Tuesday, 19 April 2011

In Training


It is a little difficult living in close proximity to adventurers without getting biten by the bug. After a conversation with Lisa a few months ago about finding my own adventure I now have one….it isn’t Japan as I first thought (that will have to wait a while) but I have decided to do Camino de Santiago or The Way of St James.

The route is a very ancient one and starts just the other side of the Spanish border (in France) and finishes in Santiago near the top end of Portugal. See map…..I have highlighted the route I will take in yellow. Initially I thought the walk was about 610 kilometers but subsequently found out that if I want to do the whole of this particular route it is about 790 kilometers.

Which made me take a very large breathe; and in addition to buying the book and researching on the internet, I decided to get really stuck into some full on training. My 8 weeks of Ashtanga yoga proved to me that I do have terrific stamina but I needed to put in a lot of time on my feet. Having a daughter who is an adventure and expedition racer has it’s advantages and the one thing I know from her is that at the end of the day it is not so much how fit you are but whether you little feet will stand up to the first week…if they do, without looking like lumps of rump steak, then you should be just fine. The other thing about having an adventurer daughter is that she is a shoe and foot expert….and she has heaps of advice regarding very, very light weight gear – because I will have to carry all my stuff.

So, I have been in walking training and loving every bit of it. I put on my little backpack filled with a litre of milk and some canned chickpeas and will slowly build up this weight until I am used to it. Since I started walking I have more than doubled my distance and my previous long walk is now a quick one for when I don’t have a lot of time. I also thought I could only walk in the morning (hmmm…talk about avoidance tactics) but have since found that I love walking at any old time – long walks in the mornings over the weekend and longish walks in the evenings after work. Next weekend I am going to walk to my brother’s house – which will be my first really long walk.

I am a bit anxious about Camino…if all goes well, it will take me about 6 weeks. But one thing that does worry me is that if I cant find a bed for the night I will have to sleep under a tree or somewhere... other than a cosy room!!! I have never done that before so am feeling a bit nervous about that. By the way, I am planning to go during September and October.

I guess as well, the whole object of this rather long posting is to tell you about a small little glitch that I have encountered in my training. I can’t breathe properly. On the slightest little incline I sound like I have never walked more than 2 steps in my life. Even going up the stairs at home made me sound like a huffing, puffing steam engine. I gasp and splutter and I thought I probably had TB. So, a few weeks ago I took myself off to the doctor and whilst she tested for TB (I don’t have it) she also did a lot of other tests and x-rays and it turns out I have emphysema….. It is really freaky and I am now on a puffer called Foxair and it is helping a bit. I go onto some other drugs a bit later in the year and hopefully that will slow it down. You can’t cure it!

But here’s the thing – I gave up smoking 16 or 17 years ago….and my doctor said “well thank God for that”. But here’s the other thing that is so freaky…this is how I feel (breathless, puffless, gasping) on just over 2/3 lung function. I can only guess how I will feel as I lose more lung function…..But the very worst freaky thing is: how can people who already have emphysema still smoke? If I feel like I do without smoking, how can they carry on doing all this damage? Things that are really bad for me are: being around people who smoke – second hand smoke is a no-no, and air pollution. So I will run a mile if you smoke around me and I really should move from my office – it is almost underneath the M1 highway that goes around Johannesburg; and if my car is all gritty and dirty then I am breathing in that air as well….

Doing the Camino will be terribly exciting and I am so looking forward to it; it will be a wonderful adventure. But what I really want to preach about is smoking – emphysema is most usually caused by smoking so give it up…..now!

Friday, 8 April 2011

Is it really important?


From: Lisa's Blog - Thank you Lisa

Is it really important?

Posted: 07 Apr 2011 02:20 PM PDT

As I heard the news this afternoon of another earthquake just off the North East coast of Japan, slightly closer to the island that the quake of 11 March, I again had thoughts of just how fragile and insignificant our everyday activities really are.

I love writing - articles, releases, blog posts; I love assembling content and interacting with people through AR.co.za and FEAT and other work projects; I enjoy reading magazines, surfing websites; I devour books; I love my family, friends and kitty dearly.

But, if a tsunami hit, what - if anything - of my daily activities would be important? None of the above, except of course for family, friends and every other person encountered in the ensuing chaos and devastation. Ah... my poor kitty. I'd definitely try to save her but when you're in a situation like that I don't think that holding on to a terrified kitty with her claws embedded in your flesh is an easy task.

As for the content on my laptop, books... it can all go bye-bye because in the big picture, it just isn't important.

And yet this is what consumes most of my waking hours. Why? Because it is what is done. We've got to work to keep a roof over our heads, food on the table, cat in the luxury to which she is accustomed and all the trappings of society as we know it. My various hobbies, sports and activities fill the non-work hours.

I just think it is weird that most (actually, almost all) of the things in which I invest my time, skills, energy and passions are not really important outside of life as we know it. Thankfully I'm really good at organising stuff, people, activities, projects - handy in chaotic environments.

Ah man, another earthquake and an accompanying tsunami warning for the same area... Japan, my thoughts are with you.

Just read on BBC that tsunami warning was lifted 90-minutes after it was issued.