How Disconnected From Reality Are You? Take The TV Challenge

About a week ago I was driving back to my place from work, it was dark out. When I came upon a stop sign that had a left turn lane, and a straight lane, I noticed a vehicle that had an interesting glow coming from within. This small Volkswagen SUV was pulling up to the left turn lane when I came along side it and noticed a 20-some-inch flat screen TV spanning from the back of the driver’s seat to the back seat of the navigator’s seat.  The TV was playing some kind of kid’s movie to 2 children seated in the back seat. Both the mother and father were sitting in the front 2 seats. I’m not sure where they were going at 9pm on a weekday but it appeared to be the whole family.

The moment I saw this I had a near face-palm moment. I couldn’t believe it. They couldn’t even leave a big screen TV for 10 minutes. I have seen TVs in cars before, hell, we had one in our large travel van… but we only used on our 22 hour drives to Florida about once a year and the TV was about 10 inches, not 28.

 

It seems to me that parents are beginning to utilize technology more and more as a method of quieting their kids. And this might seem all fine and dandy but it is a huge problem, beyond measure. Children learn by asking questions about the world around them and the things they experience. The more questions they ask, and the more you answer, the more “connected” to the world they become. They become logical and rational, intelligible as well as articulate. Children are becoming disconnected, thus, separating themselves from the world in which they reside.

Before I was in college I saw it in children I was babysitting, and I did my best to combat it. I would go to a house where I was scheduled to babysit and the parents would tell me just to pop in a movie and they would be fine… and once it was over I was to put the kids to bed. Well, I rarely ever actually put a movie in… I would sit and talk with the kids. Maybe play a few children’s games, but we were always talking. I would teach them things that would fascinate them. I would get them inspired to do things they didn’t even know existed. It got to the point where these kids only wanted me to babysit (even though parents typically had multiple babysitters in their Rolodex that they would cycle). For years on end these children would ask me to tell them “cool stuff” and they never wanted to play video games or watch a movie. I would teach them about space, how cars work, how your eyes work, the speed of light and time, interesting places in the world, how a curveball curves, rockets, and more. The kids were addicted to learning new and interesting things! And this is how it should be. I take pride in the fact that I contributed in opening the children’s minds to the world around them and hopefully shaped their future.

 

It’s not an uncommon sight. Kids (and adults) always walking around with a Gameboy or PSP, always walking around with headphones plugged in, always having the TV or radio on. This disconnect is so apparent you almost can’t go anywhere without seeing it. The hands down worst is cell phones. I get so disgusted and almost pissed off when I’m invited to an event by friends of mine and I get there and everyone has their phones out. Why the hell would you plan a social event when the only socializing you’re doing is via cellphone?!

The Challenge: I want to present a challenge to you. Something that I have successfully been doing for 7 straight months now. I want you to unplug ALL your TVs and put them in the closet. If they are too big or mounted in a funny way, I want you to take off the cable or power cord and hide them somewhere. Allow yourself the occasional Sunday football games but don’t ever (and I mean ever) plug it in for a TV show or for the news. Nearly all TV shows can be found online the day they air, and the only important news you will ever need to hear will get to you by other means. My TV has been hidden in a closet since May and I have found it opens up time and allows me to accomplish more. If you did this with children, they would very easily become more intelligible, more in shape, and have a higher level of common sense. And while you’re at it, get rid of the handheld gaming units.

Do this for 3 weeks and see what you think. And by 3 weeks, I mean do NOT stray during those 3 weeks. After 3 weeks you can decide for yourself whether or not you want to keep going with it.

Coffee Shop Dating: What You’re Doing Wrong

You and your bud sign up for a co-ed softball league in your local town. At the same time, his girlfriend and her best friend sign up for the same team. All of you show up to your first practice ready to get down-n’-dirty when you meet her for the first time. She’s wearing shorts and a 3/4 sleeve baseball tee with a baseball cap. You play 3rd base and she plays 2nd base and for the entire hour and a half both of you share glances and smiles with one another… until, you get hit a grounder and it goes right through your legs while you’re caught looking over at your buddy’s girlfriend’s best friend. Now what? You can either (a), make a fool of yourself even more and make an excuse like, “the sun was in my eyes”. Or (b), say that you were… “distracted”. At the end of practice you both exchange glances and finally you say with a big grin, “Hi, I’m (insert name)”. She smiles and says, “Hey, I’m (insert name), are you always bad at 3rd base?” You talk a little while longer as you walk towards your cars and then you finally close off with, “I’ll see you at the game tomorrow, it was nice meeting you.”

The next day at your first co-ed softball game both of you show up. You talk throughout the game when you can, not really paying attention to the score. She has everything you desire. She’s intelligent, witty, has a beautiful smile, funny, as well as charming. After the game you pack up your things and walk her to her car and then the make or break moment happens. You say, “I’m really beginning to like you, can I take you out for coffee sometime?” And with that, comes the biggest shotgun blast to the foot if I ever heard one.

