Month: February 2026

And So It Begins…

Base Phase. Week 1 of 10.

After broken arms, colds, travel, and whatever else tried to derail things, we’re officially here. Not perfect. Not optimal. But here.

Swim 🏊

  • Workouts: 2
  • Total Time: 1:13
  • Distance: A bit short at 3600 yards

Because of the broken arm, I haven’t been swimming as much as I’d like over the last month. I’d rather start 1,400 yards short than push it and reinjure something. I’ll build it back gradually. The goal is durability, not hero yards in Week 1.

Run 🏃

  • Workouts: 3
  • Total Time: 1:47
  • Total Distance: 10.79 miles

I skipped the brick run, but that was fine. The runs felt good — smooth, steady, no major complaints. I even squeezed in one last run in Florida before coming back to cold Chicago. It was heavenly. I am very much looking forward to spring.

Bike 🚴

  • Workouts: 3
  • Total Time: 1:56
  • Total Distance: 30 miles

All three rides were outside — on the e-bike. Colder, but nice. I’ll keep mixing those in while adding the Peloton back until the weather cooperates. Then the road bike can come back out to play.

Relative Effort 📈

  • Total Weekly Effort: 672

That’s a big jump from 380. Not really optimal. That kind of spike can lead to overtraining or injury. But I feel great this morning. Surprisingly fresh after a bigger weekend. No excessive soreness. No red flags.

So… cautiously optimistic.

Reflections ✍️

All in all, a good start to the base phase. Not perfect, but solid. The structure is back, and that’s what matters.

This coming week will be a bit janky because I’m traveling again over the weekend. I can get my runs in there (or at least one), but I’ll need to front-load swims. The plan: longer bike before heading to the airport Friday, long run Saturday in Boston.

The only real change is moving the rest day from today to Sunday. Which means two straight weeks without a true break. Not ideal, especially after ramping up effort.

Oh well. Might be another entry in How Not To Train.

Still — Base Phase. Week 1. Wheels are back on. And we’re rolling.


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First! ….

We have been getting so many political ads in the mail, but one of them caught my eye.  It’s for a judicial election, and the candidate prominently notes “NAME OF CANDIDATE WOULD BE THE FIRST ASIAN AMERICAN FEMALE JUDGE ELECTED BY THE 20TH SUBCIRCUIT.”

You can probably already guess that she obviously wouldn’t be the first female elected.  You can probably also guess that she wouldn’t be the first Asian-American woman elected in Cook County. (not even close)

But what you probably don’t know is that the 20th Subcircuit was only created in 2022.  There has only been one election for that area, and two judges (one man, one woman) were elected.  There is no glass ceiling she’s breaking through.  No great history of discrimination that will end with her election.

Everyone has to be “the first….”  That’s meaningful when it means something, not when it’s trivialized to woo voters who don’t know the history.

 



The “No Good Deed” Boomerang: A Masterclass in Being Lujacked…

Everybody knows that no good deed goes unpunished. In fact, if you do a good deed long enough, it eventually becomes a permanent line item on your soul that you can never truly delete.

For the past few years, I’ve organized a field trip for our female students to visit the courtrooms, observe the legal process, and see what a career in law actually looks like. It’s a great trip. But this year, I decided to test my theory. I didn’t seek out the invitation. I didn’t go looking for the work. I figured it was time for someone else to step up—specifically a female lead, considering I’ve been saying for years that a female-empowerment trip should probably be led by a woman.

The organization sent the invitation to someone else. She accepted. Great. I thought I was free. I thought I could just exist in my classroom and let someone else handle the logistics for once.

The Request

Then came the request: “Can you help chaperone?”

Sigh. Fine. I said okay. I can sit on a bus. I can stand in a courtroom. I can do the “support” role. That was my first mistake.

The Hijack

A day later, the other shoe didn’t just drop; it kicked me in the teeth. I got a request for a list of the girls who want to go on the trip.

Me: “Weren’t you coming to my classes to talk to the girls today?” (You know, to actually inform them about the trip she is supposedly organizing?)

Co-worker: “I have a meeting now, so can you do it?”

And just like that, I’m the organizer again.

The Lujack

Here’s what burns: If you prioritize a meeting over the actual legwork of the event you accepted, that should be on you. Don’t lujack your choice of one meeting (with who knows who) over the meeting you had planned to come talk to the students on to me!

