Thursday, May 19, 2011

Hollywood Triathlete, Macdaddy.

Remember that time I was sad because my iPod touch got stolen out of my car? Well, about a month ago, my window was broken in, and my LAPTOP was stolen.  (I don't think I recounted this here, because a. it was too depressing and b. I didn't have a motherfucking laptop to write on.) So if you thought I was all poor and shit, try me after I had to come up with over two grand for a new computer. Yes. Budgety. All woes now in the past, I finally got a new laptop and it's TOTALLY BALLER. 17 inch MacBook Pro, matte screen, quad core 2.2 processor! To quote Jessica Simpson as Daisy Duke, "I have no idea what that means but I want it." I figured if I was gonna get a new laptop, this one ought to be the last laptop purchased in a longass while, so getting it with all the bells and whistles means less updating.

In turn, I'm hoping this translates to cooler and more frequent bloggy stuff... perhaps even more videos! Perhaps. Or perhaps I will just try and fit in my fah-reaking training... it seems like my schedule just gets more and more intense, and somehow I still make less and less money, and still don't have time to adequately get in the gym. But my mom just shipped me a fifty pound kettleball (Lord have mercy), so at the very least I can shred up by legs at home in a few simple moves.

I leave you know with the data output from my Garmin Forerunner from the long course: I finally got the software installed on this shiny new computer, so now I'm good to go! Now you can witness the topography, my pace on the bike and run, and even a map of where I biked and ran! Boy oh boy, isn't technology swell???

Thursday, May 5, 2011

Tuesday, May 3, 2011

Wildflower Long Course: The Epic Saga

Did anyone notice that I haven't been writing lately?


Of course you didn't. Because... well, no one reads this.

But I noticed. And I felt bad. Like the person who avoids the doctor's office when they're sick, I avoided blogging about my training because I knew I'd have to fess up to how neglectful I've been. Not only did I move apartments two weeks before race day, I also got a gnarly sinus infection that put me out of commission for days. The Saturday before race day, I took my first long bike ride, about 45 miles with my LA Tri Club friends in the Valley. That's it. That, and some indoor cycling, and some running, and maybe once a week swimming. Bad triathlete! Bad, bad, bad!

I thought, "I'm not going to jinx it, so I won't write until I'm done."

Apparently, that was the right thing to do, because I did way better than I deserved to, when considering my neglectful behavior. Body, you deserved more prep. But you really came through. That is what you were built to do, I guess. No waifs here.

The long course at Wildflower is dramatic enough, but with all my hijinx, the suspense was all the greater. So let me take you on the EPIC journey leading up to this Hollywood Triathlete's Wildflower race weekend.

Monday I did a morning swim, went to work, went to tutoring, and then did a kickass spin class at LA Fitness at 6:30PM. Note to everyone: the Hollywood LA Fitness spin instructor on Mondays will kick your ASS. So hardcore. Even for me. And I'm like, pretty hardcore. So I felt good about Monday.

Then, for whatever reason, I decided to give blood on Tuesday. Make it interesting, right? I'm a regular good karma addict, and once every eight weeks I get my customary harrassment from the Red Cross to return and give them some of that sweet O+ krovvy. I don't really ever feel lightheaded or really negatively-effected after, just sleep really well, pretty much. Last time they checked in with me, I was sick with my sinus infection, so when my coworker mentioned he was off to the Elks Lodge, I thought, boy, I ought to stop in too! Granted, this would maybe throw off my hydration schedule, but I'm robust, and I felt that four days was enough to get back in gear. Plus, I was tapering, right? (Though how do you taper when you've never fully been training? Yeah.)

So that was Tuesday. Wednesday, I skipped working out to get my car's oil changed (gotta have it ready for the long drive), so I had to hustle home and try and fit in a run before my ukulele set at Trip Tease, as I do once a month (2101 Lincoln Blvd 10PM, playing again May 18!). I did feel extra sluggish and salty, which I chalked up to the missing blood pint. Then it was a quick dinner (ravioli: carb loading week, yesssss) while practicing my newly-learned chords for an acoustic version of the raw food slow jam (per request of my friend David, whose culinary arts studying brother was turning 21 and would be in the audience.) Trip Tease is fun, but it's a late show, it's in Santa Monica, and you don't get out of there until midnight, and it's hard to avoid the beer... the delicious, refreshing beer. So yes, hydration schedule again modified slightly to incorporate my very favorite German lager, Spaten. Mmm. The set went well, and that was great, but then there was some drama on the 10, which met a late bedtime of 1:30AM. Moo! Body needs sleep to make more blood!