 

Asking somebody out for coffee or to a local cafe is oh so cliché it makes my stomach turn. Why is it the generic approach to asking somebody out? Is it a cop-out because you’re too afraid to do anything else? Or is it because you’re too boring to think of anything better? This is what happens when you ask somebody out… usually, more often than not, you have already been “shootin’ the breeze” with somebody before you actually get to asking somebody out. If you then [backtrack] to a coffee shop, what will you talk about? Most of the small talk and getting to know each other has been taken care of. Unless both of you are really open to expressing your deeper selves on your first official date, there is potential for a lot of awkward silence.

Aside from that factor, what is so exciting about going out to a cafe anyway? What makes this first date memorable? You’ll be just another person who went on a date to a coffee shop. Why not a stroll through the park? Especially if you own a dog. Or a walk through a local museum. Skiing, if it’s the winter months. An introductory pottery class. But please, please, please don’t be another joe schmo and ask a date out for coffee (out for a movie is just as bad). If you’re caught up and can’t think of anything on the spot, just say that you’ll find something special and let them know what it is at a later time. It’ll at least give you time to think about a proper first date idea.

I hope this advice was helpful. If it was, spread the word with the sharing buttons below.

Related:

http://iantimberlake.wordpress.com/2011/07/08/what-is-your-personality-type-i-can-tell-you/

http://iantimberlake.wordpress.com/2011/07/01/the-1-to-10-scale-for-women-explained-in-detail/

What Is The Most Epic Song Ever? Requiem For a Dream Lux Aeterna vs. Star Wars Battle of the Heroes: Videos

I enjoy finding and listening to the most epic music ever written. I’ve always loved music and I absolutely love how a composer can write music down on a piece of paper that invokes the utmost power, energy and adventure. I’ve narrowed it down to 2 songs that I believe are the 2 most epic songs ever written… “Lux Aeterna” from Requiem for a Dream and “Battle of the Heroes” from Star Wars III. PS: If you don’t have a good quality sound system then you will not get near the full effect of these songs, a good bass is vital. Awesomely epic songs none-the-less. Also, if you believe there to be a more epic song out there, feel free to post it in the comment box below.

 

My Epic Tough Mudder Wisconsin 2011 Challenge: Every Bit Of This Weekend Roadtrip Was Crazy

PART 1 : The Roadtrip

Oh gosh where do I start. Probably the most important thing is to familiarize yourself with what Tough Mudder is if you haven’t already… check out a previous post I made doing such this: Click. This will probably be really long so if you want to skip right to Tough Mudder, go down to the obvious break (even though the whole story is epic), otherwise… From the time the wheels left my driveway until the Jeep was put in park over one day later, everything about this trip was ridiculously epic. Well, if you want to get technical it actually started about twenty minutes before we left. I had a fellow team member give me a mohawk (which I later found out was called a fohawk) because any self-respecting person would never do this sort of event without one. I came to learn that at the actual event they were offering mohawks and mullets for free which just proves my point more.

Anyway, we were leaving on Friday, July 22 at about 7:30 pm. We didn’t want to spend money on a hotel so I had everyone bring a sleeping bag and blanket and I brought my backpacking tent. Our race was the next day, Saturday, and the drive was about 5.5 hours. I also made sure everyone had their registration confirmation, death waivers and IDs.

Two of my team members left with me from my house at Iowa State headed towards Cedar Rapids to pick up the fourth member of the team. We had known in advance that there were going to be chance of storms along our way but in no way were we prepared to see what we saw on this road trip. Listening to the radio we had multiple National Weather Service interruptions along the way warning us of what was to come. Sixty mile per hour winds blew across the highway, brief spouts of rain and warnings of quarter size hail were what we were driving through… not to mention a sky that looked like death. There was definite circulation in the clouds, complete with funnels. Lighting flickered every couple of seconds off in the distance, the belly of the beast was not far away. We ended up passing storm chasers and fire department vehicles that were blocking off roads. Although it wasn’t a tornado (yet), with my soft top Jeep Wrangler it sure sounded like a freight train was coming. I could barely keep it on the road.

It was obvious all this hell was just barely to the north of us, so once we pulled off the highway going east, we had to head north to pick up my team member. Not five minutes into heading north were we hit with probably the hardest rain fall I have ever experienced. It was completely dark outside and I couldn’t drive more than ten miles per hour because of how heavy the rain was… I couldn’t even see the road lines immediately in front of my Jeep. Winds were gusting as high as seventy miles an hour and I was on a very poorly lit back road, thank goodness I had my Wrangler. We arrived at his house and went inside, just the run from the car to his door was enough to drench everyone. What’s funny is that only minutes later did the rain die out. Well, at least for now.

We hit the road again and it was about 9:30 pm by now and we were headed north-east towards Wisconsin. This is when we started getting the radio warnings again. Severe thunder storms that were the length of entire states… producing hail, more seventy mile per hour winds, extreme rain and extreme lightning. As we continued driving, we started moving more into the system. In fact, we were travelling pretty much in the same direction as the system. Lightning was flashing and the thunder was HARD, literally right above us for about two hours. We seriously thought we were going to get hit. A semi-truck across the street was struck by a massive bolt, not 50 yards away from us. Then we later saw something just off the road get struck. There was so much lightning you could read a book with the amount of light it was producing.

