Category Archives: Life stuff

Scott's Personal Update: March 2015

In yesterday’s Morning Pages, I reflected back six months to see how my life has changed.

I’ve accepted that my personal happiness is my responsibility, and by recognizing this responsibility, I’m a much happier person. People around me have even told me I’m much happier. It’s very gratifying to live more presently in each moment every day. I still experience plenty of moments of anxiety, stress, fear, regret, and anger. It’s more about reducing the magnitude of these negative emotions and the time I spend in these emotions.

Six months ago:

  • I was barely walking normally after knee surgery in early September.
  • I was about to embark on a crazy work travel schedule that brought me to Dallas eight out of nine weeks leading up to Thanksgiving
  • The idea of doing workshops, coaching, or speaking gigs seemed in the very distant past and very distant future.
  • The only time I could spend with my family was on the weekends, and even then mostly with B so that Lena could spend the weekends working on her dissertation.
  • I was generally excited about my work at Blend, though that attitude preceded the massive travel schedule I didn’t know was coming. By November, I was feeling pretty burned out and frustrated.

Today:

We’ve hired a customer success team at Blend to take over the onsite implementations for our Dallas-based clients, including a project manager and three relationship managers. They are all kicking major butt in their own way at Blend and it’s enabled me to extract myself from the day-to-day project management and focus on pure outbound customer development and selling activities. It’s better for me because that’s the work I enjoy the most and it’s better for Blend because that’s my superpower. We’re seeing the fruits of this transition with two new customers on boarding through June, two new customers eminent, and numerous new customers in the pipeline including several significant lenders – some of the top lenders in the country. This gives me a renewed sense of excitement about Blend and my work after some tough times last Fall.

This is giving me a huge boost at home. I’m traveling far less now, and while I’m good with some travel and even enjoy it because of the solitude and the face-to-face time with customers and prospective customers, last Fall was a little ridiculous. I’ve been much more present at home, and Lena told me the other day that B in noticeably happier in the last couple of months.

I split my weeks – three days in San Francisco and two days working from Davis. On the work-from-home days, I get up with B, make breakfast together, take him to school, pick him up, make dinner, and play together in the evenings. It makes me so happy when I can be present and appreciate the happiness in the moments like stirring eggs, making coffee, reading a book, and playing “catch me” at the playground.

It’s also a huge boost for Lena because on the work-from-home days, she can stay on campus longer and get more done and now there’s some light at the end of the tunnel for her.

B caught a nasty cold in January, then again in February and I was the one that took him to the doctor’s office. I took a couple of days to work from home when he too sick to go to school so that Lena could concentrate on her research. This gives me a certain sense of pride that Lena and I are truly sharing the parenting responsibilities.

2015-02-22 11.20.33

We rented a cabin near Clear Lake in late February. Benjamin called it the “cabinet.”

I’m racing again. Registered for the Donner Lake 70.3 in July. I took the motivation offered by a friend. She’s gunning for an Ironman before she turns 40 and this race will be her first triathlon. I’m registered for 70.3, a distance generally referred to as a “half-Ironman,” which is a grand disservice because 70.3 miles and 5-6 hours swimming, biking, and running isn’t half of anything.

I got back in the saddle for a couple of short rides this weekend, and started swimming a couple weeks back for general fitness anyway, especially after my surgically-repaired knee felt a little balky. I was up to 18-20 mile running weeks and more recently, have felt some throbbing and discomfort so I’ve laid off the running for a couple of weeks, replacing it with swimming.

All in all, I think I’ll be plenty ready for the race at the end of July. I’ve got four months and the 70.3 distance offers some freedom in my training to skip a day or two per week without serious repercussions. I’m not going for a PR or anything, especially considering it’ll be my first race in more than two years, not to mention the altitude at Donner Lake (7500’). The goal is to have a healthy, solid race day and feel like I was ready for the challenge by race day.

I also registered for a swim to Alcatraz. It’s a 2.5 mile swim from Crissy Fields to “the Rock” and back. Will be serious fun to get out there and look back at San Francisco from the Bay. There are no sharks in the Bay… There are no sharks in the Bay… There are no sharks in the Bay…

This also means that Ill be packing all of my gear from travel that does arise – cycling shoes to take spin classes at local gyms, goggles for swims at area YMCAs, and running shoes and my Garmin for runs. This is fun for me. 🙂

I was invited to do a couple of small speaking and coaching gigs with startup organizations, including Startup Weekend Sacramento: Women’s Edition, the TINC/Nordic Innovation House, BelCham and Stanford University starting in Fall.

So far in 2015, I’ve now done startup selling workshops at Hult and SARTA, and am invited back by TINC in April for the same. In May & June, I’m teaching an extension campus class through UC-Berkeley at LinkedIn. Fun, fun, fun. I love how the workshops stretch my brain to develop new ideas to apply at Blend for our customer development and sales work there.