By “helping” her because she’s too busy with a meeting to talk to my students, I am now the one doing the recruitment, the list-making, and the logistical heavy lifting. The “Meeting” trump card shouldn’t mean I suddenly inherit your responsibilities.

I knew I should have said no. I saw the trap, I walked into it anyway, and now I’m back to square one,

Will I ever learn? Probably not. But for today, I’m just annoyed.

I will learn, though. I will learn to NEVER do anything outside my own classroom again.  Every time I do it ends badly for me.



More “Less Is More”…. (see what I did there?)

Last year I downloaded a habit tracker app. I’ve used it faithfully. Checked boxes. Built streaks. Watched little digital fireworks go off when I hit milestones.

At first, I loved it.

Lately? Not so much.

It’s not that I want to stop the habits. It’s that I’m starting to feel like I’m doing them to appease the app instead of because I want to.

The whole point of habit tracking is obvious: you nudge yourself long enough that the behavior becomes automatic. Fair enough. Maybe that worked. Maybe a year is enough runway.

But something subtle shifted.

Two of my tracked tasks are Practice ASL and Play Instrument—each for a set amount of time. On paper, that sounds disciplined. In reality, some days it feels… compulsory.

When I sit down at the bass or the drum kit because I have to hit 15 minutes, it’s different than when I pick it up because I feel like playing along to a song. I’m not turning pro. I’m not starting a band of other 60-year-olds reliving 1987. I just like playing. I like fumbling through a groove. I like figuring out a fill.

The moment it becomes a box to check, the joy drains a bit.

Same with ASL. I do want to become proficient. But I have time. If I skip a day because I’m tired or just not feeling it, I’m still going to get there. Fifteen minutes less on a random Tuesday isn’t the difference between fluency and failure.

Other tracked habits? Taking vitamins. Drinking water when I wake up. Journaling.

Those are already baked in. If I miss journaling one day, I don’t want the app telling me my streak is broken. Maybe I just didn’t have much to say. Maybe silence was the point. The mental health benefit of journaling shouldn’t come with the mild shame of a red “0.”

That’s the part I’m pushing back on.

In this phase of life—this ongoing “less is more” experiment—I’m trying to strip away unnecessary scaffolding. If a thing is truly part of me now, maybe it doesn’t need gamification. Maybe it doesn’t need a nudge.

Maybe doing it because I want to is enough.

I know habit trackers are helpful for a lot of people. They probably were helpful for me. They got me started. They kept me consistent.

But I don’t want to live inside a scoreboard.

If I play, I’ll play because it’s fun.
If I practice ASL, it’ll be because I’m curious.
If I journal, it’ll be because something is stirring.

Not because my phone says it’s time.

Less tracking.
More living.

You do you.



The Customer is Always Right (When They Actually Want to be There)….

I’ve spent the better part of thirty years providing services to people who, quite literally, would rather be anywhere else on the planet.

Think about that for a second.

For six years, I was a prosecutor. You know who goes to court? Victims. People who have had the worst day of their lives and are now forced to sit in a sterile room with bad lighting to relive it. They aren’t there for the “experience.” They’re there because a subpoena said so. They’re miserable, and honestly, they have every right to be.

Then I flipped the script and spent fourteen years as a defense attorney. Different side of the aisle, same vibe. My clients weren’t “customers” in the fun sense of the word. They were people staring down the barrel of a life-altering L. Nobody wakes up stoked to see their defense counsel. You’re a reminder of their mistakes or their misfortunes. You are the person they pay because they have to, not because they want to.

So, naturally, I thought teaching would be the pivot.

I’ve been at it for eight years now. And look, I like the job. But let’s be real: I’m currently staring at a room full of high school seniors who view a 50-minute law lecture like a prison sentence. To them, homework isn’t “learning”—it’s an obstacle between them and whatever they’re doing on their phones. I’m still the guy standing between them and where they actually want to be.

I’m tired of being the guy at the door everyone is trying to walk out of.

I want to work somewhere people are actually trying to get into.

I want to work at a ski resort. Why? Because nobody gets dragged to a ski resort by a process server. People save up their hard-earned money, pack the car, and brave the cold because they want to be on that mountain. They’re chasing a flow state. They’re happy. Even when they’re cold and tired, they chose the struggle.