Slowly and steadily we pulled ahead of the storm and took in the small towns we passed through and the really creepy gas station loiterers. Wisconsin is special in the regard that it’s heavily forested with random intermittent towns that rarely carry over five thousand people. The signage for the roads through Wisconsin are actually quite horrible. We were following printed out directions and I was driving along a non-populated road when all of a sudden it came to a road closure without any form of detour signage. Now, I had my Jeep Wrangler, I put it in 4 wheel drive and drive right past the road closure sign. The path was nothing but softball sized rocks on this windy, dark road that was surrounded by trees. I continued for about a half mile until we figured it be best we turn around because we had no idea how long this would go for.

This is the 21st century and this is not the last time phones became of some use on the trip. One of my team members whipped out his smart phone and pulled up GPS. He was able to find a way back that would lead to a connecting road to keep us going in the right direction, and that’s what we did and it worked out perfectly.

We eventually hit a very narrow and curvy, pitch black road that was obviously surrounded by a thick forest. A small deer whizzed past us right off the side of the road. I didn’t see it but another guy in the car did. That’s when I slowed down. The last thing I wanted was to hit a deer out here. I hit the brights and for the next 5 minutes or so we saw probably 5 or 6 animals crossing the road. The first was a big fat beaver that I narrowly missed. After that there was a family of possums, again, I narrowly missed. Not 10 seconds later there were two ‘somethings’ crossing the road and I tried to avoid them but everyone in the car swears I smashed one of them, it sure seemed like it. Some even asked if I did it on purpose, ha!

By now it’s 1am and we were just arriving at the resort. We pulled into the parking lot and saw no parking spots available. I drove around a while, did a little off roading (not realizing some of it was on a golf course and on a part of the TM course) and eventually came back to the main parking lot. There was actually a lot of activity for it being 1 in the morning so by our luck somebody pulled out and drove off and I took their spot.

Conveniently this spot was very close to the Devil’s Head Resort main entrance AND it butted right up against the edge of the golf course. What did we do? We pitched my backpacking tent up on the golf course behind a couple of trees. As I was by my Jeep pulling out sleeping bags we had hotel security stop by on their golf carts and ask us how things were going. They didn’t notice the tent and offered to give our stuff a lift to the front desk and I told them we didn’t have a spot in the hotel and we were sleeping in the car. After that they were incredibly nice and offered to give us food and water if we needed it. I still don’t know what they would’ve done if they saw the tent on the golf course.

We ended up having 2 people sleep in the Jeep and 2 in the tent, I was one in the tent. It was now 2am and we were going to sleep. At about 3:30am the Jeep’s car alarm blasted me awake, I scuffled for the keys and hit the unlock button. It turns out that the guys in the Jeep were getting ridiculously hot and just popped open the door. I’m not sure how that didn’t startle security, but it definitely startled me. The next time we were to wake up, it would be to prepare for Tough Mudder!

PART 2: Tough Mudder

I had set the alarm to my phone for 8am even though we were only asleep since 2am. I figured it was okay because I’m used to not getting a lot of sleep. I set it this early because I wanted to get our tent off the golf course before golfers made it around and before many people were up and about. I ended up only being able to sleep until 6:30 so I got up with my teammate and we got out and disassembled the tent. Not long before we took it down we heard some people sarcastically say, “look at those guys being pussies and camping on a golf course”.

We found out the resort was serving a full breakfast buffet so we went up and had probably the best breakfast you could have for 10 bucks. By now people began filling the resort preparing for doom. We grabbed our paperwork and turned in the death waivers and prepared for the beginning of the end, so to speak, haha. It was only a matter of hours before our 12:40 start time so we were starting to get beyond what you might call, “anxious”. We used the analogy… “It feels like we’re about to go into battle, or jump out of a plane into Nazi Germany”.

15 minutes before our start we took a shot of GU energy gel, which has the consistency of snot by the way, but really helps. The mob of people began gathering at the starting gate that was halfway up the ski hill. The national anthem started playing and everyone stopped in silence… followed by a final roar. Then, we took the Tough Mudder Pledge. We rose our right hand and stated, “As a Tough Mudder I pledge that I understand that Tough Mudder is not a race but a challenge, I put teamwork and camaraderie before my course time, I do not whine – kids whine, I help my fellow Mudders complete the course, I overcome all fears.” After a little more psyching from the man over the bull horn he gave a 10 second countdown. It had begun.

We barreled down a steep ski slope, hundreds of us running, people falling, skipping around to avoid pot holes and yelling at the same time. The Bravehart Charge was in full force. Of course after running half way down the mountain they would make us charge right back up to the very top. That alone took quite a long time and only put us about a half mile into the 10+ mile course. Half way up we were high pressure hosed and we were already winded but we had to scale these 10 foot tall hay bales, it was the first “real” obstacle we encountered and was a joy… and yet I did pull my right calf on it, we had just started.