I’ve expanded my daily routine from six months ago*:

– I’m continuing my daily practice of Morning Pages + meditation. I’ve realized that there are three things each day, that even if I do only these three things and nothing else, I’ve had a successful day: 1) Morning Pages, 2) Meditation, 3) Workout. That’s it. On any single day, those three things alone make me happy. At a minimum, I almost always do at least two of the three.

With the neighborhood pool open now, I can find time for swim or at home I can drag myself to the back patio for a 15-minute Cross-fit workout of some kind.

 – On city days, a workout is tougher so I focus on morning pages and meditation as my two important things. On occasion, I stay overnight in San Francisco if I have back-to-back days. This offers one of my favorite runs – early morning through San Francisco and its hills – Telegraph Hill, Lombard Street, Gough, California, to name a few…

– On weekends, I don’t always get to my Morning Pages because I try to sleep a little later. I can usually do a meditation in the afternoon while B is napping. – On city days, I arise early so that I can do my Morning Pages and meditation on the train or sometimes at home first before hopping on the train. Once in the city, I either work from the Ferry Building or a coffee shop near to the office before diving into the office for very full days there.

– On the bus ride from the Amtrak to the city, I’m listening to podcastsTim Ferriss, James Altucher, and Tara Brach. Same on the BART ride from SF to Richmond before I catch the Amtrak home.

– On the Amtrak ride home, I generally work until I get to Fairfield, the last stop before Davis,  then I close my laptop and then do my Evening Journal entry to record all that I’ve accomplished that day and it’s always gratifying and a little surprising to see what I’ve done that day. Then I engage in some self talk to transition from “work” mode to “home” mode so that when I walk in the door at home, I’m 100% focused on Lena and B. I’ll even turn my phone to airplane mode sometimes when I walk in the door to resist checking email passively and relinquishing my focus on things at home.

So yes, my life is very different in a good way from six months ago – much more focused and absolute time at home, more positive mental stimulation, more diversity in my days and weeks, and continuing to build on my daily practice. Life is good.

Wondering how things will be by September… 🙂

* I know I’ve described much of my daily routine in previous posts – just sharing for those that might have found me for the first time…

What I'm up to lately…. February 2015

Read Time: 4-5 minutes What I’What

If we haven’t chatted in a while, feel free to pick-up the phone and call me. If there’s anything I can do to help you with anything, please please please let me know…

Work Stuff:

  • Blend is the focus of my work life. Lots of travel to and from Dallas, with occasional travel to NYC and Washington DC. It’s been more than a year since I joined the team full-time, and we’ve grown the team about 3x since last January – 30+ people now.
  • The work is challenging, mostly because of the complexity of the projects and our target clients. We sell software to banks and lenders in the residential mortgage market, which in today’s world of regulation and compliance, plus the path dependency of existing systems and models, makes the decision and implementation process highly complex. In one implementation, I’ve counted more than 75 people on the customer side that have been involved with the process. That’s just one project at one customer.
  • It’s not particularly difficult work, just challenging from the standpoint of balancing the self-interest of everyone involved with each specific sale, plus the extenuating affects on other systems and people not directly involved.

Daily Practice:

  • Morning Pages: I wake up every morning and journal three pages – a practice I learned from Julia Cameron’s book “The Artist’s Way.” I’ve been doing this for more than a year now. Very effective to figure out what’s going on in my head before the day gets going, and writing out three full pages is enough to talk myself through whatever is bugging me.
  • Meditation: This started with 15 minutes of simply sitting still and focusing on my breathing. After about a month, I’m now able to go 30 minutes and about 25% of days, I do a guided mediation. Tara Brach has been my go-to on this so far. I download the podcasts so I can have little session even on a train or plane.
  • Evening Journal: The evening journal is a quick sketch of the day – what I accomplished. This is a very short exercise – 5-10 minutes. It’s been super useful to bookend the day, and offers some closure so that I’m not waking up and writing my morning pages about stuff that happened yesterday. I learned this from a Tim Ferriss podcast with Josh Waitzkin.

Helping Others:

  • I’ve made it a sort of personal challenge to seek and find people to help in achieving their professional goals.
  • Just before Christmas, I downloaded my LinkedIn contacts and I’ve started pinging 2-3 people every couple of days that I haven’t spoken with in a while. I send them a personal message to the effect: “It’s a been a while. Looks like you’re doing great. Need help with anything?” Pretty interesting to see the types of responses. A few (just a few…) haven’t responded. A couple people respond back with – “Great to hear from you. Hope all is well.” And then a good chunk of people send back specific requests, most of which are things for which I can actually help – connecting them with people I know, sending them articles and ideas, etc. Check out this James Altucher blog post on how to be a “super connector.”
  • Coaching, Workshops, etc. – I’ve gotten involved with lots of different groups over the past six months, mostly around entrepreneurship and startups. Meeting really great people from all over the world, literally. A few groups with which I’ve worked recently – The Nordic Innovation Group, BelCham, Startup Weekend, Social Venture Partners, SAGEGlobal, Women’s Startup Lab, Hult International Business School, and UC-Berkeley Extension.

