Thursday, July 31, 2014

A real training ride...

Tuesday, July 29, 2014
I was determined to do something that resembled the kinds of workouts I’d been doing a summer ago when preparing for Tour Ohio.  In my current state, that meant riding.  I got home, changed and was on the bike by 6 p.m. thinking I could handle something I the two-hour neighborhood, but without a lot of climbing.  Which around here is almost impossible.
I pedaled through the park and down into Waite Hill.  I’d selected a course that, if I was in shape, would have taken a little over 90 minutes.  I wasn’t pushing hard, though I was breathing like I was.  I climbed from the Chagrin River up to Chapin Forest on Hobart Road, slowly but steadily over a 25-minute period.  The good news was that I’d return the way I’d come in half the time.
I reached the park and my turn around feeling pretty good and began the rapid descent back to the river.  I still had one more climb back out of the valley and took it slowly, but with seven miles left to home, was feeling pretty good.
The ride too about 20 minutes longer than usual, but I was encouraged about the way I was feeling.  Two rides in four days and maybe I could get myself in decent shape for some fall climbing in the Adirondacks, if just for a weekend.  The problem would be time; I wasn’t sure when Jason and I would get another rehab job, but once we did there would be little time for anything else.
Bike duration: One hour and 50 minutes.
Training Heart Rate: 120 bpm.

Calories Burned: 1540.

Abbreviated Survival Workout...

Monday, July 28, 2014
It was a tough day.  I had to let the Board president know that I’d accepted a position with Fieldstone Farm and would be leaving the Y.  There was so much still left to do there and he would be left spearheading the things I had put in motion.  For reasons I will not put in this blog, I really needed to move on.  He and other members of the Y had been wonderful to work with and I would miss them terribly.  The Y had an important mission it continues to serve in the Warren community and their leadership with further that cause.
I drove to the North Chagrin Reservation to meet Savannah and attempt the Survival Workout.  I started with push-ups, managing 75, with no apparent issue.  Then I tried my core workout.
“Oww…that hurts,” I said after three reps.
“Well then don’t do them,” Savannah suggested.
Thanks for that.
I tried some pull-ups, which involves the core as well and again, felt a pain across my abdomen.  I learned quickly that the stent and the recovery process did not allow for core work.  I went through the rest of the workout doing upper body lifts without pain, but avoided core and lower body.  We hiked up our karaoke hill and although I was breathing hard, it was a far cry from the exhausted effort I’d made hiking on level trails a few days earlier.  By the time we returned to the car, I’d managed ten different sets, broken a decent sweat, and discovered my limitations – for the time being.
Survival Workout: 30 minutes. 
Training Heart Rate: 100-150 bpm.

Calories Burned: 300.

Feeling better...

Sunday, July 27, 2014
I texted Jason early and asked when he’d like me to come by to help with the garage.  In the meantime, I’d decided my own needed some serious attention.
Since I’d begun J & J Home Maintenance with Jason and spent so much time painting and remodeling our first home, I’d been piling supplies and materials in the garage.  Add to that Savannah’s accumulation of stuff from her Columbus apartment and my complete lack of time or caring about the ensuing mess and I found my garage was suffering from the perfect storm. 
I spent the next two hours cleaning, hauling stuff to the curb, stacking and restacking and organizing until I reached the point where I could again easily park two vehicles inside without bumping doors into stored junk.  It was very humid and I was sweating profusely.  Knowing that I’d been in the hospital largely as a result of dehydration, I filled and refilled my water cup and drank.
I went to Jason’s for several hours to install a stud wall before returning home to make the family dinner, which was chicken fettuccini.  Heavy, but delicious.  My father-in-law and I watched Clint Eastwood starring in ‘The Eiger Sanction’.  Clint seemed to be in great shape for this movie, based on killing and mountain climbing, and watching some of the footage of climbers left me wondering again how anyone could want to hang on the side of a mountain with a little piece of metal pounded into a rock the difference between life and death.  Clint did not successfully reach the top, but he did get credit for killing half a dozen people.

