The day is here. I declare her dead. (Nobody really likes her anyway.) Everything changes with the times.
I am still debating whether to keep this blog material live as an archive or just start entirely over, but either way this specific link will be deactivated sometime in the next few weeks.
I will make a new blog over the break and throughout my clinical rotation in January. The new link will be available on my facebook profile or e-mail.
SO, If you dig it and want access to the new blog, e-mail me and I will send you the link or friend me on facebook - if you aren't my friend already.
If that's too hard, then may you rest in peace with the Antimom. Goodbye to the Antimom and all that goes with her.
A new chapter has already begun...better, badder, faster, stronger, with new and improved doctor-type shiz in the hizzy, and runnin' with the wolfpack. The Antimom is a woos compared to this new chick.(obviously I don't have a degree in marketing, but that's my best shot at it folks..)
Signing off.
The Antimom
Tonight the World Dies - Avenged Sevenfold
Lost the meaning of our stay Learn to live another day Doubt the choices that we've made I know that we can't hide our shame It's only in disguise
Drowning in our own debris Fool our thoughts as though we're free Close our eyes so we can see The depth of all we mean to be If only in my eyes
I don't mind (Read the writing on the wall) Mother cries (Tortured voices as we crawl) Find me on my better days To lose it once again In a way
So try and love me while you can And take the time to understand As long as I can touch your face You know I'll never leave this place If only in my mind
I don't mind (Read the writing on the wall) Mother cries (Tortured voices as we crawl) Find me on my better days To lose it once again But I seem to find out better ways To consciously pretend
Silence all I want to say And it seems to run away I'll run away With you tonight Launder all my sins away And just like that mistakes are made You know Tonight the world dies
I don't mind (Read the writing on the wall) Mother cries (Tortured voices as we crawl) Find me on my better days To lose it once again But I seem to find out better ways To consciously pretend
So a couple weeks ago we went to see Chevelle and Bush. Well, Bush was the headliner but I don't really care about Bush, well I didn't. Chevelle has been moving up the ranks as one of my favorite bands ever. Great edgy tunes, admittedly not a whole lot of content to hang onto in the lyrics department, but it's not like the songs don't mean anything. It's just that I don't know what some of them mean since the words are sometimes vague and the phrasing is fragmented.
I had seen Chevelle before last year but it was at an outdoor festival-type show and they only played like 6 songs. I was excited to see a full set indoors. And, I had never been to the 1stbank center either. Got all sparkled-up and we went out to eat at Bloom in Broomfield. This place is overpriced for what you get, but they have the best calamari appetizer we've EVER had, so we go pretty much just to get that. Anyhow, bellies full and happy we got over to the show.
We missed Filter, but they're a one-hit wonder anyway, so no tears there. Chevelle came onto the stage before we had even found our seats. So we ran in there (yes I ran in 4-inch heels - props to girls that wear heels all the time, there IS, in fact, some athleticism involved) and settled in. I bought the tickets late, so the seats weren't awesome, but the 1stbank center isn't very big, (row 16 and we were in the back row of seats) so we ended up being pretty close since our section was to the side of the stage.
Chevelle was awesome. Just the rock-out I expected. 1stbank has great acoustics...even on the side we were pounded with the sound. We had forgotten our earplugs so we were sorta glad we weren't in the direct path of the amp-stack. Some nice mosh pits got going down on the floor too. Since I started liking Chevelle back in the day in T-town when I was a regular mosh-pit participant, watching this ironically gave me warm-fuzzies. They played all my faves, except sleep apnea. I was a little bummed that they didn't improv more than about 1 minute on any particular song, but they are a bare-bones band, so I guess you get what you see. Not the all-time greatest performers...but they played hard so that's all I ask, really.