Life Tips:

  • Free days – I almost always take a “free day” on the weekends – one day when I don’t check email, or even think about work, an idea I learned from Strategic Coach, a coaching program I tried out about a year ago. It takes some real discipline to avoid checking my phone during idle moments – whether short moments in line at the store or longer stretches like my son’s nap time over the weekend.
  • Naps – Yes to these. I try to nap every Sat and Sun when my son goes down.
  • Decluttering – Been tackling areas of the house to get rid of stuff I don’t need or use. Worked through laundry room, living room, and kitchen so far. Started on my closet. Found receipts and documents going all the way back to the mid-1990s. WTF… Liberating to throw stuff away, and give away that which might be useful to others – clothes, office supplies, etc.

Training & Racing:

  • Coming off knee surgery back in September. Took me much longer to recover than I expected (which is why professional athletes retire at 40…) I’m finally back to 5-6 mile runs and nearly 20 miles a week.
  • Planning on a half-marathon this Spring, a short triathlon or two this summer, then a marathon and ultra-marathon in the Fall.
  • Ironman? I get asked if I’m doing another. I usually tell people that I have another 1-2 in me, just not this year. But soonish…
  • Learned lots of cross-fit exercises over the past year – has really helped me with balance and running with more of my body, not just legs. Here’s an example workout from New Year’s Day.

What I’m feeding my brain:

  • Podcasts: Tim Ferris, Tara Brach
  • Blogs: James Altucher, Jason Lemkin
  • Books (recent & current):
    • “The Art of Asking,” Amanda Palmer – Indie punk musician that figured out how to ask people for help. Great lessons in here that you don’t have to do everything on your own. Here TED talk is a good summary, and thought I do recommend the book for the full story and context.
    • “Annals of a Former World,” John McPhee – A book about the geologic history of the US. It’s a tome that I don’t plan to finish. It’s really five books consolidated into one, and the book that’s most interesting is “Book 4 – Assembling California.” Big focus on Northern California and researchers based at UC-Davis. It’s good bed-time reading. Three pages and I’m ready to snooze. I’m amazed at the amount of research and learning that went into this book.
    • “Influence,” Robert Cialdini – Re-reading. Good airplane/business read on exactly what you’d think from the title. Research based – not a “manipulate people” book.
    • “Principles,” Ray Dalio – Dalio is the founder of Bridgewater, a huge hedge fund. Super interesting read on how he approaches learning and communication.

And a huge thank you to Matt Slater, a friend and former student for the inspiration for this post.

Reducing my inputs

I’m taking more control of when I receive messages and notifications from the external world.

I’m finding that when I received a LinkedIn “connection request” or “so-so tagged you in a photo” on Facebook” or “your answer was upvoted…” on Quora, even if I didn’t look at it or respond to it right away, the notification showing on my locked screen and on the app icons are just too distracted. It’s like having a loose string on a t-shirt. I can live with it for about three seconds before I need to deal with it.

(PRO TIP: Here is a VERY detailed post on how to turn off notificaitons on your iPhone…)

Taking stock of my iPhone apps, there are only a few content and communication apps that I use – Facebook, Twitter, FourSquare, Quora, LinkedIn, Flowdock (work), and text messaging. I’m purging a few, and turning off notifications for others.

social-media-icons

So… decisions were made… Here’s the recount of my inventory taking:

FourSquare – Was on my phone home page and I only used it for airports and occasionally when I’m at a place like the Farmer’s Market where I like to snap a fun picture of my son of what I’m doing and post to Facebook. I never go back and reference places I’ve been. Who am I talking to here anyway?

Decision: Deleted

Facebook – Sorry friends. I really don’t look at what you’re doing all that often, and if I have a few idle moments of time – say in line at a store or airport, I want to fill that time with more targeted learning for my brain like podcasts or book reading.

Decision: Deleted

Twitter – This was a bit of a decision for me. I have a more focused list there of people I’m following, so in a way, it’s sort of learning through semi-curated content, except there’s still too much noise. The chances of hitting good content on the fly on my phone is too small. I have TweetDeck on my laptop and I have a few lists there, and whatever. I can find what I need when I need it.

Decision: Deleted

LinkedIn – This app made the cut.I’m keeping this one for now. I do use it when I’m going into a meeting (or in a meeting) to check out someone’s background and look for common connections and interests. (It’s also an app I keep open constantly on my laptop when I’m working.

Note: I’m also putting together a series of e-books on tips for using LinkedIn. Stayed tuned… You can sign up now right here and I’ll email you a copy when it’s ready.

Decision: Stays, with notifications disabled.

Quora – Somewhat personally curated content for topics that I chose. The quality is generally good, and mostly I use the mobile app to save questions that I might want to answer later on during a writing sessions.

Decision: Stays, with notifications disabled.