At the top found the Boa Constrictor… tubes that went down through mud into a big pool of water and then came out on another side. This one will test your claustrophobia to the limit. Fortunately I’m not claustrophobic and thought this one was fun. Though, one of my team members cut his hand real bad coming out of it… meh, it’s TM.

The hills were hands down the worst part of the course, horrible on the knees and calves and relentless. We went downhill to Funky Monkey bars where a recent dip in the mud made it nearly impossible for me to grip the grease soaked bars. I made it about half way and fell into the muddy water. We had one team member push all the way, he screamed on every bar to put him through the obstacle mentally, it was epic.

We were roughly a mile in and each and every one of the team felt like we had just finished a 5k. I was having a real hard time, this was the first big “test” I had done since being allowed by my doctor to do physical activity. In January I had 3 seizures, pneumonia and a torn shoulder all at the same time… made training for this incredibly hard, especially when you add summer school and 2 jobs. I thank the rest of my team for pushing it beyond breaking point. I am always one to finish something, but they helped me finish stronger.

Now we were headed back up the mountain and this time it was steep and highly muddy, it was worse than walking up a big sand dune. Then to top it all off, the top of this hill had 2 sets of 12 foot walls we had to scale. The only real way to get over it was to boost each other. Teamwork was essential and the best part about TM was every single person doing it was all one big team. One of my team members rather remarkably launched himself up on his own… he’s 6 foot 5 inches! I’m pretty sure all of us got hurt on this one… I definitely rolled a nut and had a pin on my race number pop out and stab me. Once up you had to stay there and help somebody else get up, it was the code after all. It was then followed by a 12 foot jump or an attempt to slide down the wall. The Berlin Walls were absolutely brutal.

Of course after this there were more hills, and with every downhill was the dreaded uphill. Although, downhills still sucked real bad because they were basically out of control descents. We were now about 2 miles in and really feeling it with a heat index of 105 degrees. Talk about sweating bullets. Each of us lost about 7 to 10 pounds in water weight alone.

Devil’s Beard was a massive cargo net that was placed on one of the hills, it required you to get really low and avoid getting tangled while still going uphill. It was pretty damn difficult (seems like a trend).

After Devil’s Beard was The cliffhanger, which was a very steep yet short hill that was completely and totally smooth and slick mud. Nothing to grab, no holes, no rocks… nothing. The most common strategy was just to form a massive human chain with everyone around you, took some serious work but was definitely a fun obstacle.

The Kiss of Mud was next which was at the top of another incredibly arduous hill. This obstacle is a massive mud pit that has really low barbed wire hanging over it. Our job was to army crawl under it without getting tetanus. This one was also really fun but seriously scraped up every bit your body… elbows, knees, shins, forearms, back, face. It also got you completely and totally muddy, from the top of your head down to your toes, it was awesome!

On our way to Turds Nest was the longest and steepest descent on the mountain. It is normally the path for a double black diamond when skiing. You had no choice but to run and there was no way of stopping yourself unless you decided to fall on your but and slide down a bunch of rocks. This sucked, and, it was in a place everyone on the mountain could see you. But it did lead us to Turds Nest which was an awesome obstacle that was basically a cargo net suspended in the air that you had to strategically cross, a lot of fun.

Now about 3.5 miles in there were definitely a lot of people beginning to quit. We were nearing the end of any MAJOR hills but weren’t out of the woods yet. We had to climb another rather massive hill to get to Log Bog Jog which was a series of logs placed at various heights in a pool of mud that you had weasel through. It was fun but there were a lot of injuries on this one. It’s known for that.

I was still really lagging as my ankle was now starting to act up, which is a previous injury I have had. My calf was definitely manageable and of no real concern at the moment when we encountered Shake n’ Bake. It was an obstacle where you jump into a pit of muddy water and then army crawl through a sand pit that had cargo nets over it. When we went through there were a lot of people around us so we were able to just duck through the long cargo net and not have to turn into a piece of breaded chicken. We got lucky.

Now approaching mile 4 we were getting closer to the halfway mark and yet we still took an hour and 45 minutes to get to this point. I can’t even begin to explain how exhausted we were at this point, I cringe just thinking about it. Quite literally everything was hurting. Most of it was a good hurt, though. A trail appeared as we started to get away from the mountain and we had to run through a narrow, hilly path for about a mile. This trail opened up to a lake where we saw Walk the Plank.

Walk the Plank was very close to the halfway point. It was this massive 20 foot tower we had to scale and then jump off of into water. I had planned to do a flip off of it but my mind was very far from that place by now and the thought never even crossed my mind. After the big drop you had to swim across the lake at the same time swimming under some rather large barrels that were roped in the water. This was the most joyous obstacle on the entire course. It was the ultimate cool off after 5 miles of pure utter torture on the mountain.

We continued running through some woods and open area that was next to a golf course. It was a massive juxtaposition… the hell of Tough Mudder against the absolute beauty of this golf course, I think it made it more painful. Even though the miles were marked, I lost track of the mileage because I was so in the zone that my mind didn’t even process the signs. Spider’s Web came up where we had to climb a big cargo net vertically, this one was actually one of the easiest obstacles. I say that with a bit of a hesitation because it still wasn’t easy after all we had been through.