Thursday morning, I loaded up on some Gatorade (G2: eff that sugar) which was joyously on sale at Ralph's:  how did YOU know I had to hydrate, Ralph's! I drank a mix of Gatorade and water all day (peed like every thirty minutes) to ensure my blood would be nice and rewatered. After work was my last shot at working out before driving up to Paso Robles the next morning, but all I got in was a 30 minute swim before being displaced by the rotund crew of Aqua Aerobics ladies. (Does anyone else notice that only the morbidly obsese do Aqua Aerobics? What's up with that? I literally have never seen these women anywhere in the LA Fitness... it's like they materialize from the pool like some mystical giant Ladies of the Over-Chlorinated Lake promptly at 6PM on Thursdays...) I took it as a sign that I was to cut it short and went for the sad panda party of one Italian dinner down the street at Micelli's, where I got to feel bitter about being a better singer than the waitresses but not getting a job there while consuming way too much cheese via garlic bread that should have been cheeseless. I was dragging ass, and once I got home I fell asleep IMMEDIATELY, passing out until ten, only waking up to brush my teeth and put together some triathlon essentials. Did not seem to bode well.

Friday, equipment manager/sherpa/chauffeur for the drive home Jack and I hit the road at 10:30AM, getting to our destination at around 3:30. We set up camp by the other LA Tri Clubbers, got the decent cardio of the long walk to registration and packet pickup, and settled in for an early night. At the Expo, some seasoned dude was talking about the brutality of the course and the various rapey hills that would assault you, which of course made me feel swell. It was helpful to keep in mind, though... I knew where to save up my energy, where to gulp a Gu ahead of time, and when I should gear down in anticipation for NASTY GRADE, the longest hill in the history of races, even the Tour de France. Okay, no, but... it sucks.

Back at camp, I got to chat with other LA Tri folks, who reassured me that I'd be okay, having done Piuma. Those in the Angeleno biking know would recognize Piuma as the rapiest hill available in the Santa Monica Mountains. All sorts of hardcore biking people tackle it on the weekends instead of sleeping in and eating pancakes. I'm pretty sure last time I did it, the ascent took me a full hour, an hour into the cold mists of Middle Earth. (It really did look oddly Lord of the Ringsy for a mountain in LA.) It's unpleasant, to be sure, but not insurmountable. So I was told, "it's not that bad". And yeah, it wasn't Piuma bad... but it was BAD. And Piuma is followed by waffles, not a hilly mothafuckin half marathon.

But I get ahead of myself.

Bundling up-- the wind made it feel downright icy this year-- we called it an early night with my customary Ambien sleep (last one in my script, oh health insurance fairy, please come and give me a new one?) to be awakened by some obnoxious fat dude hollering "Good MORNING WILDFLOWER! It's TIME to GET UP!" over and over. At 5:45AM. WTF. And he was just like, some dude. Not someone's coach, not some official "I wake up people in case" dude, just some dude. We all had our cellphones ready to do that, sir... a half hour later. Douche.


Morning at the finish line... not to return until afternoon.

So, up and at em, it was time to get my transition site readied, and down we went with all the gear in tow by 7:30. (Race waves started at 8, mine at 9:10. Hate that hour lull.) I had a banana and a coffee to encourage a prerace move, and then hung around while waiting for Jack to return with my forgotten sunglasses-- the bike woulda sucked a nut without them, so it's very good he went! I still dreaded it all a bit, but felt, here I am, time to do this. Nothing left to do but race. And maybe hydrate some more. (Last minute wetsuit pee is not only expected, but a tradition.) I was feeling strong and fully restored to my previous levels of Nikki ability after my long long sleep, and was no longer worried about having given blood.
And here's where it gets even more interesting.
 