Flowdock – This is a work app that we use for internal chatter. This needs to stay on my phone, and I’ve turned off the notifications from showing on my locked screen. I have my account set up so that I receive an email when someone messages be here, and turning off the notifications prevents weekend interruptions.

Decision: Stays, with notifications disabled. 

New Year's Day 2015 #crossfit #flying

Today’s rundown…

– Woke up at 6:53am, thinking it was 4:30am, and maybe slightly disappointed because it was 6:53am already which meant significantly less time to myself in the early morning for reading and whatever. Then I realized I went to bed at 11pm and it was much better to have had the extra sleep.  (Yes, this is my life… 🙂

– B woke up soon thereafter. Did FaceTime with my parents. Played with MarbleMaze. Breakfast.

– New Year’s Day Crossfit workout which I dubbed the “20-15 workout.”

20 reps of 15 exercises for time:

  1. Pushups
  2. Situps
  3. Wall balls
  4. Wall ball cleans
  5. Squats
  6. Snatches
  7. Burpees
  8. Candlesticks
  9. Lunges
  10. Mountain climbers
  11. Kettlebell swings
  12.  Pull-ups
  13. Knees-to-chest
  14. 20-second plank
  15. Dead lifts (I added these during the workout)
  16. 1500 meter run

** Note: Got the idea from a similar workout on Christmas we called “The 12 days of Christmas – 25 reps of 12 exercises.”

– Lena flew us from Davis-University (EDU), over the Sonoma County to the coast so we could see the Buddhist temple, then we flew up the coast to Point Arena, then back home.

– Now it’s late afternoon, and I’m thinking about dinner out – Thai, Indian, Irish place… Something, anything other than cooking.

– We cooked lamb last night, which was planned for the grill except when Lena opened the grill to cook, she found a rat’s nest complete with live rats. We eschewed the grilling part for dinner…

The Ferry Building this morning

“You need to put your shoes on.”
“Why?”
“Because you’re in a public place.”

The perpetrator is skinny and scruffy, and homeless. He’s probably more happy that he’s sitting inside so that he can take off his shoes instead of adhering to social norms. The arrester is a ferry boat worker. Maybe he has a reason for caring about such things. Maybe not.

A taller, skinnier version of Lou Holtz brings up the rear in this batch of ferry commuters.

Squeaky shoes.

Two guys wheel three empty beer kegs. One of kegs was labelled “Lagunitas.” That was a lot of recent inebriation.

The wretched screeches of the wooden chairs drag across the grey concrete floor. The screech carries an echo up and across the ferry building, and then dissipates across the cold concrete pillars above. A second screech when the patrons pull their chairs underneath them to sip their coffee and prepare to eat their breakfast.

A mom, dad, and a little tiny baby settle into the corner near the window. So much of the day ahead of them. Of course, with their little tiny baby, I suspect these particular tourists have been awake since 5:30. Their breakfast pastries seem more like lunch. Two naps, seven feedings, and 12 more hours precede a few minutes of rest for themselves. Except for this moment. The baby is quiet, and so are the parents, sitting and smiling at each other, then smiling at the little tiny baby, then smiling at each other again.

The ferry just backed out, did a K-turn, and is drifting away for it’s next batch of commuters.

The fog rolls from south to north. I’ve never noticed it do that before. Usually it tumbles and blankets the Bay from the west before settling.

A seagull stands watch atop the rigger used for roping in the ferry when it docks.

A second ferry just backed away from it’s port at Pier 1. It’s horn sounded like a nine-year old blowing through a used saxophone before the reed is wet enough.

Two women walked into Mijita, followed by a man dressed in black and orange Giants coat and hat. The women spoke in Spanish with minor enthusiasm. The man walked deliberately with his head fixed on the text message he was composing.

A blond woman with a long pony tail, white running hat, and pink shorts strode past in a jog. I suspect the cold moist air has made her legs pink too.

The seagull is gone, and the fog is lifting. A transparent orange rises just over the Berkeley hills hints that the storm might be over. The homeless man left and another ferry is arriving. More commuters. More squeaky shoes. I don’t see Lou Holtz.

Dear Lena, It’s modus operandi while you're gone…

Dear Lena,

We really miss you and hope you had a great presentation today in Washington! Everything here is clicking right along. I found the conference agenda and checked out a few of the other economists at the event. Hope it was okay that I sent them friend requests on Facebook.

I know we normally keep the AC around 76 or 77 degrees, and even 76 is a little warm for me sometimes. So in your absence, we’re running at a breezy 56 degrees. In fact, I’m wearing wool socks and a hoodie right now.

There is food in the sink, but not in the fridge. I discovered that bread is pretty good at soaking up moisture if covered with coffee grounds. It’s all kind of just sitting there squishy and spongy while I’m waiting for the garbage disposal to unclog itself. Apparently “The Badger” doesn’t take watermelon rinds too well. Some name for that thing. Pretty misleading advertising if you ask me.