Now is when the course really opened up. We began a rather long run, probably 1.5 to 2 miles through a rather beautifully flowered trail. I’m not sure precisely when but right around this time one of our team members had a real bad hamstring pull. He just stopped moving and had a real hard time even bending his leg. Out of fortune, a fellow Tough Mudder came by who happened to be a physical therapist. She asked to help and my friend said alright. It was kinda funny because she is kneeling down with her hands up his shorts giving him a deep tissue massage while other Tough Mudders are running by wondering what in the world is going on. I was jokingly saying, “Nothing to see here, nothing to see here, just keep on moving”. It was a rather humorous time during the race but she apparently worked wonders because he was a lot better afterwards.

After this long trail run we came up to another set of Berlin Walls. This time we knew what we were doing and got over them rather quickly. Still didn’t prevent me from popping a nut, it seemed almost unavoidable. We were probably at about 6 miles now. We kept on moving about another half mile through trails to Greased Lightning, which is the worlds biggest and longest slip n’ slide. Lets just say it fit the epic theme. This was beyond fun. Me and the whole team went down together and had an absolute blast. The greased tarp turned into just a big muddy hill where we continued sliding, this was a great moral booster.

The long awaited Fire Walker was next. Now, I haven’t brought it up yet but there were mini obstacles in-between the main ones. They would have random water pits, muddy hills, rock piles, etc to toss in our path and there just so happened to be a mud water pit right before Fire Walker. This obstacle was a maze of burning foliage with flames as high as I was. The firemen were there to control it but we had to run through it. I held my breath as best I could and began running through it but it was super hot, burned my eyes and my exhaustion made me take a breath and boy was it bad. I immediately started coughing terribly. I also tightened both my calves doing this because they went from cold to hot really fast. I had to stretch them out for the next obstacle that was immediately after Fire Walker, which was Everest.

Everest was a giant 15 foot tall muddy quarter pipe that we had to run up. After I stretched out my calves I ran up it and barely made it with the help of a stranger. I biffed it on the other side though where it was about a 60 degree slope into a thin layer of hay.

What happened next is where I lost the rest of my team. They had run up ahead to the next obstacle, while I was still stretching out my calves and due to somebody getting injured on an obstacle in-between my team members and myself I got held back behind them by about 20 minutes.

The next two obstacles were Ball Shrinker and Twinkle Toes. They were very similar. One was a rope balance through a body of water and the other was a beam balance 12 ft above water. There were also intermittent lakes we had to swim through that were filled with green moss and seaweed. It was wonderful. Twinkle Toes was also the obstacle that had the injured person in-between me and my team mates.

Now I was probably close to mile 8 of the course, but didn’t know it at the time. This is when I heard and saw a helicopter come screaming overhead. It was a medivac helicopter. It flew straight to the mountain that I saw a few miles in the distance (where I had come from and where all the hills were at) and hovered above some place on the mountain. It lowered down and pulled somebody up and flew away just as fast as it came. Apparently, a guy slipped up and had a compound fracture of his FEMUR!!! That’s probably the hardest bone in your body to break. A Tough Mudder employee said the bone was jutting out of his skin and blood was everywhere. I haven’t heard how he was doing but hopefully he’ll make a full recovery. Meanwhile, during all of this, about every 15 minutes you would hear the sounds of ambulances coming and going from the course, it was very ominous.

After a decent run I came up to a rather large and scummy lake where we had to pick up these large logs and carry them over our heads but make a loop through the lake. This sucked because the lake was disgusting and holding anything above our heads right now was just about the last thing we wanted to do. It was slow going and took maybe 10 minutes to get through. Just think about holding an 8 pound weight over your head for 10 minutes, now think about it after going through Tough Mudder. Now add all that with having to do it in a lake. Yeah.

Another really long run proceeded, maybe 1.5 miles long where I came to the Mystery Obstacle. I absolutely hated this obstacle, it wasn’t hard, wasn’t physically demanding, wasn’t long, it just pissed me off FAR too much. It was a short pool of muddy water that was maybe 30 yards long and about shin deep but they had taken a backhoe and dug out random holes that were 3 to 5 ft. deep. You couldn’t see them, you couldn’t prepare for them, you just randomly fell into them without warning. It pissed me off. Anyway…

The last legs of the entire course were here, mile 9. A brief jog to Chernobyl Jacuzzi where they had these 2 large dumpsters that were filled with heavily iced water and dyed to either a color of blue, green or red. You had to climb and jump in and then swim under a wooden board submerged underwater. This had to be 38 degree water, it was COLD!! Now I was cold, exhausted, blue, caked with mud and physically finished… I had maybe a half a mile left before the most intense obstacle of all, Electro Shock Therapy.