Though not a day with formal exercise, I burned a lot of calories, dropped quarts of sweat and felt more like myself than I had in over a week.  Recovery was slow, but it was happening.

A bike ride...

Saturday, July 26, 2014
I started the morning sharing a cup of coffee with Mimi and discussing kidney stones and the work I needed to do to get caught up at her place.  None of it was going to happen that morning, though I did manage to download a bunch of pictures from her camera to her computer for her, a task I feel she will never master – but I enjoy doing. 
I’d passed a number of garage sale signs on Friday and knowing Jason was always looking for deals on tools, called him and suggested we hit a few.  He stopped by to pick me up and over the next several hours, I climbed in and out of his truck looking over other people’s junk.  I needed to go to the bathroom every hour and finally asked him to drop me back home.
I laid on the couch and continued to nurse my sore back, but by six, I’d had enough of coddling myself and slipped into my biking gear.  My plan, possibly a little weak, was to ride about an hour in a loop that would take me no more than 30 minutes from the house at any given point.  I had my cell phone for emergencies, so what was the worst that could happen?
The skies were overcast and it had been drizzling earlier.  I wasn’t going to let this stop me, though.  I headed towards the park and on to Waite Hill, descending the precipitous Eagle Road at high speeds and heavy rain.  I reached the halfway point in a pounding downpour and soaked to the bone.  And feeling marvelous.  What would Lance have done?  He’d be riding, of course.
I got back home thinking that although it may not have been my best decision, that it had worked out okay.  I’ll do dumber things in the future, of that I’m sure.  For now, I can say I’m riding again.
Bike duration: 75 minutes.
Training Heart Rate: 120 bpm.
Calories Burned: 1050.

Finally...some activity.

Friday, July 25, 2014
My back pain continued throughout the day and made everything difficult to do.  Still, I knew I needed to get moving if I was to accelerate the healing process.  I went out and trimmed the grass before hopping on the riding mower to do the cutting.  It was something, at least.  When Savannah came home, I asked her to take me to the park and walk me like the dog.
“I need to move some, but I don’t want to get halfway and find out I’m unable to continue,” I said.
We went on a 1.7 mile trail and I walked at about 50% of my normal walking pace.  My back was sore, but loosened up as we walked and by the time we reached the car, I was feeling looser but exhausted.
I picked up some groceries and decided to make an Amish casserole for dinner.  I called Jason and invited him over.  Being up and moving was definitely helping.  I’d gone out to do something in the yard and when I returned, found Jack making a mountain of chicken and rice.  I told him about my dinner plan.
“I’m going out on a date, dad, so I don’t think I’ll be here for dinner,” he said.
“Hey…that’s great.  What are you guys going to do,” I asked, watching the food mounded on his plate spilling to the table when he stuck his fork in for a bite.
“We’re going out to get something to eat,” he said as he chewed and swallowed.
I scratched my head, looked at my watch – it was 6 p.m. – and then at his plate again and pointed at it with a questioning expression.
“We’re not going until 8,” he said and continued to chew.
I ate the dinner with gusto – the first meal I’d truly enjoyed in close to a week.  Jason and I discussed the work we would be doing on his garage the next day; we would be putting up walls to create a workshop.  He left and I plugged in a movie and just tried to rest my back and continue the healing.
Hike duration: 45 minutes.
Training Heart Rate: 90 bpm.

Calories Burned: 175.

No luck working...

Thursday, July 24, 2014
I drove to work thinking about all I had to do to prepare for the evening’s Board meeting.  I knew I’d have a hundred messages in the ‘in box’ as well as mail to sort through and documents to create.  And I was feeling lousy.
I spent the first hour blasting through as much as I could with the realization I wasn’t going to make it too much longer.  I notified the Board president that he’d be running the meeting, created an agenda, copied financials and minutes, and after two hours, headed for home.