I did some housework. Just basic stuff. The laundry for instance. I think you might be making this chore more difficult than you need to. I’ve noticed that you tend to separate our clothes into piles, then wash them in these batches you call “loads.” Did you know if you fill the washing machine all the way to the top, I mean really pack it in there with all your body weight, you can fit the underwear, jeans, towels, and all of the pink and red t-shirts all at one time? It’ll save you a ton of work.

dirty laundry pile up

Speaking on the washing machine, does it always make that “thud – thud – thud” noise and leak from the top? I was going to put towels down to soak up the water but they were already in the washing machine. I stood there thinking – “Isn’t that ironic?” Funny how life works…

I did fix the creaky door to the bathroom. Be careful not to trip on it when you come home. It’s leaning against Benjamin’s wagon in the garage. Sorry I let that little home improvement project go for so long. I tacked a bed sheet to the door frame for now. Otherwise it’s kind of chilly when you get out of the shower.

Benjamin is eating really well. You’ve mentioned it’s hard to get him to eat when I’m away, but I’ll tell you, he’s been eating like a grizzly bear since you left. If I had known it before, I would cooked him chocolate chip banana pancakes with maple syrup for dinner long ago.

Benjamin seems happy to go to bed a little earlier than normal too. He doesn’t mind hitting the sack at 7:15 when you skip bath time, give him the iPad and let him eat dinner in there. Though I will say that it took me until nearly midnight to get him to lay down tonight. Sometimes I just don’t know what gets into that kid…

I quit locking the door to the front house because the lock is “broken,” meaning that you need a key to unlock it from the outside. I figure the neighborhood is pretty safe now that the students are gone for the summer, and besides that, Benjamin threw the house keys down the sewer. I know you’re probably thinking this was my fault but it wasn’t. We were going to the park and he said – “Keys daddy.” I thought he just wanted to carry them or pretend to open doors or something. I couldn’t believe it. He darted from the middle of the street where we were walking and threw the suckers down there before I knew what was happening. That’s the last time I fall for that one. He’s one smart kid. I can’t believe he got me a third time.

Both Benjamin and I can’t wait to give you a big hug and a kiss. Especially Benjamin. He’s been kissing everything – the walls, his stuffed animals, the couches, and even the cats – since he found your box of lipstick.

See you soon! xoxoxoxoxo

A year ago…

I’m wrong about almost everything. I get romantic notions of how a certain event or a certain outcome will validate an idea or bisect my life between what was and what will be.

A year ago, I was working at CoreLogic. I had flown to DC for the week and came back a day early because I was incredibly bored.

A year ago, I spent all of my time in the DC office and hotel working on SalesQualia. I noodled on software ideas for salespeople and building sales consulting packages to sell as a product. I was just starting to think about local help for my projects.

A year ago, I experimented with Google and LinkedIn ads for my books and workshops. I had yet to publish my second book.

A year ago, I had just led a workshop in Orange County and was focused on a speaking proposal for The Lean Startup Conference. I did a few more workshops in the Fall, and didn’t get the nod for the conference speaking spot. Neither mattered.

A year ago, Hult had yet to return my calls or emails about teaching. Now I’m preparing to teach my fourth class there starting next month. They love me there and we’ve talked about teaching in London, Shanghai, and Dubai.

A year ago, I hadn’t yet talked with Blend. Last night, I slept at the Blend office.

A year ago, I set goals about learning French, homeschooling Benjamin, living in Australia, and getting interviewed by Charlie Rose, and running an ultra-marathon. I still have those goals.

I always think I know what my life will be like in a year. Clearly, I haven’t a clue.

15 Life Lessons from a two-year old

I’ve had some heavy travel the past two weeks, and so I spent the latter half of last week and this weekend spending time with my two-year-old son, Benjamin. He’s two, which means that he’s mostly free entertainment – a combination of a living with a tiny drunk person and Mr. Magoo.

The more time I spend with him, the more I learn about the inhibitions I’ve developed. I hear that you reach a certain age that you realize that the whole system is completely stupid, and then you unlearn these inhibitions and just go about your business. Ever watch an 86-year-old women tell a young kid to turn down his radio on the BART? The old woman always wins because of the inner fortitude that’s regrown.

The problem is that most of us, myself included, wait way too long to unlearn what we’ve learned as societal norms or what we’re supposed to do or not supposed to do, and by the time we realize that nothing really matters except for personal happiness and well-being, we’re too old to do all of these things we wish we would have done when we were younger.

In watching Benjamin go about his business every day, I’ve picked up a few lessons about living a happier life.

1. Wear whatever the heck you feel like wearing.

Rain boots or snow boots when it’s 90 degrees outside. Choose pink Crocs to wear, and then wear them for three days even if they give you blisters because you like wearing them. Wear said pink Crocs with a red shirt and orange shorts. Wear your sunglasses upside down. Put stickers in your hair. Color yourself with permanent marker.

2014-06-08 10.02.34

2. Walk into sprinklers.

It’s hot. The sprinklers are cool. Why wouldn’t you? Don’t think about the wet, muddy shoes as consequences.

