7.08.2007

yikes, mileage

a stabbing in my neighborhood: yikes. anybody know positive ways to handle this sort of thing? i'm going to keep doing what i'm doing, with more care and an extra glance over my shoulder, etc., but any extra advice would help.

so that makes this feel a little superficial, but i don't want to be all paranoid and all that. anyway, i bagged the trail race i thought i'd want to do because my right leg woke me up in the middle of the night. instead, i went up to NCR and just did 35 minutes, easy. surprisingly, my legs felt very fresh. the weird part was that i felt as though i was carrying a 2x8 across my shoulders. seriously. after all that swimming, my shoulders feel so wide, and it definitely affected my arm carriage. but, it didn't take terribly long to get used to it, and i'll just be stretching a lot and get somebody to massage my back every so often. all said, i'm very excited for the triathlon. awesome.

5 comments:

Unknown said...

Tag!
http://kletco.blogspot.com/2007/07/8-random-things.html

Nick said...

I always go to Jimmy Malone from the Untouchables (played by Sean Connery) when it comes to stabbings:

"He pulls a knife, you pull a gun. He sends one of yours to the hospital, you send one of his to the morgue. That's the Chicago way!"

Mary said...

In all seriousness, it's best to just remember that your neighborhood is no more or less dangerous now than it was a week ago. One incident doesn't change the neighborhood one way or another. How we perceive things says a lot more about ourselves than anything around us. So, do all of the common sense safety stuff, which you were presumably doing anyway, and go about your business. Nothing more to do.

Wacky Neighbor said...

Carry a cellphone, trust your gut, stay in populated and well-lit areas, change up your route, don't be embarassed to avoid something that feels wrong (screaming really loud, running away from somebody, asking for help).

Unknown said...

And teach Toby to attack.