Bush came on. Honestly we thought about leaving, but we decided...ok, we know some of these songs from college so we'll stick around to listen. I was skeptical at first, and made the comment that their songs sound like souped-up Duran-Duran. But overall, they actually ended up being really good. Gavin Rossdale is a great performer, and the band was super talented. I now know why he was in the running against Val Kilmer for the role of Jim Morrison in the Doors movie back in the 90's. I was also taken aback at the difference the extra guitar made in the fullness of the sound...(Chevelle is a three-piece band)
Then the good part. I don't even know the name of the song that they were playing, but it was somewhat of a ballad/relationship type theme...and Gavin started going around the arena. He started out on the other side at the level of the stairs/coming out from the tunnel, and I realized he was going to come all the way around. I went down there to the landing and watched as he came closer. I noticed that the people in the row next to me were all dudes pumping their fists, sorta oblivious that the rock star was about to pass by. He was about 5-6 people over and he saw me standing there waiting. He actually reached out his hand to me and I grabbed it and pulled him through the dudes and to the stairs landing with me. Of course there was a spotlight and a bunch of frantic security guys coming along with him.
There I was in the spotlight with Gavin Rossdale. His arm around me, my arm around his waist (He was sweaty) in the spotlight as he sung a verse of the song to me. I was surprised he's a pretty big guy, he was the same height as me with my heels on, and they make me at least 6 feet tall, and he's a pretty good beefcake. I was acting dumb...Except for when I was pulling him through the dudes, I didn't ever really look him in the face...He was singing...I was wiggling around and waving my other hand around with this big goofy smile. Meanwhile there was some sort of security scuffle behind us and I felt a beer go down the back of one of my legs. Totally worth it. Then as he let go and turned to keep going I did manage to run my fingers through his hair/pet his head one time (also sweaty and he needed conditioner). So I haven't bought the new Bush album yet, but since I had a date with Gavin, I suppose I might give it a listen. Good way to sell records, Gavin...good strategy, indeed...
I am so happy it's Friday. This week in school was a POS to put it nicely. It's nine classes, but much more manageable than last semester. I now live by: put out the fire each day. I try to keep up with at least skimming all the required reading for classes, but one day at a time is how it needs to go for now with all the quizzes, lab reports, group projects, research papers going on.
Visited Jeffco's best at the courthouse today for traffic court. They handed me this paper at the beginning that said the maximum penalty for my "crime" was $1000 or 30 days in jail. (Who picks the 30 days in jail?!) While I know my eyes dilated a little while reading that, only had to wait about 15 minutes past my court time, proved I had insurance and a registration to the DA...case dismissed. Jail is going to have to stay on the bucket list for now. heh.
Excited for the Chevelle concert. Well, it's Chevelle and Bush, but I couldn't give a crap about Bush. Sure there's some songs from college I'll recognize, but we dont need to reflect upon those days. God what a waste of my youth. (Except for an Aossey and Bob-squared - shout out to ma boyz!) Not like I haven't compensated and I guess if I didn't go through that I wouldn't be here now so...yeah. Also, chevelle has the most obscure lyrics, but their music kicks my ass, especially live so I can't wait to blow my eardrums out a little (more). What? Can't hear you.
Ready for skiing. Yes, it's a little late this year being September, but I'm SO ready.
Tae kwon do. Hmmm. Haven't had time to go, but it's getting to be black belt time again. Maybe I"ll give it a go. If my patty-ass holds up, that is. I'm getting my quickness back slowly in soccer after the long road of recovery from the torn gastroc. The hamstring problem persists. I need a new Bob. THE Bob is too far away now. I can only dream of the magic hands these days. Like I always say, so many Bobs so little time.
While I'm pretty run-down from school, I'm feeling pretty bad ass lately. Nothing is going to phase me, and I am feeling the need to take out the trash...It's garbage day, yo.
I leave you with the song of the day: I Burn it Down, FFDP. A perfect fit to the post...
August 25, 2011
Been digging around lately for new music and I am currently in love with the new album Hell or Highwater: Begin Again. (It's very Foo-Fightery). Need a workout song? Try "Crash and Burn" Conveniently fits in to the theme as of late...
Boy, give me a free week and look at all the shit I spew out...