2014-06-14 18.23.54

3. “I don’t like it… Because I said.”

All the reason anyone needs to do, or not do, anything. If you don’t like it, don’t do it.

4. Take a second ride on the merry-go-round.

You rode the cow, and now you want to ride the dog. It’s $1/ride and it’s Saturday at the Farmer’s Market. So ride the horse. Now. You don’t have to wait until next week.

2014-06-07 10.39.32

5. “I do it… I need help.”

At least give it a try by yourself. Anything.  Then when you figure out you can’t do something, ask for help. It’s okay.

And once you’re on the right track, do it yourself again.

6. “Yeah! I did it.”

These were his first words on Sunday morning, cheering from bed. On some days, waking up should be a good enough accomplishment.

Celebrate the little successes because sometimes the little successes are harder than you think.

7. “Be a flying ace.”

2014-06-14 10.48.10

We all wanted to be great things when we were kids. Then we let life or someone or something or no one in particular tell us that we can’t or shouldn’t or that it would be too hard or it won’t pay the bills or it’s too risky or it’s not really a job or that we shouldn’t. So then we don’t.

I saw an old guy walking out of a donut shop the other day wearing a t-shirt that read: “In every old person, there’s a young person wondering what the hell happened.”

Be a flying ace if you want to be a flying ace.

8. Knock it down and start over.

Whenever he and I finish building a block tower, he immediately knocks it down. I’m always a little peeved because I want to admire what we’ve built or that we’ve used every block.

It’s just a tower of blocks. The fun is in the process.

9. “It will be fun.”

Yes, it can always be fun. Go to Trader Joe’s and you can buy flowers, and they give away free snacks, and they give you stickers when you check out, and you can sit in the cart and pretend to be a flying ace. Yes, it can always be fun.

2014-06-14 17.03.05

10. “I want to paint.”

So what if it’s 8:08pm on Tuesday and it’s bath time in 7 minutes. If you feel like painting, paint.

11. “I want to go high… Go really fast.”

What’s the point of swimming if Daddy doesn’t throw you 10 feet into the air so you can splash? What’s the point of swinging if you don’t go high? If you’re going to do something, then do it.

2014-05-18 11.14.52

12. “Don’t touch me… Don’t push me.”

Hell yes. This is my space and don’t you invade it, or there will be hell to pay.

Annie Lamont talks of learning how all of us have an acre of land that we get to cultivate and as long as we don’t hurt anyone, we can do anything we want with it. If you don’t like what someone is doing to your land, you’re allowed to tell them to leave and they have to leave.

Keep your space and don’t let anyone invade you.

13. Draw on the walls.

Sometimes the hallway needs a bright blue line on it. The hallway probably needs to be painted anyway.

14. Barbecue sauce on pancakes is perfectly acceptable.

2014-02-19 07.30.25

15. Walk up to complete strangers on the street and greet them with an enthusiastic “Hiiiiii!!”

They always smile back and say “Hi!” back to you. It makes everyone feel better.

Halftime

We drank from the garden hose at halftime. When it was really hot, we had to wait for the hot water that had been sitting in the hose to pass before getting to the cold water. The cold water wasn’t necessarily cold, just cool enough to qualify as cold comparatively. A lot of times I was hungry and dropping lukewarm water into my empty stomach only reminded me of how long we had been playing and that sometime soon, the game would be over. Halftime never signified that the game was halfway over. It usually meant that the game was nearly over, and I never liked that. Some of my friends would want to sit and rest on the grass or in the shade or take a break on the back porch.

garden hose

I would tolerate this blasphemy to retain goodwill. It was a delegate balance. While I wanted my teammates to rejuvenate and my competitors to be defeated, I wanted my teammates, whether we were winning or losing, to feel the urgency to continue the game, and for my competitors to feel rejuvenated enough to continue with the battle with earnestness. A tie game at halftime was optimal, or at worst, a score where one team was winning by a slim margin. I didn’t even care if my team was winning or losing at halftime, so long as there was collective impetus to continue to game.

It was a cold political move on my part. I’d let them have their break, an act expecting reciprocity. I assumed, wrongly, that they knew what I was foregoing by agreeing to a halftime. I would sit during breaks sometimes, but not usually. If I did sit, I sat on the edge of the chair, or on the ground with my knees bent, holding myself upright with my forearms tucked over my knees. And if I sat back at all, it was to conform to my friends sitting back in their chairs or straight-armed, holding up their bodies laid straight-legged on the ground, arms extended behind themselves holding up their torso. I think they were genuinely tired. I was sitting this way out of courtesy. Didn’t they all know what I was foregoing? A break of 10 or 15 minutes could be two or three at-bats, or a single at-bat leading to a flurry of runs, driving a stake into the competitor’s collective hearts. It meant we were foregoing the infinite fun that exists in each moment of play, and by sitting there on the grass or on the back porch, we would never experience those moments.

