blnchflr: Running (running)
practice being a zebra ([personal profile] blnchflr) wrote in [community profile] runners2014-07-20 10:46 pm
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July Challenge: Journey so far and check-in #3

Leave your current mileage and active hours in the comments :)

Week 2:
[personal profile] ell: 65.5/130 miles, 9/20 hours
[personal profile] franzi1981: 19.7/25 km 2/0 hours
[personal profile] ilanarama: 12.6/70 miles
[personal profile] linaelyn: 0/25 miles, 8/35 hours
[personal profile] liv: 11/40 km, 10.5/25 hours
[personal profile] meri_oddities: 84/120 miles, 3/8 hours
[personal profile] ridicully: 25/75 km, 3/25 hours
[personal profile] semielliptical: 42/85 miles, 2.5/8 hours
[personal profile] blnchflr: 27/50 km, 1.5/2 hours
[personal profile] temve: 29.5/70 miles, 19/20 hours

Together we've travelled 475.1 miles or 764.4 km in July, or 43.9 % of our collective goal!

Map of journey second week from ca. Schleswig to Rhüden, Germany

From Schleswig or close enough, we passed by Kiel and through Neumünster, then excitingly through the second-biggest city in Germany: Hamburg, running though the Elbtunnel - "Achtung, achtung, hier spricht die Polizei! Hallo, hallo, det er politiet!" (at least they used to say that back in the day; haven't been through in years).

From Hamburg we continued south as decided by the poll, running by Lüneburger Heide for a bit, through Hannover and Hildesheim, and stopping for the week in the small town of Rhüden.

Not as long a run as week 1, as we had a couple of people out of commission, but we're still 0.5 % ahead of our goal, so go us!!
linaelyn: (hugs from kittens)

[personal profile] linaelyn 2014-07-21 05:06 pm (UTC)(link)
New Job? WOW! That's HUGE! To manage any runs at ALL in that kind of week is OFFICIALLY AMAZING.

You do realize intellectually that your healthy activities, active hours & running time are in the crazycakes upper reaches of not-normal, right? That most humans in our mutual age-contingent get upset at having to park the car at the back of the lot because it means they have to walk a couple hundred yards to get to the groceries, and back home to the sofa & tv? YOU ARE DOING ASTOUNDINGLY WELL.
ell: (Default)

[personal profile] ell 2014-07-22 06:32 am (UTC)(link)
intellectually, i do know this, but that doesn't seem to matter to the feeling part of my brain.

as for the job, it's just a job and it's temporary, but it's the first time i've been out of the house for a full-time job since i've been here - all the other work i've done has been telework to the us from home. it turns out that i don't have the spoons to work (did i mention it's in a foreign language?) with other people and have any left over for me and Tem. at the very least, this has really brought home to us that i really do need some sort of intervention because it turns out that when i thought i was just lying around being a waste of humanity, it turns out that i was actually gathering spoons up for the other hours of the day where i could then appear mostly normal and not crazy.
linaelyn: (clearbrook - heroine addict)

[personal profile] linaelyn 2014-07-22 07:25 pm (UTC)(link)
It is so wonderful that we have the metaphor of spoons to help us understand these things. :-) Having the challenges of your general level of spoons, on top of New Job, and Not-your-Native-Language, WOW. You are doing well just to keep your head above water.

There have definitely been times in my own life when it was Work-and-nothing-left-for-home, both as the stressed worker, and as the partner of the stressed one. And the first month(s?) of a new job are often that way.