The first semester of medical school was a shocking eye-opener. For the first 3/4 of the semester, I was pretty solid. I was mentally prepared for a less-than-perfect performance. This material is not difficult. It's the sheer volume and speed at which you must master the material that gets you. These are the best and brightest, and I know I have my cocky moments, but I also know it was really something to get this far, I am older, slower, etc...I cannot expect to be the best of the best in this arena. Also, I probably have less time to study than almost anyone else in the entire class as I refuse to completely abandon my family life for this and have 2 hours of commute per day...It is an ego-boost just to make it through the gauntlet without a crash and burn.
I was the rock at first, many of my classmates were having trouble reconciling imperfection in their minds, and I was there to console them. These are the overachievers, they have perfect performance records. They have not yet failed at anything. I guess this is the "wisdom of age" part or something. But then near the end, it broke me.
The way it works here is, you have to pass everything (73% or better) in order to advance. Luckily if you eff something up, you get to redo it. You still get the shitty grade, but you must demonstrate that you know the material. It was the week after our Snowmass backpack. I had much trouble returning to reality. I had a paper due that week, I had a new unit of anatomy coming at me, dissections to attend to, and this practical exam. I was averaging about 3 hours of sleep that week. The day of the practical exam...I was spent. This exam format was, you are the doctor assessing a patient in different ways in front of the professor and they grade you based upon your performance. I couldn't think on my feet that day...I failed two of the four parts of the exam. I got a nice tongue lashing from my professor about the expectations for me and how I came far from meeting them.
I went in the other day to redo the material. A tough pill to swallow, but the deed is done...it got me thinking about the experience:
The reprimand from the professor put me over the top and I lost it on that day. I was supposed to go dissect for a few hours after that. But what I did was go into the lab and cry...in front of everyone...I said some things I shouldn't have. In my frustration I went down a list of blaming different people and things...completely out of line and embarrassing in retrospect. There is nobody to blame but myself. I was supposed to be the composed elder statesman - no longer. I would like to apologize to my classmates for acting like an idiot, and to my partner Erica for being a completely shitty partner and even friend. I feel like I let them all down in a major way. Lesson learned. (one of those unpleasant lessons I was talking about yesterday)
So hereforth, there is no crying in medical school. Anyone that knows me knows that I tend to have firey reactions regarding (and then dwell eternally upon) the things I really care about...and clearly this is one of them. But there needs to be a separation of church and state here, this is business. Done. When the switch is flipped, there is no emotion. An easy fix for me...but will the switch stay flipped? Time will tell. The new day starts Monday. Nine classes or some unreasonable number close to that...but it's more bookwork rather than undefined labwork this semester which will fit my lifestyle better.
On the bright side, we're packing up for Taylor Canyon and Crested Butte tonight. It's our favorite place in Colorado. We're going to fish a lot, swim, bike ride, take the kids on a (tame) river raft trip, hang out in CB, maybe shop a little real estate. Really excited for these last days of summer...SHAZAAM.
Left the Longs Peak TH at 3am. Felt great cardiovascularly, a little sluggish in the legs. I made it to Granite Pass by 4:40am. Left achilles tendon had other plans for the day and started sending me some cramping and sharp pain, little bit on the right too. Can't mess with that, especially before you've done anything interesting on the agenda yet...must've kicked the hanging bag a little too hard in tkd. Took it easy going down, didn't feel like bothering with the poles. Back to TH at 7am. Drove home the long way down through Nederland with my windows down, the sun roof open and lots of loud tunes...that's fun to do once in a while. Now I'm here fancyin' a nap soon. But first:
Time to think though, which is a main reason why I like to solo climb in the first place. I was thinking about how a lot of people call me a "free bird" or "free spirit" etc...and whether that's actually a good thing or not. Whether I like the label or not, it's true. I cannot be satisfied with status quo normal everyday repetitive life. But what am I after? Experience. I like and need to have different experiences in life. There's not that much that scares me to try at least once. I think you're allowed to make mistakes along the way. What's important is that you learn the lessons presented. The lessons are not usually pretty, and sometimes they are not learned the first time, but to me, it's worth it. You only have one life. I mean, we don't REALLY know how this works and you could come back as a Walmart fishing earthworm in the cooler. Your day to go could be any day. I have had many reminders of this lately. One day a person is here with you, the next they are gone. Who wants to leave this world with regrets? Who wants to be on their death bed and wish they had more time to go out and have experiences..? No. When the time comes, yes there will inevitably be a few things I wish I had finished up....but not for lack of trying, and no regrets. I will not have regrets. (no I'm not currently dying or planning to so don't freak)
I realize this is a dramatic discussion. But there is nothing to argue about here. It's true, period. You live your life fully or you don't. Each person's idea of what "living fully" is different, of course, I realize that. And I realize that my definition is maybe considered extreme or even selfish and wrong by some. Well, it's just who I am...be self-righteous all you want, but then don't sign up to come along on the ride. If you think about it, can't anything you want for yourself that would make you happy be considered selfish in some way? Why do the people who realize what they need to be happy and go out in search of it get labeled selfish? Everyone is selfish to get what they need to thrive, when it comes down to it. It's just not the right word to use, in my opinion.