Restarting the game was always a challenge. I’d begin with subtle questions – “So who’s up next?” or “The score is 26-24 right?” or “Should we play to 50 or 100?” It was a prompt designed to tap the competitive rage I assumed that everyone had – sparking tinder, challenging, daring anyone to claim indifference or choosing inactivity over ecstasy of pure competition.

There always seemed to be one person that wouldn’t care about continuing. “I’m pretty tired, I think I’m gonna go home.” Unacceptable. If I was lucky, someone else would share my lust to continue our makeshift championship, and together we two, or even three coaxed the defector to continue on to the second half. “Let’s just play for another 30 minutes.” or “We’ll switch up the teams so you can play catcher if you’re tired.” The bigger the group, the more infectious a single defector could be.

imbalance

When the game was four to a side, a single self-directive to leave could spread like a virus to another who would suddenly remember they had to go to the store with their mom. If two people left, it was recoverable – three to a side remained competitive. But if it three defectors emerged, then four-on-four turned into three-on-two, and all hope of competitive balance was lost. With three on two, even if a balance could be struck somehow, the energy and endurance required of the two to compete lasted never more than a few minutes, and then the game would disintegrate anyway, casting off another defector or two, leaving four or three of us left to find new entertainment altogether, a difficult task, if not impossible after the exuberance of the intense four-on-four competition last transpired over the last two hours.

groceryThis is when I would begin to accept defeat, and began to consider the available options. If it was close to 3:30, I could go home and watch Starblazers. If it was 4:00, I would watch Batman. We could try to extend the fun by swimming, except that required a trip home to change and then back. The fixed cost of this transaction was too great. Getting home to change, then back to Brian’s house to swim, then back home dried off and ready for dinner by 5:30 was a lot to ask of an 11-year old. I could make it happen if in a vacuum. The problem laid in the transaction cost of stopping at home. That meant answering questions mom would ask or worse, introducing the opportunity for my mom to ask me for help with something. No matter how small, it created a disturbance in the space-time continuum that needed to flow uninterruptedly to executive a swift transaction from Brian’s house to home, and back again within 15 minutes before his mom realized that we planned a transition from whiffle ball to swimming, because Brian too faced the potential disruption to the space-time continuum. His mom was notorious for asking for help with some small task that never turned out to be as small as described. Taking out the trash became scrubbing the trashcan with soap and said garden hose. Carrying in the groceries meant helping her to unpack them. Or worst of all, there was the suggestion that “maybe you should just stay inside of a little while to rest…” Rest? Rest? You want me to rest? What kind of person rests? It’s July. No one rests in July.

If we could somehow resuscitate the game after halftime, there would even be a genuine burst of true competitive activity, indelible moments of competitive uneasiness. Then someone would push a little too hard. Someone wouldn’t run to the next spot with the same vigor as before halftime. The score would become lopsided and the losing team became indifferent. We’d try switching up teams. We’d try giving them an extra strike or an extra out each at-bat. The minutes on the downside of the afternoon clicked away. Then the final blow landed when someone, anyone, would finally proclaim that they were quitting. It was over. The game was over. The moment was over, and I knew it. I stood there, disbelieving.

And on some days, I’m still standing there.

We're moving to Alaska!

When I was a child and I lived in the city,
I dreamed of Alaska so far away.
And I dreamed I was flying over mountains and glaciers,
Somehow I knew Id live there one day…

– “Alaska & Me” by John Denver

The State of Alaska’s court decision this week is a sign from God. Now that the roadless parts of Tongass National Forest could be opened to commercial activity, it’s time that Lena, Benjamin, and I make this move. We’re even a little stunned ourselves as we pursue this next chapter in our life together. I only interviewed with Georgia Pacific this past Friday, and already they’ve made an offer I just can’t refuse.

It’s not the decision so much that surprises me. Decisions are just ideas; thoughts. Ideas fill my mind every day. The startling part of our lives’ next chapter is that we’re taking action on this decision. Maybe I shouldn’t be so surprised. I’ve always been an intentional person. My daily view of the world is fixed and concrete. It’s just my personality. From this perspective, that I’ve had these intentions, even if hidden or buried for such a long time, and that I’m finally taking the step to move Alaska is actually consistent with who I am and how I’ve always lived.

john denverWith our move scheduled for two weeks from today, we’ve accelerated the purging of our personal belongings. In packing boxes and selling furniture to Craig’s List bargain hunters, I openly wonder how exactly we reached this point. I fondly remember John Denver as a regular guest on “The Muppet Show” when I was a kid. As a Boy Scout, I took to earning merit badges in forestry, woodworking, and conservation with wild abandon.