I want to work at Wrigley Field during a Cubs game. I want to work in a National Park. I want to be the guy providing the service that people actually put on their calendar with a smiley face.

I know, I know. I’m being naive. I can already hear the comments. I’m sure there are entitled POS at Vail who complain that the snow is “too crunchy.” I’m sure there are drunks in the bleachers at Wrigley who make everyone’s life miserable. I’m sure there are tourists at Yellowstone who try to pet the bison. People are still people, and a certain percentage of them will always be a headache.

But at least they’re there by choice.

At least they want what I’m selling. There is a fundamental difference in the “aura” of a room when the people in it are there because they’re pursuing a “win” rather than trying to mitigate a “loss.”

After thirty years of managing human misery and teenage apathy, I think I’m ready to trade in the “Must-Do” for the “Want-To.” I want to provide a service for people who are actually glad to see me coming.

Is that too much to ask? Or am I just the old guy yelling at the sky again?

Either way, if you see me scanning lift tickets next winter, mind your business. I’ll be the one smiling.



Getting Off the Double-D Bus….

Yesterday, my household received 17 pieces of U.S. mail. Fifteen were campaign mailers.

Fifteen.

Having been part of a few campaigns myself, I know exactly why we get them. We’re what the voter files call “Double-D’s” — voters who have pulled a Democratic ballot in the last two primaries. When a candidate wants to do a mailing, they don’t just blanket the city. They buy a voter list and target likely supporters: people who are registered, who actually vote, and who have voted in their party’s primaries before.

In Chicago, that’s the play.

There are no Republican primaries that matter here. If there are Republicans on the ballot, they’re often token candidates with no realistic path in a one-party town. Countywide judicial races? Zero Republicans. Why would I pull an R ballot when there’s literally no one to vote for?

So everyone — regardless of their actual politics — pulls a Democratic ballot. It’s the only place where the election is decided.

And because I’ve voted in every primary and general election since 1984, I’m prime real estate. Reliable. Predictable. Engaged. A campaign consultant’s dream.

Which is why my recycling bin is a campaign graveyard every two years.

The irony is that I mostly vote in primaries for judges. They’re often unopposed in the general election, so the primary is the only meaningful vote. If you care about who ends up on the bench, that’s the moment. Sometimes I’ve had friends on the ballot. Sometimes former colleagues. It’s hard not to show up.

But this year?

No election in my sub-circuit.
No meaningful countywide vacancies.
A crowded congressional field where the candidates seem to be competing to prove who can run the furthest left, the fastest.

My choices aren’t moderate vs. progressive. They’re progressive vs. more progressive vs. most progressive. There’s nobody even pretending to occupy the middle.

And so I find myself contemplating something I’ve never done in 42 years of voting: skipping a primary.

Not switching teams. I’m not taking a Republican ballot — that’s equally futile here, and it doesn’t solve the “no moderates” issue. Just… stepping off the bus for a cycle. Removing myself from the “Double-D” category. Quietly slipping off the mailing lists.

It feels oddly disloyal, even though it’s not. Voting is something I’ve always taken seriously. I’ve never missed. Ever. Through law school, through young kids, through brutal work schedules. Snowstorms. Busy seasons. I showed up.

But voting only matters when there’s something meaningful to decide.

If there isn’t — if the ballot doesn’t offer a real choice, if there’s no competitive race that affects my district — is showing up a civic virtue or just muscle memory?

I don’t know.

Part of me thinks I’ll cave. Some acquaintance will pop up on the ballot, and I’ll think, well, I should support them. Or I’ll tell myself that consistent participation matters, even when the choices are thin.

But part of me is tired of the performative mailers. The glossy cardstock promises. The environmental waste. The constant nudges from campaigns that already know exactly how I’ve voted for four decades.

Maybe for one cycle, I let them wonder.

Maybe I’ll retire my Double-D status.

After 42 straight years, I’ve probably earned a sabbatical.



Putting the Wheels Back On…

The last three weeks have not been good training.

Most of that isn’t my fault. I had a broken arm, which kept me out of the pool and made biking uncomfortable. But I also didn’t run like I should have. Then, just to really seal the deal, I picked up a nasty cold this week that kept me home for two days and crushed whatever momentum I might’ve rebuilt.

The wheels fell off the training bus. Bigly.