I spent the remainder of the day laying on the sofa and trying to manage the pain with the help of Percocet.  It took the edge off, but my back was so stiff and painful – I guessed from being flat on it since Sunday night – that again, I couldn’t find a comfortable position.  I tried eating a little something, but still had no appetite.  I knew I’d be doing more of the same tomorrow – work would be out of the question.

Out of the hospital...

Wednesday, July 23, 2014
It was check-out day, which was good.  I had rescheduled the interview for 5:15 p.m. and was anxious to get home and begin mending.  The Urologist had visited before 7 to explain the operation.
“You’ve got a sent in the urinary tract which is expanding it to allow the fluids to get past the stone, which is still there.  I think it will be powderized by the work I did, but it was so inflamed in that area that I couldn’t reach it with my tool to remove it.  We may get it when we go back up there in 2-3 weeks to remove the stent,” he explained.
He said my urine, collecting in a bag on the side of my bed and being fed by the catheter coming from where they come from, was looking good and that I should be going home today.
I reported this information to the nurse when she returned to my room.  Just when I thought I’d known pain, she removed the catheter and alerted me I wouldn’t be going anywhere until I peed on my own.  I grabbed my bottle when she left and made an effort and then discovered there was even greater pain than kidney stones and catheter removals.  I was loving life in the hospital.
I made it to the interview on time and when I described what I’d been doing over the past few days, they were incredulous that I’d appeared at all.  I was meeting with the staff of Fieldstone Farm and they knew me well.  “This could have waited, John,” the CEO told me.
“It was very important to me and I’d already cancelled Monday’s appointment.  I didn’t want you guys thinking I as some kind of wimp,” I said and we took it from there.

I continued to dread peeing throughout the evening and was too nauseous to eat.  I’d had very little since Sunday evening, but was without an appetite.  Since I wasn’t doing anything except laying around, I suppose that was a good thing.  I did vow to drink more and was following through on that.  I finally headed off to bed hoping tomorrow would bring a lessening of the pain.

Are you allergic to any medications?

Tuesday, July 21, 2014

I called work early and told them what was happening.  I remained in a dilaudid haze throughout the day since my injections were all that kept me from killing myself.  I still had hopes for passing the stone before surgery, which was scheduled for early afternoon, and kept drinking and peeing constantly.  When the transport person came force me into hospital garb (I was wearing my t-shirt and shorts under the gown they’d given me in the emergency room) and wheel me to the operating room, I tried peeing one more time to pass the stone – without success.  Damn.
Once in the operating waiting room, I was asked for the seventh time (I was literally keeping a count) whether I was allergic to any medication, and many other questions including if I had metal in my legs or not.  The nurse that was asking these questions was on the  left side of my bed.  The anesthesiologist on the right side was waiting for her to finish so she could speak.
“Are you allergic to any medications?” she began.
I was in pain because the dilaudid had long since worn off.  I was irritated and it showed.  I looked at her and then back to the one who had just asked the same question.
“Are you serious?”
She was, she said and so I told her I wasn’t.  The first nurse walked away, but when she returned, she began to question me again.
“Do you have any metal in your legs?”
“Look – I’m really in a lot of pain.  You need to write my answers down somewhere so you don’t forget.  You asked me five minutes ago if I had metal in my legs.  Don’t you think you’d have seen me slip out of here to insert a rod of some kind into my leg in that time?  No.  I DON’T HAVE ANY METAL IN MY LEGS!”

She wasn’t too happy with me and she probably controlled my pain medication.  It was a bad move, but I wasn’t thinking clearly.  At some point, the anesthesiologist slipped me a mickey and the next thing I remember was being in the recovery room with a new nurse.

“So…are you allergic to any medications?” 

Return of the kidney stone attack...