Electro Shock Therapy is a 20 yard long tunnel of dangling electric wires (a few hundred of them) that are changed with voltages ranging from 1,000 to 10,000 volts. It has very heavy mud and multiple hay bales in between. There is not a single way to avoid these wires unless you cop out of the entire obstacle and fail the whole Tough Mudder course after 10 miles of hell. I was debating doing it because they specifically state that people with epilepsy will not be able to do this obstacle. I (being myself) defied them and did it anyway. This was easily the biggest attraction. It was close to the resort and it was the most awesome obstacle. You could hear the buzz of the wires just waiting for their next victim. Hundreds of people crowded this obstacle just to watch people run through. I came up to it alone, my team members had already finished the course and were out in the crowd somewhere. I hit the wires at a decent running pace made it in a couple feet and hopped some hay bails only to get zapped real hard about halfway through, a gave out a fairly audible, “AHH”, but continued running. At this point the wires were accumulating on me and one was across my face, I knew this was bad. The next thing I know was getting hit with a body dropping impact of electricity. I hit the mud hard after giving another yell of pain. I could the entire crowd let out one big, “ooooooohh!” The zaps on this obstacle can be heard real clearly. Especially the big ones like the last one I was hit with. It gives off a really loud CRACK and just locks up all the muscles in your body. It was totally worth it despite how horrifying it was. I had made it through the final obstacle.

 

PART 3: Post Race

Once I got up I made my way across the finish line only to find a cute girl place a much rewarded orange headband over my head, a couple protein bars, a shirt and the most delicious and most highly earned beer I’ve ever had. It was a perfectly chilled Dos Equis, which isn’t the highest quality beer in the world, but after this race, it was. My team was waiting for me at the finish line and we all exchanged cheers and high fives in joyous accomplishment. We started busting out the camera to take team photos… it was a rather glorious and momentous moment for all of us. One we will all remember. Tough Mudder has nearly 1/3 of all entries quit out or get injured and can’t finish and only the highly physical and mentally willed people tend to apply. It is a race not to be underestimated and remains up there with one of the hardest things I have ever done. It actually probably sits right there on top as the most difficult thing I have ever done.

Afterwards we hosed ourselves off and got changed. We hung around for a while listening to the music and taking in the moment… mostly just not wanting to move. I planned on staying for the after party but we were all so unbelievably dog tired that we decided to head into town for an extremely well deserved dinner and then head home. We went to the nicest place we could find, which was some sit down steak house filled with middle aged people wearing khakis and dresses. We had mud stained shirts on, probably smelled horribly, I had a mohawk and all of us had skin dyed some sort of color from the Chernobyl Jacuzzi. We met some very nice locals while waiting for our seats and talked to them about Tough Mudder and they were all incredibly impressed and enthused. Some woman even gave us 40 dollars to split between the 4 of us, we told her she didn’t have to but she said she wanted to. All of us had massive steaks. 3 of us had 20 oz. ribeyes. We ate like kings.

I got home and crashed hard. I can safely say for all of the team that nobody wanted to move. The next day was a day of just sitting/napping because the very act of getting out of bed was painful. Being the day after I’ve found myself to be burned from head to toe, have cuts from head to toe, bruises from head to toe, several pulled muscles, soreness everywhere, complete and total tiredness, lack of mental awareness, and creaking joints… will I do it again? You bet your ass I will do it again, where’s the sign up sheet?!

Tough Mudder: The Most Demanding Mass Race On Earth

Tough Mudder is hands down the most demanding mass race on Earth. I will be doing this race 4 days from now with a team of 4 that I gathered several months ago. A quick overview of the race is a 10-12 mile obstacle course through mud and icy water, over hills and into trenches, through fire and electricity and more. A death waiver is required for all applicants while only 3/4 of the racers actually complete the course. You want tough, this is tough.

Tough Mudder was created a couple years ago by a Harvard student who had a project tasked to him by a professor in a goal of finding a potentially successful start-up company that is unique in today’s world. When the professor heard of his this student’s idea, he thought it was crazy and he would be lucky to get a hundred people at the first event. Well, the Harvard professor was wrong, over 10,000 people showed up! Tough Mudder now holds races once a month (on a Saturday and Sunday) all over the world with each course being completely and totally independent of the last.

The costs range from $80 up to $200 depending on how soon in advance you sign up. The majority of the money goes to the Wounded Warriors Project while the rest goes to paying staff and course construction. This is why the prices seem so high, but when you see where the funds are going, you’ll be happy. I always find it funny that people will donate hundreds or even thousands of dollars to their political party of choice for the upcoming election but might consider a tens of dollars to wounded veterans a high price to pay. Makes me curious, hah.

Anyway, there are 24 obstacles in the upcoming Wisconsin race I am doing. Obstacles include: Braveheart Charge, Death March, The Gauntlet, Boa Constrictor, Funky Monkey, Berlin Walls, Devil’s Beard, Cliffhanger, Kiss of Mud, Turd’s Nest, Log Bog Jog, Shake and Bake, Walk the Plank, Underwater Tunnels, Spider’s Web, Berlin Walls, Greased Lightning, Firewalker, Everest, Ball Shrinker, Twinkle Toes, Dry Wood, Mystery Obstacle, Chernobyl Jacuzzi and Electroshock Therapy. Look here for course map.

