never gave up on you though. Sure, the new hotness models have come along, but Forerunner 310 has stuck with me through all the bad races. You’re honest with me, and tell me only what I need to know. You were so open minded to handling a menage a tri, unlike some of the other watches of your age who were too set in their ways to understand multisport events.

More than anything, I am blown away at how strong you are. I smashed you. Destroyed you. We hit the ground at over 20 mph. Even with your busted grill, you are still working. Amazing.

Your buttons and faceplate may be ground down, and you have an almost unreadable glass, but you are still my lady. Your LCDs are still deliciously lit up. I don’t know if you are hanging on just to impress me, and plan to shortly disappear to the great triathlon in the sky with all the other destroyed fitness computers. Either way, I wanted you to know how much I love you and how much I owe you for most certainly saving me from so much more harm than what actually happened.

Love,

Brandon

Here’s a link to the strava file where I went down. You can see the speed and abruptly stop around mile 29. The bike I was on is a complete writeoff. Twisted rear triangle, destroyed derailer. We didn’t discover that fact until I was a few miles into my ride home and the whole derailer ripped off as I was shifting for a climb. Fun.

We were running a training camp in Coeur d’Alene ahead of the Ironman 70.3 race this past Sunday. I was riding at the back of our group of athletes. There was some debris on highway 95. By debris, I mean large rocks the size of two fists.

I have never crashed on a road bike before. I’ve been riding proper road bikes since 2001. Been hit by a car once, but this was the first bona fide crash.

Going over the handle bars, I was surprised by how clearly my mind snapped back to my 4 years of Ju Jitsu in high school. I began putting my left arm forward to roll through the crash. My hand caught on the bars, and all I could think was “other arm!!” even though I was flying on the wrong vector to roll on my right shoulder. I didn’t quite make it, but did manage to get my right arm in front of me with watch side down.

It was at this point I heard the very loud grinding sound. I felt it all the way through my body. I thought my head was sliding on the ground. And then I was upside down, then rolling, and then stopped in the ditch on the side of the road. We estimate that I slid for well over 50 feet with my weight fully supported by nothing but the Garmin Forerunner 310 XT before I flipped over and stated rolling.

My right shoulder, elbow and hip were a scraped up bloody mess, but I was fine. Hurt. Embarrassed. But fine. My watch, on the other hand, was not. You can see that in the photo here.

IMG_20160628_151846For those who would like to see the damage to my body, and don’t mind a slightly NSFW picture, we took a photo a couple days later. Good times.

If anyone who reads this knows anyone at Garmin, please make sure this love letter finds its way to them.

Gratitude Week 3

  • Discovering Humility in Serving Others - I never worked in a restaurant. Nor any traditional service industry job. I was very fortunate to have the opportunity this past week to act as an extra pair of hands for my tri coach Ben Bigglestone. He ran a training camp in Coeur d’Alene this past week, with all but 2 of them racing the half Ironman on Sunday (whilst preparing for the full Ironman in August). It was an incredibly fulfilling week of camaraderie, laughter, setbacks, successes, and fun. I was there for the other athletes, looking to give them a “pro athlete” experience of not worrying about things, and having everything taken care of, and also looking to anticipate their needs based on my own experiences over the years of my racing.
  • Hard Plastic - a longer love note to Garmin will be coming, but let’s just say that my Garmin Forerunner 310 changed from workout computer to fully-load-bearing-hockey-puck during a nasty little crash this week that destroyed a bicycle. My first ever road crash.
  • Underdogs - From the agony of Yonny Hernandez to the ecstasy of Jack Miller, the first Sunday-running ever MotoGP race at Assen will go down as one of my absolute favorites. Rain is the great equalizer. It was so great to be able to yell and cheer for the first non-factory race winner since 2006 in Portugal when Tony Elias won. Rain is a field leveler. A fact I relished when I raced in my first national race at Road Atlanta. I got greedy and went for a pass that would have put me into 9th place. I ended up in the gravel. Fun fact, I beat World Champion Ben Spies that weekend. Of course, he was only 14 that weekend…and started at the back of the grid…with a split field wave start…and he crashed…from third place. He was (is) fast.

Life Nudges Week 2

Starting a Business

Surprising that the theme this week would again be around starting a business. Not super surprising, given my background and the things my brain likes to jump to, but here we are.

A friend has a good idea for a company he wants to go start. He’s even spoken to seed investors who have agreed to give him the money. It’s not the best deal, and that’s caused him some hesitation.

I could tell he was excited about the idea, but he’s being held back by fear that he won’t have enough money, and also fear related to leaving his very well paying job.

As we talked about the idea, however, it wasn’t clear to me that he needed to leave his job to build a testable product. Most of what he wanted to do could be accomplished with a spreadsheet and a phone. He was massively overthinking the problem.

In this specific case, he was so wedded to his solution, he was missing the macro problem. Yes, the way he wanted to solve the problem would matter, and be a competitive advantage, in the future, but he didn’t need it today.

I’m looking forward to seeing some forward progress from him in the coming weeks. It’s a very interesting new spin on an old idea, but I like it. It really resonated with me.