Sunday-Monday, July 20-21, 2014
The drive home was uneventful.  I took a Percocet in the morning; the warning on the bottle said to ‘be careful’ when driving, so I figured it wasn’t going to knock me out.  It didn’t.
We were celebrating Jack’s birthday for dinner, but after eating a little, I found the pain was beginning to escalate, so I took another Percocet and went to lay down.  By 9 p.m., I was again in full blown kidney stone attack and the Percocet had all the effect of a jelly bean.  The real hurt was on the way.
I couldn’t sleep or find any comfort through the night and began throwing up around 3 a.m.  By 7 a.m., I knew I would be returning to the emergency room and found myself there by 8:30 a.m.  I took my paperwork from the hospital in Potsdam as I thought the blood work could prove important and it did.  It took two hours of intense pain for them to finally give me some dilaudid, a powerful opiate that brought instant relief.  When I could once again speak without clenching my teeth, I questioned what was happening.
“That shit was really good.  Why in the f&*k did you wait so long to give it to me?
They had some bullshit reasoning and it was some time before the Urologist finally joined me to give me some understanding of what was happening.
“Your left kidney is functioning quite poorly.  We have the results from Saturday and in two days, it’s declined by half.  We need to move that stone by pumping you full of fluids, or we’re going to have to put a stent in there to get around it,” he said.
I had a job interview scheduled for 4 p.m., or in about four hours and told him so.  He wasn’t too interested.
“We need to admit you.  You’re very sick and we have to continue to pump in the fluids and see if the stone passes.”
“I can go to the interview and come right back here for the night.  This is important and could affect the rest of my life,” I said.

“Your kidney will definitely affect the rest of your life,” he said, but was weakening and finally agreed.
I was administered some more dilaudid; the pain had me writhing again.  It had been less than two hours since my last shot and I started thinking this dose would wear out just about the point that the interview was scheduled to begin.  Falling to the floor and yelling ‘somebody shoot me’ would probably do little to impress the interviewers.  I decided to cancel and stay in the hospital.
They moved me to a room and on the ride in my bed to this new location, the dilaudid wore off and I had the worst attack to date.  I had to get out of the bed and was rolling around on the floor of the room trying to find a comfortable position knowing no such thing existed.  The nurse did not have my records yet (not sure why the computer from the emergency room didn’t have instant access by the nurse on the fourth floor), so I was forced to go through twenty minutes of hell waiting for my next injection.  Clearly, this stone was stressing the hell out of my kidney and the hospital was the place for me.

I spent the evening in a dilaudid haze, getting up to pee into my bottle every hour.  No stone passed and as morning approached, I knew surgery was on the way. 

Tuesday, July 29, 2014

Attack of the killer stones...

Saturday, July 19, 2014
I didn’t sleep particularly well and finally got up around 6 a.m.  I noticed my stomach was bothering me, but once I got up and walking around, slowly began to realize I’d had the same kind of pain before.
“Donnie…we better start packing up.  I think I’ve got a kidney stone attack coming on,” I said, dreading what I was saying.
By the time we had our gear in the boat, I was about 80% of the way to a full blown attack.  I’d had one very bad one about 17 years earlier and that one had gotten me my first ride in an emergency vehicle and left me thinking of the pain I’d gone through in passing it over the next several days as the worst period of my life.
The plan was drive north to Potsdam, the closest hospital, which was about 40 miles away.  My Aunt and Uncle lived just outside the town and I figured I’d dump my car there and have them take me.  I got to within two miles of their house before being forced to the side of the road where I was sure I would vomit.  The saliva drooled out, but the cookies stayed in.  Still, the pain was getting unmanageable.  I arrived minutes later at my Uncle’s and he drove me to the emergency room where strong medication was injected and CT scans confirmed my diagnosis.
“You’ve got one on the move which is causing all the pain, three more in your right kidney and one in your left.  You’re also severely dehydrated and you left kidney is not functioning at its normal level,” the doctor explained.

He prescribed pain medication and something to help increase flow and sent me home.  I managed to lay around my Uncle’s place and with the Percocet, was reasonably comfortable.  I went the rest of the day drinking over 10 glasses of water and eating quite normally, but no kidney stone passed.  I went to bed wondering if I would be able to make the drive home on Percocet and before another bad attack.   

Climbing Mt. Esther...