[Before I begin, just be aware that this section is most def TMI and has to do with some nasty physical shit that happened in the bathroom. So you can always just skip ahead if you'd rather know less about my goings on.] As you'd want before a 7 hour race, a coffee-inspired BM took place, giving me one less thing to worry about, though it was, let's say, a little efforted. While I'm getting my sunscreen on and getting my swim gear together, I notice I feel some... wetness... and reach down to my shorts to find my hand covered in blood. The entire seat of my shorts. I squeeze the lining of my shorts and it drips blood. So, you can imagine, I freak the fuck out, but as I am still me, I put on my cap, my goggles, my ear plugs and the bottom of my wetsuit so I can still make my race time while I rush to the port-a-potties with the shortest line. I grab a bunch of paper towels and try not to hyperventilate in a panic. In the stall, I sop up ALL the towels and find that blood is actively pour from my behind like a bloody nose, and, horror of horrors, find an actual piece of tissue, like, some kind of body matter, has emerged. I think I've lost nearly a cup of blood, and don't know what it's from, but I know if anyone saw how much I was bleeding that they wouldn't let me race. (It didn't hurt.) I don't know what's going on, if this is some sign of a serious disease, but I know it's not going to be resolved sooner than later. So I try to just wipe it up as much as I can, pull on the rest of my suit, try to stop crying, and go to start my race, because traumatic and deeply embarrassing rectal bleeding be damned, I was gonna do it no matter what.

Jack took this picture right before my race. Trying not to cry... can you tell? No. Because I'm a Teuton.
[Okay you can start reading again if you didn't want to read about that stuff.]
The swim was good, but choppy: the wind was all up in our grill, and for whatever reason, these motorboats kept passing and stirring shit up. Annoysville! But still beats the ocean anyday. Despite that, and despite my poor swimming track record, and my broken ass, I felt incredibly strong and good. My last few races have seen a marked improvement in my swimming... I think I got the hang of breaking through the pack. Something's working out for me, because I was with the leaders of the purple caps, and passed more than a few girls, who were stroking way faster than me. Must just be my incredible guns, propelling me along.
 
By the end, my lungs were burning, and I'd exhausted my rhythmic inner chants that keep me going through that leg, so I couldn't really dolphin leap my way to shore, but my time wound up being quite good, under 39 minutes. That's better than Oceanside! Good job, me!


 
After getting through the moving-like-I-had-a-stroke phase of post-swim sea legs, I got myself wiped off, shorts on, heart rate monitor in place, helmet buckled and my bike gloves on (those sheisty things do NOT like wet hands, let me just say), I gulped my CHOCOLATE RAGE Gu (the name always makes me laugh) and headed out to RAGE up some evil hills. Jack taped me on the way out, cheering "Hiroshima, bitches!" (My bib number was 1945... pretty sweetass number right?? The people next to him looked disturbed. Heh.)

 
As expected, the bike course was strenuous, only today nature decided to make it interesting, just in the way I prefer. So instead of just assy ass difficult hills on assy crap pavement (oh for some smooth asphalt, can I get a witness, my biking friends?) we also had assy crap evil headwinds nearly the entire time (to quote an LATCer: "how can you bike a loop and windup having headwinds the whole time?") Unless they were blowing from the side, as I flew downhill at 40mph, while my tire hit a groove in the assy pavement, causing my whole bike to rattle and shake and my mind to say "okay Muller, you're about to die, how do you like these triathlons now, uninsured dumbass?" That one happened after my midbike pee break, around 28 miles, I think (where I discovered no evidence of previous bloody scares, by the by.) 
 
All told, as tough as the climbs were, I sort of preferred those to the respites that came after: flying downhill with wind blowing you around is unsettling, even if you make up time and miles. The wind was so bad it ripped BOTH stickers off my helmet. I saw several of those dead soldiers glued to the road... good thing our bikes had numbers twist-tied.
 
To review, we all know 56 miles is a longass bike ride, so I won't show the map. The data that's interesting is the topography:

Oy.
Mmm. See those juts up and down? Yeah. That's what I was dealing with. You see that nasty shit at MILE 40? That's Nasty Grade. And you see how there is ANOTHER hill at the top? Yes, that was the cruelest surprise du jour. The downhill following featured a terrifying moment where I was forced to pass a white sedan on the left, for he was driving like an idiot (less than thrilled to have to do that on the assy pavement, no less). Another good reason to have closed courses...
 
As exhausting as it was, I felt good about the bike ride, too. I felt pretty strong and happy, and the views were, as they always are, spectacular: gorgeous rolling hills, and when Lake Naciemento comes into view, it's just stunning. Even when you're thinking you're gonna die, and have the same random songs playing in your head. (This time around, it was some song by Usher, which I'd rather forget, and randomly David Bowie's "Moonage Daydream", which I definitely mind less.) I believe I have Grane to thank for my bike success. (Did I mention that Grane, aka Bruennhilde's steed, is what I call my super kickass secondhand bike? It's totally battle worthy.) That bike can take hills like nothing... even though it's technically a size too small, with the modifications, it works like a dream. It's so nice after a season and a half of riding the Tank to have a bike that's super efficient... every little inch of pedal stroke was going into moving me ahead. Hills? No problem, g.
 