All I know is, you take a person away from what they love, you try to change them or constrain them to fit into other ideals, you get a sad, sad person. You get someone who feels caged. Caged is not a way to live. Feeling this way affects all others associated with this person in some way. It's a chain reaction, and not a good one. So what it comes down to is: whether you are the free bird or the well-mannered social "ideal", you need to respect the other view. Figure out what you're dealing with and go with it, right? Keep the keepers, toss the throwbacks, sort it out. But do not compromise your happiness to try to fit into someone elses box...it ain't gonna work. Let your freak flag fly and defend it.
And for those who want to Bible-thump? First and foremost, you are not God, so you have no right to judge others. God created free will. God created forgiveness. God know's we're a bunch of eff-ups. Would God want you to waste the beautiful life he has given to you? I....think....not. Do we need some rules for this? Yes. It's simple. Go to church if you like. Volunteer. Give to charity. Pray at night for the strength to be a decent human being. Do your best to be a nice person. Do unto others../walk in anothers' shoes... A majority of the time, everything works out fine.
Now go get it folks. And to those who already are...I tip my dirty selfish eff-up freebird hat to you.
I decided to write this today, to get pumped for some get-yo-mind-right self-prescribed suffering on Long's Peak tomorrow...
I had a few days in one week off from school and the kids were at g-ma's house. We climbed Mt. Elbert as a training run earlier in the week. Time for a Becky Special, alright. This one didn't seem all that bad, since we got several days to complete the mission instead of cramming everything into one, which would be a normal BS...
So I've been lusting after Snowmass for years. It's got a permanent snowfield on it. I..Love...Snow. I love crampons, ice axes, glissading, everything. I even love kicking steps...so usually I lead and do most of them since Chad does not love snow. He's in love with that slut - rock. It also takes some serious mileage to get up there. Bonus. Darwin keeps the faint of heart back in Denver. It's an 8-9 mile approach UP to snowmass lake at the base of the climb. This, even for our delusions of grandeur, was too much to bite in a one-day, so we decided to backpack in with our camping gear and snow climb gear and fishing gear to see what it's all about up there.
We left early Friday morning, thinking we were going to zip right out I-70 and down into Aspen. Right out the gate we got a a visit from Officer Fattypants state trooper in Golden Gate Canyon. Not the start out the gate we were hoping for. We were talking and I was not paying attention to speed AT ALL, which probably means I was going about 55 in a 35. We then promptly discovered that in the transition from me to Chad paying the bills when I started school, that the 4Runner had not been registered nor did we have our current insurance card. Lovely, just lovely. He gave us a break on the speeding since somehow I've managed to stay out of too much vehicular trouble here in CO, but I now have a court date for the end of September for which I will have to miss an afternoon of classes. After some brief arguing about that we went on our way. I-70 went smoothly, but I forgot how annoying Rte 82 is and it seemed to take FOREVER. We both agreed to take independence pass on the way home and that it would probably be faster. I think we started hiking somewhere between 11am-12pm.