Friday, July 18, 2014

I’d left work and done the drive to Keene Valley the night before, arriving in the public parking lot around midnight.  It was a beautifully, clear Adirondack night so I happily threw my ground cloth down, spread out my bed roll and sleeping bag and climbed in.  I star-watched for twenty minutes or so before nodding off
I went to the Noonmark Diner for breakfast at 6:30 a.m. and was at the trailhead for Mt. Esther and hiking by eight.
My stomach was bothering me on the drive over and as I pulled into the trailhead parking lot, my eyes searched the area for a privy.  None was to be found.  Bears shit in the woods.  Desperate hikers in empty parking lots and no sign of human life around squat by the side of their car quickly, planning to dig a cat hole and bury the remains when time isn’t of the essence.  So that’s what I did.
And about half way through the ordeal…naturally…another car pulled in and with 30 spots to choose from, selected the one next to me…naturally.  I scrambled to return to some form of full dress and stood just as a beautiful, young female hiker was emerging from the passenger side of the car.  She noticed me standing up from behind the right front fender of my car and I was hoping she just figured I’d squatted to tie my shoes or something.  We said our ‘helloes’ and little else since they were French Canadian and didn’t seem too conversant in English.  This allowed me a chance to sneak off into the woods, as I should have done in the first place, to dig a cat hole and finish my business with some modicum of dignity. 
The climb I was doing would be my 34th of the 46 peaks in the Adirondacks above 4,000 feet.  Mt. Esther is on the trail to Whiteface, the famous Olympic ski mountain and the one I planned to climb last.  This meant I’d be covering the same trail again someday, which was okay but easily something I could have done on the same day and managed a two-fer.  It was a steady and steep trail for the first hour and my pitiful conditioning was taking a toll.  I was sweating profusely and breathing heavily, but I trudged on.  To my surprise, I overtook the young couple from Canada.  I’d looked them over in the parking lot, and they’d looked super fit.  The woman however, was sitting on the side of the trail and looking rather exhausted.  Maybe I wasn’t doing so badly after all.
I reached the peak two and a half hours after starting on trembling legs.  I ate a Clif bar, downed 32 ounces of Crystal Lite, took some pictures, and visited with a family from Rochester before heading back.  The trip back took almost as long; descending is easier on the lungs but harder on the legs and caution is necessary to keep from falling.  Round trip, I’d covered about ten miles.  I dropped into the creek just off the trailhead and tried to wash away the sweat and grime of five hours of difficult hiking. 
I called Donnie to let him know I was on my way to our rendezvous point on Cranberry Lake, but didn’t make it there until 4 p.m.  I loaded my camping gear into his fishing boat and we were off to explore the many islands on the lake looking for an isolated camping spot.  Many of the islands are so small that camping isn’t possible since you need to be 150 feet from the water to pitch a tent.
We ended up on Joe Indian Island with a perfect campsite.  The bugs were merciless though, so I pitched the tent for sleeping.  We boated into Dead Creek Flow for Wanakana and the Pine Cone Restaurant where we got burgers and fries before returning to our campsite just as the sun was setting.
Hike duration: 5 hours.
Training Heart Rate: 100-160 bpm.

Calories Burned: 3000.

Thursday, July 17, 2014

A full Survival Workout...