You won’t find this on my LinkedIn profile, but my first job out of college was with Decor-ative Specialties, an Los Angeles-based cabinet doorcabinet door manufacturer that had opened a manufacturing facility in Monroe, NC. As the company’s youngest outside salesman, I roamed the Carolinas visiting cabinet makers, dispensing the virtues of outsourcing the craft of cabinet door-making to our specialty shop. I quickly learned about wood grain patterns and the best places to install soft pine, cherry wood, and red oak based on expected room humidity. For example, teak wood is remarkably good for laundry rooms where clothes dryers run frequently. Few effects in a home communicate more about a homeowner’s pride than well-made, professionally-installed custom cabinetry. I really learned the beauty of the inside of a tree, and more importantly, how to control Mother Nature for the sole purpose of vanity and personal satisfaction.

About two years ago, Lena and gave away our television. We never used it after Benjamin was born, plus we needed the space for various and sundry items related to child-rearing. (Looking back now, perhaps this was the start of the subconscious disposition our personal belongings.) But all the while without a TV, I clandestinely maintained my NetFlix account to watch reality TV shows. The History Channel’s “Ax Men” quickly become a personal favorite. I’ve watched every season at least eight times, mostly on airplanes or on the Amtrak during my morning commute to San Francisco.

axmen_oakes-E

In checking my Amazon and GoodReads accounts, I’ve noticeably increased my consumption of Jack London books over the past few months. While packing, I came across Jon Krakauer’s “Into the Wild” on our bookshelf. I find Christopher Johnson McCandless’s approach to life in Alaska to be both comforting and profound. We don’t expect to live in an abandoned school bus while we’re there, though living in a tent for a stretch or even sleeping in open already feels like fresh water for our souls.

I experimented with vegetarianism a couple of years ago. The transition wasn’t too difficult, and in identifying the plant-based proteins and nutrients I needed for my rigorous triathlon training, I felt an interest in botany germinating.

Tying together my ingrained love for wood and the influence of such a well-crafted television series and books, we’ve decided that pursuing this new career as a lumberjack will bring me the personal happiness I’ve been chopping away to find all of these years on the corporate ladder. Even better, because I’m a college graduate, Georgia Pacific (or “GP” as we in the business call it…) included a fast track to a lead logger position as part of their offer. This is akin to an assistant foreman role in a manufacturing plant. I am very grateful to GP for this leadership opportunity despite my lack of industry experience.

Screenshot 2014-04-01 10.33.20Just this morning, I drove past a construction site adorn with John Deere tractors. I felt my pulse quicken thinking about the Feller Bunchers, Skidders, and Knuckleboom Loaders that I’ll be licensed to operate by the end of the Summer. It brings back fond childhood memories of playing with Mark Jeurgans and his Tonka trucks when we first moved to the Whispering Oaks subdivision when I was four.

mail planeMeanwhile, Lena will be fulfilling her dream as a full-time private commercial pilot. We’ve worked out an agreement with GP for her to transport site managers daily to and from our worksite in Tongass, and just this week she found a classified ad in the Juneau Empire for flying a US Mail route twice a week. Plus, we’re pretty confident that she’ll be able to at least find some part-time work as a consultant given her PhD research on grapes and pest management. It’s a little known fact that a microclimate exists in southern Alaska near Juneau where wineries are sprouting up to meet the demand for “buy local” consumers. In fact, rampant bootlegging now requires that both the US Immigration Services and ATF to patrol the US-Canadian border.

As a lumberjack and lead logger, I’ll be among the plants, the earth, and the soil, standing tall beneath the everlasting golden sky in the summer months and the comforting dark blanket of the cold Alaskan winter months. I can’t imagine a more delightful hardship than learning to coexist with Mother Nature during the darkest, dreariest days of December and January when the snow reaches the tall pine tree tops. Plants are such amazing creatures, and I’m becoming rather obsessed with the field of plant neurobiology and its quest to explain animal-like competitive behavior between and among plant life.  To pass the time during the logging offseason, I plan to earn my bachelor’s degree from Kensington University in cellular plant biology.

Most of all, I’m excited for Benjamin. Leaving behind a life of iPads, Thomas the Train, and his day care friends will force him to develop his manhood sooner. Kids need more structure nowadays. Lena and I are sure that an everlasting love of nature will grow as he becomes rooted in Alaskan culture. We’ve preordered curriculums and home educational materials so that we can home school him properly, and we’ve decided to speak Russian exclusively in the house starting today. As Sarah Palln so adeptly noted, you can see Russia from Alaska. Fun fact: Anchorage is closer to Moscow than Chicago.

phoneWith Lena’s regular access to an airplane and especially with the mail route position (fingers crossed!), we expect to send and receive letters pretty often. We’ve yet to figure out if there’s cell phone coverage in the national forest, but I’ll be issued a satellite phone through work. (Good ole GP!) Whether or not we can make personal calls from this phone is yet undetermined.

I’ll be sure to add another post or two before we pack up our trusty Saturn for the drive north later this month. She might be a 2002 model with 123,000 miles, but we think she has enough pep to get us to our new home in the northern hinterlands.

We love you all and appreciate the support we know you’ll give us with our decision! As Lex Luther said in Superman II: “North, Miss Teschmacher. Due north.”

Finally, and most of all, if you’re bereft in reading about these developments, double check the date of this post.