It’s honestly not even worth laying out a full training log for the week, but for completeness: one 30-minute run, one 30-minute bike, and one 30-minute swim. That’s it. Relative effort dropped to 180, down from 739 the last time I posted—and down through a slow climb in the 600s to get there. To be fair, 180 wasn’t even as bad as the 174 the week before. Still, between the broken arm and the cold, training ground to a near halt.

The timing isn’t great. IMWI base phase officially starts on 2/16, which gives me about one week to get back to where I wanted to be. That’s not happening. I’ll increase relative effort and training load next week, but I’ll be starting base phase a bit behind.

And that’s okay.

I’ve got 30 weeks from my start date to the start line. There’s room to adjust. I can still finish base phase on time and in shape—just not optimally. Not perfectly. But this has never been about perfection anyway. It’s about consistency over time, and sometimes consistency includes setbacks, illness, and broken bones.

Next week is about putting the wheels back on. Not flying. Just rolling again.



On further reflection…

 

The pity party in the post below should be read as minor. I know I have it good. My health is still pretty darn good. This isn’t a cry for help or a “woe is me” entry.

I just finished reading Do No Harm, written by a neurosurgeon, and it’s filled with heartbreaking cases—people blindsided by tragedy, bodies failing in sudden and cruel ways. That alone can mess with your head. But closer to home, the last four months have been… a lot.

I’ve known three young people—22, 21, and 21—who died suddenly. One by suicide. One murdered. One rumored murder, though in no event was it natural or a disease. I’ve gone to visitations for two of them, and I honestly can’t imagine the pain their parents are carrying. That kind of loss feels unbearable.

To be clear: this isn’t about me. This isn’t “look at me being sad about horrible things that happen to others.” It’s just the backdrop.

Add to that my wife’s co-worker, who died of glioblastoma, and two friends’ brothers, both gone in their mid-50s. It’s been that kind of winter. One loss stacked on top of another. So much tragedy, all at once.

I feel deeply for the people left behind. If there’s a lesson I’m taking from all of this, it’s a simple one: enjoy it all.

I usually walk around with a pretty strong awareness that I could die at any moment. I literally tell my students every day when they leave class, “Have a nice rest of your day. See you tomorrow—if I don’t die.” Mostly it’s a long-game joke, because one day I will die and they’ll all be like, Dude. He totally called it.

Anyway, that’s about it.

People can stay angry. They can yell at the TV, doom-scroll blogs, and go on partisan rants about the outrage of the minute. That stuff will still be there tomorrow.

I’ll be over here hugging my kids, playing with my dog, enjoying dinner with my wife, and doing my best to savor every minute.



Pity Party for One…

I know this is a bit of catastrophizing, but for the first time in my life I’m really feeling my age. Fifty-nine. I’m sure my body complained when I was younger too, but I wasn’t aware of it in the same way. Back then I bounced back from injuries. A small cut healed in a day. I got out of bed and walked down stairs without a second thought.

Now? Not so much.

Everything hurts.

Some of this, I know, is temporary. I’ve had a cold for the last week. Nothing dramatic, but enough to knock me down. I took two days off work. I sat around. I didn’t exercise. And as always, not moving made everything worse. Weak, stiff, sluggish. The good news is I know how this part goes: next week I ease back into exercising, slowly rebuild, and claw my way back to baseline. It sucks, but it is what it is.

The broken arm is also mending. I’m just about a month out now. I still feel it, and I’m not eager to put weight on it, but I should be back in the pool next week just to keep the range of motion. That helps… except it also means that even though I feel weak, I can’t really do much strength training yet. So I wait. Another two or three weeks, then I start building strength again. Again, not permanent. Just annoying.

Then there are my wrists. Both of them. They’ve hurt like hell for a month. Some of it is clearly overuse — too many pull sets with paddles — but they don’t seem to be getting any better. It probably doesn’t help that I keep learning drums, playing bass, and generally refusing to ice anything or take NSAIDs like a responsible adult.

My knees have hurt for years. That’s not new. I walk down stairs one step at a time now — both feet on each step — which is a sentence I never imagined typing. The back of my right knee has been tinging for a while, and now the front of it has started popping. Because of course it has.

And to top it all off, I wake up in the morning and can’t fully straighten my arms.

That one is new.

It goes away after twenty minutes or so, but still. What the hell is that?