Thursday, July 17, 2014
With no grass to cut or houses to paint, at least for one evening, I drove straight to the North Chagrin Reservation for a Survival Workout.
I did manage to do an abbreviated workout several days ago, but I climbed out of the car with the intention of completely kicking my own ass.  I’d managed 80 push-ups, down from the 100 I’d managed before starting the remodeling project several weeks ago, and figured I’d be happy to hit that number again.  With some struggling over the final 2 and a head ready to explode from the blood rush, I managed 86.  Quite pleased, I did my core work, pull-ups and finished with a set of dips before heading down the trail to the next station.
I realized when I reached my next stop that I was already feeling the effect of the first set…and that’s not normal.  Someone had taken my biceps curling rock; this has happened before and I’m thinking I need to hide it.  I’m not sure what they’re doing with them other than trying to mess with my mind, but I’m also thinking of installing security cameras to bust them.  Or not.
When I reached my third station, my muscles were over-pumped and tired.  That’s a good thing, though.  There was a large construction dumpster in the horse trailer parking lot where I do a series of exercises and a bobcat sitting next to it.  Some major construction project was happening in my park – and I hadn’t gotten the memo!  I climbed up the side of the dumpster and peered inside.  It was loaded with the debris from a destroyed foot bridge and the bridle trail was listed as ‘closed’, but this applies only to visitors to the park…for me it is simply a suggestion which I chose to ignore.
I found the bridge they’d removed and wondered if it was being replaced.  I was forced down into the creek to get across and it was there that, testing several rocks, found a suitable replacement for my biceps curling rock.  I didn’t want to leave it there, so I hauled it with me for a quarter mile – a nice addition to the workout – before dropping it behind a tree where no one would see it and consider removing it. 
I climbed the swing sets, did a sprint and some high knees and by the time I returned to the car, I’d done 21 different sets and was thoroughly exhausted.  As I walked under the pull-up branch, I pondered throwing in one more set.  It was a struggle to get my tired arms overhead, but once my hands were on the branch, I figured I may as well just pull.  I managed 8 and called it a night.
I was proud of the effort.  I also decided, while walking, that I’d head for the Adirondacks for the weekend.  Donnie has some time off and it planning to meet me in Cranberry Lake for some camping.  I could use the escape.
Survival Workout: 60 minutes. 
Training Heart Rate: 100-150 bpm.

Calories Burned:600.

Tuesday, July 15, 2014

First house completed...

Tuesday, July 15, 2014

Finally!  I arrived at the Stow house last night to find Jason ready to load tension on the garage spring; our final task.  We did this quickly – it wasn’t nearly as difficult as I thought it would be – and moved on to loading our tools and the trash into his truck.  I took some final pictures of the property as required by the contract and headed for home.

I hardly broke a sweat with the work performed and felt rather guilty when I arrived home to leftover chicken and dumplings.  And sure…I had to have some of the pie from Savannah’s 23rd birthday party, which we’d celebrated Sunday.  I just didn’t have time to get in a workout, but that time is coming.  I’m behind on yard and home maintenance, both my own and the ladies for whom I do work, but I should be able to catch that up over the next two weeks AND get in some bike, run and Survival Workouts.  

Thursday, July 10, 2014

Finally...a Survival Workout

Thursday, July 10, 2014

I arrived at the Stow house in the late afternoon knowing Jason would not be joining me and that I needed to get things done quickly so I would have time to cut Joan’s grass and maybe make it to the park before dark for a short run. 
I measured and cut baseboards for the bathrooms, spackled and painted two ceiling patches and did some miscellaneous cleaning.  Then it was a fast drive to the Solon Cleveland Clinic where I picked up my drug test results proving that I was clean and an acceptable Tour de France or Major League Baseball participant.  It was also necessary for me to receive my Merchant Mariner's Credentials, something I would need for any work I might take on the Great Lakes - more on that later.  
I arrived at Joan’s place to threatening rain and a very squishy lawn from the previous evening’s downpour.  I elected to do most of the lawn with a push mower, increasing the time but burning more calories, as well.  I finished at 8 p.m. and drove towards the park where Savannah agreed to meet me with Dakota so they could observe me doing the Survival Workout.
It had been four weeks since my last push-up when I’d knocked out 100, which meant my expectations were low.  I didn’t disappoint myself.  By 70 I was slowing, but managed to squeeze out another ten.  Actually, not too bad considering the layoff.  I was fatigued, though, and knew that I shouldn’t push it to exhaustion as I would normally if I hoped to be able to paint the next day.  Savannah arrived with Dakota and we started down the muddy trail with Dakota making a point of walking through instead of around each and every puddle.
“She’s going home in your car,” Savannah said.  She was driving her new purchase, a 2011 Honda Accord and did not want this muddy mess on her seats, towels or not.
“Not a problem if you’ll stop at Heinen’s and do the grocery shopping,” I replied. 
I went to ten stations and did my lifts, all of which were 10-15% below normal.  I’d lost some strength, which was no surprise.  I was also feeling the effects of all the work I’d been doing over the past three weeks; fatigue in the legs visited me earlier than usual.
At least I put in an effort.  The house should be done Saturday and I’m hoping to return to a regularly scheduled workout regimen.  I’ve been driving over some bodies of water each day that have gotten me wishing I had my kayak with me, too.  I miss the recreational workout/activity more than anything.  It defines me and I can’t be who I am without it.
Survival Workout: 30 minutes. 
Training Heart Rate: 100-150 bpm.

