Monthly Archives: June 2007

Woe is Wii

I have found the Wii to be as entertaining as I had hoped it would be. Mer and I have had several friends over to play two-on-two tennis, and Mer and I have played a lot of tennis against each other, usually splitting games.

For solo play, the best game in my opinion is baseball. And there is the source of my frustration. The Wii has arbitrarily assigned a point value of 1000 to be “pro” level. I made my way up through the “minors” easily, reaching 993 points with no losses and only one tie (once I figured the game out). Then, at 993 I faced my first pro team. Suddenly, the batters would not swing at the garbage pitches I threw. If I put it across the plate, they hit the ball. The pitchers suddenly threw lots of splitters, which it turns out I can’t hit.

So, after four games against pros or near-pros, I have lost four straight games. I think I have only scored two runs in those four games. Today, I scored one run on three hits, and gave up five runs. It was not even close. To make matters even more fun, the computer randomly assigns errors to teams, either fielding or pitching. My team had four errors to my opponent’s none. Sheesh. My score has dropped below 900, and I’m looking forward to facing a non-pro team again. Soon.

Full house

We closed on our new house today. It is odd – all the legal and financial stuff happens in the weeks before closing. On the actual closing day, the deed gets “filed” (I assume not in the circular file). So, on a day when you spend thousands of dollars and commit to up to 30 years of payments, you get a phone call congratulating you on your file going through. Strangely anti-climatic.

We’ll probably move in the first week in July or so. It will be nice to walk to work.

Luck o’ the Irish

The city of Cuyahoga Falls and a local chapter of the Hibernians throw a ***FREE*** Irish Festival every year, with three days of music and food and dance. I’ll blog more about that later, after I’ve been to a few more acts (we went last night for about an hour and a half).

BUT, starting this year, they also added a 5k race. I kept looking at the weather forecast (which was looking cool and dry), and I kept thinking about the 3 seconds I needed to break 20:00 in a 5k. I asked Mer to let me run this race, since I was still in shape for a 5k, and after some pleading on my part agreed to let me enter (we need to be careful about money, and the race cost $20).

So, the race was today. The day was indeed cool (probably about 60 degrees at race time), and was low humidity. I had also gone out and bought new shoes before I knew about the race (my old shoes were about 14 months old and were getting pretty worn to run in), so I had that in the plus column. There were about 100 racers at the start line, but I got near the front, and after a cute “Good luck, Sweetie!” from Mer and a command to “Go!”, the race started. I ducked around a few runners and found myself in the front pack. We had a slight bottleneck through a road barrier that was still up from the festival, but that did not mess with my pace or stride. I was still passing people, and found to my surprise that after about 5 minutes I was firmly in the lead pack. I felt good. The sun was out, but most of the course was shaded. There was a small uphill at the start, and there was a brisk breeze in my face, but I felt good, and since it was an out-and-back race, I knew the wind and the small hill were going to be in my favor for the last half of the race.

I was still surprised that as we neared the turn-around area, I could still see the lead police car. I was starting to feel a little tired, but the race was half done, and I was about to get the wind at my back, and my pace was holding up. There was a small but slightly painful hill near the two-mile marker, but I talked myself through that (my running mind is always about getting to certain minutes – “just get to 15 minutes” and such). There was a fairly long straightaway that led to the home stretch, and that required some mental games as well. I was really starting to feel tired once I got to 15 minutes. The “just get to 16 (or 17 or 18) minute mark” alternated with a fairly steady “Please, God, help me!” While my legs and breathing were okay, my body was tired. I don’t how much God gets invested in my running, but I managed to keep going. I turned onto the final road, and was still struggling, but knew I would be okay if I just kept my pace steady. I managed to do that, and with yells of encouragement from my supportive and loving wife, I finished.

Official time: 19:35
8th place out of 109 finishers.

See the results here.

Yes! First sub-20 in more than 15 years.

Many thanks to Mer for her support of an obsession she does not understand, and thanks to God for making the human body so that it can do some pretty cool things.

I can now relax for a few weeks, and then switch my attention back to distance training for an October half-marathon.

An interesting note on the age classes this time. I was in the 30-39 group, and guys from this group finished 1,2, and 4, so no top-three finish for me in my age group this time (I came in 4th out of 21), but that is fine since I got my personal goal.

Date Night

With the impending two house mortgages, Mer and I have relegated all of our social activities to the free kind or to ones where we already have paid. This last weekend was the latter category. We have season tickets to Actors’ Summit Theater, and so this last weekend was an official goin’ out on the town date night!

As an added bonus, we are in the middle of graduation parties, and we eat very well at them. We had a fun party on Saturday afternoon, where we got to visit with some of Mer’s students and I got to chat with Ombudsman and his family for about 30 minutes. All this, AND food!

After the party, we went home and puttered. We ate a modest supper while watching Angel on DVD. We then headed north to Hudson to the theater to see Musical of Musicals, the Musical! This is a very funny…um…musical where the same story is told five times in five different musical styles. Here is the plot:

– You MUST pay the rent!
– I CAN’T pay the rent!
– You MUST pay the rent!
– I CAN’T pay the rent!
– I’LL pay the rent!

All done in the style of Rogers and Hammerstein, Sondheim, Webber, and more. If you know basic musical theater, the show is a riot. The musical styles are right on, and the parody of Oklahoma, Carousel, The Phantom of the Opera, Evita, Hello, Dolly!, and others is funny all the way through. The set was minimalist, but that worked just fine – the show was in the acting and the songs. The actors did a bang-up job, having fun on stage. The show was about an hour and a half long, and it went by much faster than that.

Ohio readers should rush out and see this play here.
Chicago readers should see it here.
NOW! Why are you still reading? Go get tickets!