All of these obstacles take place in heavy mud, water, fire or electricity, or all at the same time. And between the obstacles are nothing but wet and muddy hill climbs… often times involving the carrying of a partner or a log. Speaking of partners, this is supposed to be a team challenge. It literally cannot be completed without the help of a friend or some random stranger willing to help. In fact, immediately before the race, at the Braveheart Charge… they make everyone take the “Tough Mudder Pledge” which states that no Tough Mudder will be left un-helped if help is available to be given.

It is NOT a race but a challenge, but if you CHOOSE to time yourself you have the possibility of making it into the World Tough Mudder challenge, which is probably the only event that is tougher than this.

Tough Mudder takes the average person about 2.5 hours to complete… and this is for mostly athletic people. Overweight people are rare on the course but you do see them. I give such great props for men and women who are overweight and attempt this course. If it was a goal set or the stepping stone in their road to healthy living, it sure is one big one.

Once/If Tough Mudder is completed, you will receive an orange Tough Mudder headband, admitted into the after party with a live band, drinks and food. You also receive free tattoo vouchers for the Tough Mudder logo and you get the honor of being one of the few who have completed the challenge… a challenge less accomplished than a marathon. If you really want to test your toughness and have an awesome time doing it, sign up, it’s totally worth it AND it’s a charity. Look forward to reading about my experience when I get back from Wisconsin on July 24th, 2011… hopefully having accomplished the race.

Book Teaser, First 3 Pages Of My Novel: The List

I thought I would give you a sneak peek into the novel I’m writing, I won’t divulge the plot yet to keep an air of secrecy but if you would like to comment on what you think of so far, feel free. The handful of people who have heard about the plot can’t wait to read the finished book. It might be a little while before a finished product comes out but everything I’m writing in the book is stuff that I feel like is either plausible and/or needed… though, still science fiction. Have at it, the first 3 pages!

PS: Please don’t mind any grammatical errors, I haven’t been focusing on it that much.

 

The List

 

Yearning for a rifle to unleash my sobbing hate, I clasped my mothers hand close at heart. She opened my hand and dropped two crystal blue pills in my blood stained palm and murmured,

“Take these and run, I will never be far behind”.

That was four months ago, not too long after the maple trees began to release their seeds to the wind and helicopter into the distance. Squirrels would be caught stealing bird seed out of the neighbor’s swaying feeder. And grass stains were commonplace amongst the local boys.

Now, the Earth is scorched. Smoke and Fire sprout like dandelions from hell. Death is unflinching and often over a can of beans. Streets have become war zones and travel by night is out of the question. Grass stains have since evolved into blood stains. My brother Renny and I outrun hunger nearly everyday and the occasional human encounter heeds great apprehension. The ample triumphs of mankind now whisk away in the wind as if they were all made of sand.

Ren and I have been surviving on the road together ever since mom left us. He is all I have and I’m all he has, without each other we could never make it. Even though he is my younger brother and he looks up to me for any shred of hope left in this tattered world, we still depend on each other to make it through each day.

Sometimes we catch ourselves reminiscing on perfect days at the ballpark; Sun shining on our backs, light breeze in our face and a hotdog so good you can taste it just thinking about it. The effervescent smell of freshly cut grass is a day long gone and the taste of that hotdog goes away slowly with each passing day.

I often wonder if such thinking is harmful on the mind but then I realize that hope is all we have left.

Ren and I were on the move in search of any morsel to satisfy our stomach. It was an unusually still day that made for an heir of uneasiness. Cautiously maneuvering through what once was a city road, looking over our shoulders no longer was an act, but a habit.

Each of us had a pistol and I had a small twenty-two rifle wrapped in a wool blanket and slung on my back. Creeping around an endless line of abandoned vehicles we both knew the use of our guns were at wits end and used as a last resort. Guns and especially bullets were valued more than a few mortal human lives.

It was rather ominous to see every car on the road picked clean of vital parts; air filters, steering wheels, belts, tires, even entire seats were all parted out. If you were able to find a battery, however, you were one of high esteem… either that or someone with a big fat bulls-eye on the back of their head.

I yelled at Renny to come over. He had already been eyeballing the same thing off the side of the road and was hopping towards me over a couple mangled taxis to see what I too had noticed.

“What do you think it is?” I hesitantly questioned.

“I don’t know, lets check it out.” As he jumped over the hood of the car we were hiding behind and began running out into the desolate and dusty parking lot, I quietly shouted,

“Ren! Get back here!” I swung my rifle off my shoulder and unwrapped it from the wool blanket. I set the barrel over the rusty hood of the car in an attempt to cover Ren as this was as perfect a place as any for an ambush.

Ren scuffled his way in a big cloud of dust to the mysterious object as I knelt over the car beginning to sweat profusely and doing my best to guard the parking lot. He hunched over the object such that I couldn’t make out what he was doing.

Just as quickly as he arrived, Ren stood up and darted his way back leaving a wake of dust just as big as last time. He leaped feet first and slid over the hood of the car like he was in an action movie.