Calories Burned: 300.

Wednesday, July 9, 2014

A close call...

Wednesday, July 9, 2014
I arrived at the Stow house determined to get the forms for the cement steps we needed to pour ready for Jason’s arrival.  I grabbed a spade and began digging out the area the forms would occupy then began measuring and determining their exact location.  We were dealing with a sloping sidewalk that was leading to the front door and creating a step up to the porch on the front of the house.  The old step had cracked and broken away from the porch because the land under was settling.  I wanted to re-pour the last pad leading to the step and correcting for the unlevel ground by building up one side of the pad.  I used a four-foot level and determined how much I’d have to raise the pad to accomplish this.

We had a table-top saw in the garage which we were using for the few cuts we needed to make.  I took the measurements I needed, drew the lines on the plywood I was cutting for the cement forms and we about cutting the wood.  The saw sat on an old credenza in the garage and was unstable at best.  I was without my eye protection since Jack had borrowed it two day earlier and left it God knows where.  Two simple cuts…no big deal.

I started the saw and began feeding the wood through for the crosscut as Jason was backing in the drive.  I could hear him exiting the truck and walking up to the garage, but was focused on the wood I was cutting.  I noticed that I was not staying on the line I’d struck on the wood even though I was pushing it through with a right-angle guide.  Suddenly, the wood bound on the blade, split and kicked into the air striking me hard in the ribs.  I turned off the saw quickly and backed away as Jason ran up to see what had happened. 

“Are you okay?” he asked, reaching to pull something protruding from my forehead above my left eyebrow.  It was a splintered piece of wood about an inch long and an inch from my eye.

I took a deep breath, which hurt, and said, “it hurts like hell.”  I lifted my shirt and watched Jason’s eyes widen.

“You took a pretty good shot,” he said, observing the red laceration, six inches long below my left pec muscle.

“Good thing I’ve got a core of steel,” I kidded fully aware of how lucky I’d been.

How stupid of me.  Powering up a saw with no one around and without safety goggles.  I was very lucky and hopefully learned a valuable lesson.  Time will tell.

We mixed and poured three eighty-pound bags of cement into the forms I’d built over the next hour.  I was having troubles mixing as the pulling and pushing of the heavy cement bothered my bruised ribs.  Once this was accomplished, I moved inside and continued touch-up painting, sanding and door hanging.  We finished up by loading wall debris into the truck and hauling two 100-pound plus hunks of concrete into the woods behind the house.

I drove home thinking of stopping for a Survival Workout, but instead decided I should wait to see how the injury played out.  No sense in making a bad situation worse.  I’d eaten two pieces of pizza Jason had brought to the house and so didn’t want anything when I got home until Savannah mentioned sitting down to watch something with a bowl of ice cream.

“Sounds like a good dinner option,” I said and joined her.

Tomorrow should be more of the same.  I need to cut a lawn for Joan, a new contract I’ve taken on, cut my own grass and do more work at the house.  We’re very close to being done and I’ve a lot of catching up to do before I can again get regular with my workouts.  I hope I’m not too far gone when that day comes.

Still remodeling...

Tuesday, July 8, 2014
I drove to Stow to meet Jason and tackle the remaining tasks we needed to complete to put his first remodel job behind us.  I received a call from Jason before I arrived asking to stop and pick up some essential equipment.