The last hills after Nasty Grade were no small chickens (um, is that a phrase? If not, it is now) and so once I reached Lynch Hill for the scary descent back to the transition area, I already had the crazy euphoria of "oh oh oh, I'm getting the fuck off this bike soon!", which I knew was misplaced euphoria, as I still had a hillyass half marathon to tackle. (It's pretty devestating to see the men of earlier waves already in their sixth mile of the run as you are just getting back from your bike... not to mention those who are actually finishing. Yikes.)
 
But back I went, and I felt happy, because I'd done it in under four hours. Go me! For a person with colon cancer, I was doing great! [Note: I don't have colon cancer, turns out I "passed a clot", which is harmless and not worth all the fuss. But blood loss is still blood loss and the doctor was impressed I was robust and hydrated enough to not feel ill affected. Thank you, overdose of Gatorade from previous days!] I hung up my bike, got my visor on, slipped on my shoes and out I ran.
 
Only upon reaching the port-a-potty for my second pee break did I realize I was running in two sets of shorts (my bike shorts over my tri shorts), so I took them off, tucked them into my pants, and ran with a big old weird looking cloth bulge until mile 8, where I ran up the hill into the campground to cheering LATCers and abandoned them on a rock near my campsite. Before this, the thought of mile 8 was helpful... I'd think "specifically directed moral support is just five miles away!" at mile 3, and so forth. And once that was done, it was only 5.1 miles to the finish. But sweet Lord, those were long miles.
 
To get an idea of what I was up against, here's the topography on that shiz:
 
 
I had given myself explicit permission to walk to hills and had been doing so, trying to run so long as I could walk and keep my heart rate low, and had managed to jog a decent 6 mile per hour rate for at least a few stretches, but then that last stretch, which went out into a desolate meadow, down a looooong hill that you then had to run BACK up in the hot sun, and then the last three miles just isolated in this dusty shadeless route... it was definitely a trying experience. Felt more like I was in some surreal existential hell than a race. At one point, I was just staring at the cracked, parched dirt road ahead of me, jogging steadily, saying to myself, just keep going, just keep going. I even closed my eyes. All I wanted was a sofa. But little by little, I made it, and soon I was over that last time check and the dude DJing Michael Jackson was announcing that Nicole Muller (pronounced correctly here) from West Hollywood (well, sort of) was on her last mile! YEAH BITCHESSSS!

If you see that little intense decent on the topography map, that's the end of the run, which goes straight down. Me and my long legs took off with the help of sweet gravity and loped down, not holding back at all. (Again, as with the trail marathon, my years of running around in the woods enabled me to bound downhill fearlessly.) I passed a load of more timid people, including the one guy I kept up with the whole time, a forty-something dude with Rocktape on his left calf, who said to me as I'd sprinted up a little hill earlier, "you're going to pass me on the final sprint to the finish, aren't you?" I was feeling pretty raw at that point, so I said, "More like crawl to the finish." We'd gone back and forth with who's in front, who's walking this time, not in a competitive way, but in a good for pacing way. Sure enough, there he was, happily raising his arms in victory to people passing on the shuttle uphill, and sure enough, there I loped by, resisting the urge to say "You were right!" lest it come off as bitchy. We were both in our last half mile... he was soaking up the victory, I was trying to finish strong as I could. With the help of the hill, my pace was up to 8 miles per hour. Booyah! Sure beat my 3.5 mph walk.



Down to the bottom, giving it all I got, I reached the chute to the finish line and did what best could resemble a sprint in that condition, urged on by a "yeah LA Tri! Finish strong!" (I love the LA Tri support, who needs a name when you got a team?) Sunglasses in hand (want to see that face for the picture, am I right?), I crossed the line to victory! (With my last name pronounced "Mueller". Why do they always mispronounce when it counts?) And immediately, breathlessly wanted to burst into tears, but was immediately asked by the girl taking the time tag off my ankle "are you okay?", which they always do when you look emotional, which I always look, because I just finished a half marathon after a 56 mile bike and 1.2 mile swim on this difficult-ass course, woman. So yes, I'm fine, let me put my damn cool towel on my face and weep for a second! No one better keep me from crying after my Ironman, is all I'm saying. Tears of joy to not be running anymore, and to have achieved something. Allow me that!