As if my body decided to pile on, my senses have joined the rebellion.

My hearing is going. I can’t really hear my wife unless she’s in the room and looking at me when she talks. If she says something from another room, it might as well be a different language. Half the time I respond based on context clues and hope for the best. This has not always gone well.

My eyes aren’t much better. I’ve had one cataract removed. That eye is still wonky, and the other one has a small cataract of its own, plus generally poor vision for good measure. My glasses help, of course, but most of the time I just wear cheaters — even when I’m not reading — so both eyes are equally fuzzy. I can’t see especially well, but it’s easier on my eyes. Low expectations, evenly distributed.

I know — none of this is catastrophic. I know a lot of it will pass. I know I’m still running, biking, swimming, working, living my life. This isn’t despair. It’s just… awareness. The slow, creeping realization that my body no longer quietly resets overnight. It negotiates. It complains. It needs warm-ups. And apparently, it now has opinions about sound and light.

Anyway. Pity party for one. No gifts, no RSVPs required. I’ll shut it down shortly and get back to doing what I always do: moving forward carefully, grumbling a bit, and pretending I’m still indestructible — just with more stretching, louder voices, and bigger fonts.

 



Less Is More…

As I get older, I’ve adopted less is more as a mantra. It applies to most things, especially where I see dysfunction.

I know I said I wouldn’t talk politics, so this may be a slight violation, but if the U.S. government spent less money, we’d get better service. More money means more agencies and less oversight. You simply can’t follow all that money, and billions get stolen or wasted.

And it’s not that people along the chain don’t care—it’s that they like it this way. They are stealing or wasting the money. They’re getting money, votes, power, or influence, and the system protects them. The people at the bottom of the line don’t have the political acumen or leverage to complain, and even if they did, the answer would be to spend more money to fix the problem.

Spend a heck of a lot less. Make states pick up anything beyond the bare minimum, and I’ll bet a ton of that fraud disappears. This isn’t new. Twenty years ago I represented clients who ripped off Medicaid. Same behavior, different scale.

The same principle applies to schools.

Trying to push through the curriculum and doing more work doesn’t improve learning. It kills student motivation and achievement. I hear so many colleagues talk about being “behind” in the curriculum. Behind what, exactly? According to whose calendar?

I’ll work on a topic until students actually master it, then move on. Less coverage is more learning. Learning is a lifetime thing.  There’s plenty of time to “get through the curriculum,” and getting through it is far less important than students learning the underlying skills—how to read carefully, think clearly, ask good questions, and figure things out on their own. If they leave knowing how to learn, they’ll keep learning long after they’ve forgotten whatever unit we rushed through in March.

Political anxiety is another version of the same problem.

I wish there were a social movement to boycott social media, blogs, and 24/7 news. So much of it is click- and rage-bait. The authors don’t care. They want eyeballs, which lead to ad sales. Same with nonstop news channels. They have to fill the time even when there isn’t any news, and outrage keeps people watching. They’re selling soap.

If people stopped engaging—Twitter, BlueSky, Reddit, blogs—we’d deny them the eyeballs. Go outside. Get sun. Exercise. Play music. Make art. Read. Volunteer. There are endless things to do that don’t involve ramping yourself up over the outrage of the moment.

I’d make a horrible therapist. A friend mentioned how many clients she sees who are deeply anxious and depressed about the U.S. Really—Trump. (I live in a very liberal town.) If I were the therapist, I’d say: turn off the TV, delete the social media apps, and find one volunteer commitment a week. Tutor kids. Work at a soup kitchen. Whatever. Done.

I keep a daily habit tracker specifically to avoid doomscrolling: read for 30 minutes, play an instrument for 30 minutes, practice ASL. I’d tell them to do the same. Make brownies for a neighbor while listening to music instead of the news. Anything but feeding the beast.

Life isn’t that bad. The standard of living in the U.S. is fantastic. Access to medical care, technology, information—it’s not perfect and never will be, but too many people have a financial or political interest in keeping people outraged.

Honestly, when a friend shows full-blown Trump Derangement Syndrome—or the right-wing version—I tend to think they’re being used and don’t realize it. Especially since most of them are educated, upper-middle-class, employed white people who aren’t personally suffering any of it.  That doesn’t mean they can’t work for change, but the mental melt-downs seem both excessive, performative, and attention-seeking.

Less really is more.