“Damn bees are everywhere.  Could you get some wasp spray and some juice?  I’m dying of thirst,” he said.

I was pretty sure he wasn’t dying, but figured I should accommodate him since he was dealing with the bees and the concrete.

I arrived at the site and immediately dove into completing our tasks.  I went around washing and replacing all the outlet plates I’d removed before painting, rehung shelving in closets and rehung doors.  I needed to do some sanding and touch-up painting, as well.  The house was stuffy and hot and the sweat was flowing.

It’s not exercise as defined in any fitness-related sense.  It is, however, activity that burns calories and keeps muscles toned.  Climbing, balancing, moving, carrying are all things that accomplish this end and likely the reason I’ve managed to go so long without formal workouts and no weight gain.  Still, I know I’m losing some strength and endurance and am anxious to get back to the Survival Workout, biking and running.  In the meantime, I’ll just keep working hard.

Monday, July 7, 2014

Monday, July 7, 2014
It has been such a long time since I last posted a blog and there is a reason – or excuse – for that.  It goes something like this.

I haven’t been working out.  Over the past three weeks, I have done one 21-minute run and little else other than work.  Work however, has been intense.  I had picked up two new clients for whom I am do miscellaneous jobs around their homes in addition to forming a new business with my son, Jason.  Our business – J & J Home Maintenance – was formed primarily to do rehab work on bank-owned properties being reconditioned for resale.  We went to look over a property we’d been given to consider and toured the house with a work order outlining all that needed to  be done.

“This place is an absolute mess,” I said as we toured the 3,600 square feet of a house that had not been lived in in over two years.

“Yeah – they’re not normally this bad,” Jason said.  He’d done some work with a friend on a similar property and from that experience, gotten the idea that we should do them together.

The entire interior of the house had to be painted – ceiling, walls, trim, and anything that had a coat of paint on it already.  This would necessitate the removal of extensive amounts of disgusting wallpaper, which is never an easy feat.  It also required the removal and replacement of two bathroom cabinets, counters and sinks, three toilets, eight light fixtures, two concrete steps, two garage doors, shower heads and plumbing, and over 50 feet of paneling and drywall, warped and moldy, from a finished basement.  It was a major undertaking for our first project and would have to be done in our free time since we both worked full time positions already.

“I’m willing to give it a go if you are, but there is no way we can do it in a week.  We’ll tell him two weeks and see what happens,” I said.  He agreed.

The company heading the renovation project, Market Ready, tried to get us to agree to one week, but I simply said, “give it to someone else – there is no way we can do it that quickly.”  He called me back 20 minutes later and said, “do it.”

I spent 90 hours there over the next two weeks painting, cleaning, hauling and rehabbing.  Because we couldn’t get answers quickly enough on portions of the work that were unclear, we were unable to meet the two-week deadline, which was last Thursday, and continued to work through the holiday weekend.  As I write this, we’ve still got another 20-30 hours of work to do before completion, but the end is in sight.  The question will be, ‘should we do another one?’  I’m not sure, at this moment.  For the most part, I have spent three weeks working and sleeping, which has kept me in shape, but it’s no life.  I won’t make much money on an hourly basis, but I’ve gotten a tremendous crash course in home remodeling and spent quality time with Jason. 

My feet are killing me.  They were very sore after the first day of painting.  I’d spent over 10 hours on them and figured it was that…and the shoes.  I switched out to my hiking shoes for the second day, but it was no better.  They remained sore, but it lessened over the next week until I went for that 21-minute run.  That evening, I could hardly stand the pain.  I’m wondering what the next run will be like.

I’d like to say this is the beginning of a consistent return to the blog, but I suspect I will remain sporadic.  I began the blog with two thoughts in mind.  First, inspiration to readers…and to me…to exercise more.  Second, to work on my writing skills.  I’ve accomplished both, but there is no end to keeping fit or to improving writing, so I have to keep going.  My life is stressful right now and writing, or the need to, can either relieve or heighten that, depending on the day.  Today – it’s a relief.