Jack got a little video at the end... I do not look so into being interviewed at that point, for obvious reasons. (You can see it in the next post.) But I felt surprisingly well considering all the drama, and the lack of training, and the moving, and the illness. I think Vineman's gonna be allllll right. But I WILL NOT skip my Saturday long rides anymore! Well... except for my friend's wedding next week.  And my birthday. But... I mean it, I'll be good. As good as a Hollywood Triathlete can be...!

Thursday, March 17, 2011

Let's make it interesting.

We've all heard the phrase, used in poker games when someone wants to up the ante. "Let's make it interesting." Wasn't it already interesting? If poker were boring to begin with, why'd you start playing in the first place? And why did you wait to "make it interesting"? Well, I guess the point is not that it was dull at the onset, but that it now has a sense of real risk, real danger, real stakes. And so I can say this little quest of mine has been "made interesting" with the Hollywood aspect... it's tough enough to train for one of these super endurance races, but trying to perform and get ahead in the biz concurrently is a ridiculous addition. So ridiculous as to be irresistable to a madman like me.

Lately, even with it being crunchtime in terms of needing to get those hours and miles in before Wildflower, it seems like everything else in the world is coming to a frenzied head. My job situation's gone to pot, my horror film came out, the website I write for launched, and two different people approached me about doing some kind of menstrual product social media work. (Yes, the two were entirely unrelated and happened within a week of each other.) So it really feels like there's a paradigm shift happening in my life. Add to this that I suddenly found a single apartment which is just gorgeous, in a great building, with a huge kitchen, ac unit and utilities included for $875/mo, just when I'd started daydreaming about being on my own... not to mention that it's right near Griffith, so I'd get my tri on right easy. Of course that also means I'm moving fifteen days before Wildflower... eep. But life is crazy sometimes, and I'd rather do it all than nothing...
...which is why this week I've been running myself ragged creating a parody music video with my friends while the zeitgeist is still there (it's of the 13 million youtube abomination, "Friday", and is practically guaranteed hits.) We were up til 12:30 on Tuesday recording, Wednesday I was up past 1 doing my uke set at the Trip Bar, and today I was up early to shoot a few scenes so Stuart would have more time to edit and get this vid up by our Monday deadline. I have been good about getting in my minimum amount of training, but today haven't done a thing, had sugar and pizza, and can't exercise because my butt is turning inside out. (Sorry, tmi. But hemorrhoids are no joke.) I have to stay focused and keep up the multitasking... I'm still convinced this can all be done. It just will be more... interesting.
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Sunday, February 27, 2011

Crunchtime.

So, I just got an email that says it's 64 days before Wildflower. Fuck.The halcyon days of unlimited yoga are done, and the hours of conditioning must begin in full force pronto if I am to survive this brutal long course.
The good news? My little diet experiment has worked quite well, so I'm already in pretty good form weight wise. Also, we've finally moved to the office, which means morning swim and spin.
I'm cutting it a bit close in my usual fashion, but I've got my new beautiful Brooks ready to be broken in, and I just got out of a four day business trip that would've been April 1 and totally messed up my training schedule, so I think I'll fare just fine...maybe.
Still haven't read the endurance chapter of Four Hour Body, but definitely going to use more interval training this time around to improve my speed and endurance...don't need a book to tell me that would help.
It's Sunday and I'm up early...looks like as good a time as any to bust into this full force. Shoes on, let's go!
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Friday, January 28, 2011

Four Hour Body and Tri's

Last week I got a newsletter from the USAT, and there was an article singing the praises of Paleo, and an endurance athlete doesn't have to carbload with starches and get addicted to powerbars to succeed.  This was, of course, utterly heartbreaking.  Why run races, if not for the giant bowl of pasta?  Sweet potatoes are grand, but penne they are not.  Yet lately-- especially after the holiday sugar overload-- I've been thinking a lot about what dietary choices I can make that will help me out, and considering some new sort of regimine.  If you tell me what to do, with specific instructions, I'm pretty great at following through.  I'm the eternal student.  I did, after all, get through all my past races simply by copying down a training schedule from a xerox my friend gave me.