We are not used to carrying 45-50 lbs of crap, and Chad has literally no hips...so backpacking for more than a couple miles is rough. I was feeling the weight, but held up ok. Chad was suffering for the last few miles, but we managed to get up there with some time to have some dinner and fish a little. For me, this is the most memorable time since Chad and I took our first backpacking steps into Yosemite NP in 1997 that I have felt just overwhelmed by the beauty of a place and intense thankfulness for being alive and out there with someone I love. After the first few miles out of the parking lot, this is serious backcountry. The weather was great. Who could ask for more? Well, I could ask for better pictures but turns out neither of us is very good taking pics with the Kodak Playsport which we bought last year to be our trip cam...
First you go through a few miles of gorgeous giant aspen trees (the way they should be)...Then you get to the pine forest. Then the beautiful river full of dumb fish/logjam. Then the big push uphill. Then the mosquitos and ticks. THEN Snowmass Lake...awe-inspiring to say the least.
In spots the trail was being consumed by the forest...
First glimpse of the beast (the point is N. Snowmass, Mt. Snowmass is the hump behind it):
This is supposed to be about 5 miles in, but as you can see, we had a ways to go.
Another problem is, I alternated video with pics, and some of the more exciting sights got video instead of pics...and we're really bad at shooting video...but here's a cool spot (we'll see if this works):
We got there and were surprised at how many people were there since we only saw two people all day coming up - probably 15-20 up there and all the more cozy camp spots were taken. We forgot that backpacking is a sport in itself and this lake is a stop on a popular circuit that links to the Maroon Bells drainage. We picked anything that looked flat, turned out to be a great tent spot, except for the neighbors who stayed up all night smoking pot, playing music on a radio, talking and singing loudly and generally pissing all the climbers who had to get up at 4am off. Chad was feeling pretty dumpy, close to a bonk, so we pumped him some water and made some gatorade and he sat and drank while I set up the tent, etc. I knew he was feeling really bad when he flat out quit fishing about an hour later. Now that's serious...Luckily he felt better during the night because we had to climb in the morning. 5 miles, 3,100 vertical. Piece of cake! Then we were going to pack out.
In the evening we had surveyed the route from camp. We were very surprised at the lack of snow. We thought since it was such an epic snow year that the route would still be substantially covered. But only the top half had snow. Ok, well, that's a good compromise since Chad and snow don't get along. Everything started out good. We got up, I had some coffee (essential) and we got out of camp at about 5am. The hike around the lake was a lot longer than we thought, it's a damn big lake! Hit the scree field about 5:45am, it wasn't that bad, except for one little section and we found out later that we could have easily avoided that and did so on the way down.
On to the snow. Here's our *classic* tard moment that extends the day...we decide we're going to shoot straight for the saddle between Hagerman and Snowmass and then run the ridge to the top because we both think that's what it said in the Roach book and that's what it looked like on the topo map too. WELL, that ended up being a little off and added about 3 hours to our day. The route was to go to the point RIGHT of the saddle. The funny things about this: a) the actual route was printed on the back of the topo map but neither of us looked. b) It is clear that we both need a lesson on reading a topo map.
We were having a great time on the snowfield and we finally got to the saddle. Then we had the ridge to deal with, which we of course thought was completely doable since we thought it was the route...we traversed across this ridge. I was very tenative since I had my large pack on with weight and also because a kid died on the mountain a few days prior due to rockslide. Yes, they were all loose. So we got to the knife-edge area and decided to bail our in the snow couloir below instead of risking it.
Ridge:
SO, we ended up having quite a tour de Snowmass...our route up is red, down is green, the approximate standard route is blue, little red flag on the summit. Sorta blurry, but the best overall pic we have for the upper route...its a zoom from down at camp. We sat for a while on the snowfield contemplating whether to go for it or not. We were tired. But, we ate some synthetic food and decided to pay the price and go. We couldn't decide the best route of attack once we got going up though. Didn't want to cliff out again. Once you get up to the ridge there's another 45 min-1 hr of scrambling on really loose class 3 on the back side of the ridge traversing over to the summit. Also anxiety-inducing because that's where the accident happened just a few days before, and I had been leading most of the way on the snow and was pretty spent at that point to be doing scrambling. We dropped my pack on the route to free up what juice I had left. Chad lead me across the climb like the rock jock that he is.