So with this in mind, my roommate's excitement over Tim Ferriss' Four Hour Body and the Slow Carb diet made a lot of sense.  I'm not so sure if I'm ready to commit to a life of Paleo, but a restricted diet for six days and a cheat day a week is something I jive with.  Otherwise you just cheat in little ways randomly, and feel bad about it.  But this?  You get to glutton out and it's "required".  Yeah!!  I've been giving it a shot, if only to slim down and have less weight to lug around, and because, after all, this is Hollywood.  Can't be too thin or too rich.

I figure it was best to do this during my yoga time, because from what I can tell, it's not so conducive to an intense training schedule.  No fruit, no carbs, no dairy, just veggies, loads of legumes, and a handful of nuts.  And so I'm considering, as it was endorsed by Mr. USAT, to go Paleo once I get heavy into the training, if it proves impossible otherwise.  (Though I did just find a sweet recipe for a Slow Carb protein bar!)  I'm pretty interested in the regimen Tim's figured out, and even if it's not totally my thing, it at least is inspiring me to see if I can train for my super long race with less time.  Because time's something I don't have a lot of...

So yeah!  Inspired by the idea of smallest possible work for greatest gains, I'm switching it up.  More track workouts, more spinning, more drills in the pool, but less time eaten up over all.  So harder work, but lesser time.  Also can help prevent injury! Sure, a long bike/run on the weekend, to gauge improvements and such.  But wouldn't it be neat to apply that whole idea to a full triathlon?  And someone on a time and money budget like me seems like an ideal Guinea pig.

I'll keep track of it as I go...

Game on. Dog downward.

It was not without some drama, but I'm now officially all signed up for my races this year, so at least my bank account can recover from that over the next few months.  I'm gonna be a lame-o and only do two, because I am, after all, a budget triathlete, so I've chosen carefully: for the first time, I'll be doing the long course at Wildflower (eee!) and then of course, Vineman!  A lot of people purport the long course is actually harder than Vineman, and I might agree... it's so challenging with all those crazy hills, and Vineman is so gentle and lovely.  You know, for an Ironman length race.

I got two friends, Larry and Ismael, to get in on the three-for-two Vineman signup, where the third person pays back two-thirds so everyone gets a sweet deal (Wildflower wound up costing the same amount, once you figured in the discount!)  Ismael and I met up on December 30th, just before the deadline for the cheapest price, so we'd get the best deal, and did the online sign up on my laptop in a coffee shop.  I had Larry's info and was hoping it would be smooth sailing (Ismael was, afterall, on his break from fighting crime: he's in the LAPD), but of course, my apprehensions were fulfilled and the third registration didn't show a balance of $0.  I was anxious we'd get stuck with the bill, but heard back from the Vineman folks in no time, who were super cool about our technical difficulties. Larry filled out his registration separately and emailed it in the New Year, and by the next week we were all three proud Vineman contenders.

The real drama, of course, ensued when Larry went to send his check of a third of the entrance price to Ismael, and some ass stole it from the outgoing mail, cashed it, and drained his bank account via some elaborate money laundering scheme based out of Beverly Hills.  That of course caused a huge amount of stress, with police and FBI getting involved, but hopefully Larry's gonna be back in good financial standing in no time.  I just find it ironic that the check they wrote was due to a police officer in the first place!  They've got it coming.

Groupon (and Living Social) are of course big budget wonders if you manage to resist the temptation to buy every deal you see.  (I do not always resist.  I'm on a coupon-fast now.)  That being said, I got one month of unlimited yoga at the so-beautiful YogaWorks sudio on Larchmont.  I swore I would try and do a class everyday, within my ability (I know I'll HAVE to miss next Friday because I'll be at Big Bear on a mini vacation, which I paid for with a Living Social voucher... told you, totally addicted.)  So far I've achieved this despite my most insane schedule ever-- between tutoring and work, there's not many hours in the day.  But how nice to set aside some time and try to get those hammys stretched before I embark on the insane regimine of tri training.  Larry's already getting his base built, and Ismael wants to go for some long rides, as he's doing an Ironman in May.  So I'm enjoying the zen of this moment while I can, and when I can find it (last night, I did a 9-10PM class, and this morning I did 6:30AM-8.  Let me just say, the muscles are not so limber in the AM.  Couldn't pull off plow.)  I did sign up, at a discount (but of course!) for a 20 class package, so I can cross train my my happy yoga place.  The budget-ier choice would have been to stick with the free outdoor yoga in the park, but with the way my schedule's working, there's not a single time they practice that I can join, so this seems a sound investment.  If only for my sanity.