So we finally made it, I have no idea what time it was...12? 1? We knew it wasn't any speed record, that's for sure. We spent a few minutes up at the top and more closely observed just how loose this mountain is. It's just a pile of giant boulders balancing so delicately. You can see daylight through the pile in spots. The original plan was to take a jog over to N. Snowmass too, since it's on the unofficial 14er list, but that was going to be several more hours of scrambling so we scratched that. Sort of a fail, but we didn't want to tempt fate and we were glad we persevered to get the main summit, so we left rather quickly.
I usually hate pics of myself, but I had better put this one in...sorta dig it. You know it's a real smile when you weren't even looking. heh.
We found a nice drop-in through the big cornice near the summit (green line above) and near my pack to cut the traverse on the ridge short and glissaded most of the way down the snowfield. A welcome bout of fun after all the work! But I was naughty and glissaded with my crampons on...big no-no..and my left leg caught and rolled up underneath me once. Popped a ligament in my ankle. No biggie, ow for 10 minutes then fine, must have been the last little bit of that ligament left. Thank God my knee held, but it was pretty sore after that. Then we went down the easy way through the grassy part instead of the rocks.
We did have to cross the waterfall and go down the lower half of the scree, however, and that's when I started feeling ick coming on. I started to lose coordination on the sliders and took a hard spill at one point on the scree when my pole stuck in a hole, but my down parka that was stuffed in the sleeping bag compartment of my pack broke my fall and saved my low back from a nasty pointy rock. Instead of bruised/broken pelvis I landed on a pillow. Talk about luck. These days on the Becky Specials, I am much more cognizant of how I am feeling at all times since our little incident at the Crestones when I just about checked out. So, we slowed down, I drank as much water as I could, and we finally got down and got me some gatorade. Bonk avoided.
We knew we were too tired and it was too late to pack out, so we decided to stay the night again even though we were low on food. I felt better after a couple hours of lying in the tent and eating and drinking. We ate most of what was left and headed over for some fishing. That lake is FULL of fish and everyone, especially the dry-fly-fishermen were catching a lot of beautiful Brookies and a few Rainbows. We had a good night's sleep with some Vitamin I and the idiots were gone. Possibly the best sleep I've ever had above 10,000 ft. Packed up casually in the morning for the long hike out.
We knew what we were up against this time, so we paced ourselves...well, plus it was downhill. We stopped at the logjam area for some great fishing. Now THOSE were dumb fish! I could see us coming up here someday just for fishing alone...nah, who am I kidding? I still gotta tag N. Snowmass someday!
We got about half way down and things were starting to really hurt. Turned up the speed and got out as fast as we could. We were satisfied since we caught two groups in the parking lot that had left camp about 45 minutes before us AND we had stopped for fishing. We drove over independence pass into Leadville instead on the way home. I do think it was faster than 82, and I always forget how sweet it is. Seems like one should drive over Indy pass once a year on a nice day if not just for the hell of it.
Ok packing and getting a cat nap before my 2am date with Long's. I think I may try for Storm Peak and/or Mt. Lady Washington too. If I feel shitty, maybe just Mt Lady Washington or just Storm Peak? We'll see how it goes with two workouts today and none sleep, eh?
**SLEEP WHEN YOUR DEAD!!!!**
August 22, 2011
I need to climb. Weds morning seems good for a nice stroll in the park...but where? Longs beacons...it's been 4 years...
August 19, 2011
Vanquish that which kills you darling
Forsake not the dream
Through the world I feel I've fallen
Forsake not the dream
August 03, 2011
It's about that time...
Song of the day: Summer's End, Foo Fighters
It wasn't pretty (as usual) but we did conquer Snowmass! I'm pretty stoked about it. Got lots of awesome pics. One of the most beautiful places I've ever seen in my life.
I am writing a paper on Osteoarthritis tonight (I know you're jealous) and then I will try to put up a trip report.
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