I looked at him stupidly wondering what the hell he just did and why. I was huffing air almost as hard as he was I was that exhilarated. I tried to say something but words escaped me and all I could do was stare at him confoundedly. In the most serious of faces he said,

“It was too heavy”, gasping for air, “I need your help”.

“Are you crazy! You can’t just run out there like that! We need a strategy!”

“Well I did just fine didn’t I!”

“Yeah, but I had no idea what you were doing and if somebody was watching there was no way I could’ve protected you! Did you at least find out what it was?”

“I have no idea,” Ren said.

“You don’t know?”

“No!” Ren barked. “But it looks like it’s worth closer inspection.”

“Why do you figure that?”

“I just feel like it could be something.”

Giving a questionable glare at Ren, “Okay, but this time we’ll do it my way. Can you at least give me some information about what you saw so I at least know what I’m dealing with?”

“Well, it’s this black metal container about the size of a cinder block. Has a handle on each side with some kind of latch on one of the short ends.”

“How abou–”

“Oh, and it probably weighs about as much as a cinder block too.”

“How about we find some cover, and find some of that food we were originally looking for, and think up something that’ll allow us safe access to this container.” Renny nodded in agreement.

Still hiding behind the vehicle I look from Ren’s eyes up to the bluebird sky and watch the white billowy clouds drift by quietly. I shut my eyes and exhale slowly, releasing all the tension that lay before me. Releasing all the anger and frustration of surviving in a dead world. Releasing all the painful memories of the past.

I open my eyes and take a deep inhale. My lungs fill when I notice Ren is still looking at me for some direction. I focus my eyes into Renny’s and declare,

“I’ve got a plan.”

 

 

“Cosmic Gravity” by Laura Brehm: Have A Listen

Thought I would give a shout-out for my cousin Laura and her newly released single, “Cosmic Gravity”. This is her first self produced track but she already has 2 albums out on iTunes called ‘Day to Day’ and ‘Dreams’. This new song is available for purchase as well. Have a listen, her name is Laura Brehm and I’ll post some of her webpage info below.

Facebook Fan Page: https://www.facebook.com/laurabrehmmusic

http://laurabrehm.bandcamp.com/

http://www.whereparallelsmeet.com/

What Is Your Personality Type? I Can Tell You.

There exists a test in which your personality can be immediately narrowed down to a level of high precision. This test involves breaking down each person into 4 categories where each category contains 2 different “qualities” of a person. These qualities are neither good nor bad. This leaves us with 16 different personality types. This test is a psychometric questionnaire utilized by psychologists to discover how people look at the world around them as well as the ways they are most likely to make decisions. It has been utilized by many covert agencies as well, in an effort to predict behavior of enemies of the state.

The test is called Myers-Briggs Type Indicator. The 4 categories are: Attitude, Perceiving Function, Judging Function, and Lifestyle. At the bottom of the page I will post a link to the test… complete the entire test, without rushing, and remain as accurate as humanly possible. Answer based off what you think, not what you think others think of you.

Attitude: You can either be an Introvert (I) or an Extrovert (E). One is not better than the other. It is often misconstrued that an introvert is shy… the two are completely different. Extroverts are action oriented and seek a broad range of knowledge where introverts are thought oriented and seek depth of knowledge. Extroverts look for frequent interaction and introverts look for substantial interaction. Extroverts gain energy as a party goes on whereas introverts lose energy as the party goes on.

Functions: There are four functions. You are Sensing (S) or Intuition (N) and Thinking (T) or Feeling (F). Everyone has all of these, but there is always a dominant one and a 2nd dominant one, S or N -and- T or F. Sensors prefer information that is perceived by the 5 senses, and distrust hunches. They prefer details and facts as apposed to theoretical information, like Intuition people do. Intuition people are highly intrigued by future knowledge. They are more likely to pursue thoughts that coexist with facts as well as patterns of theory.

Thinking and Feeling is a decision based category. Thinkers make decisions more from a 3rd person point of view. They tend to be more logical, reasonable, and consistent. Feelers base their decisions on sympathy and empathy and from a 1st person point of view. They tend to follow “general consensus”, and are more concerned with people in the given situation.

Lifestyle: Judgers (J) are people who prefer finding resolutions to an issue. On the opposite, Perceivers (P) prefer things to be left open ended. It gets more in-depth than that but this is a general round about relation to the J and P people.

What you get, once you take the test, is 16 possibilities…

INTJ: As some of you might be aware after reading the “About Me” section of this website, I am an INTJ… which is always in a battle with INFJ as the rarest type indicator.

Based off what I’ve read, INTJs project a high level of confidence in all their thoughts and decisions. Sometimes coming across as arrogant to the feelers and sensors. We have a very specialized knowledge and train of thought. We have very high levels of expertise in (usually) multiple areas and we are able to tell you immediately what we do and do not know. We are often known as perfectionists with great ambitions and will always seek improvement in any area of interest. The phrase “does it work” is almost a doctrine of INTJs and is applied in literally every situation. Thus, we are highly independent, and authority and general consensus is often negated. INTJs have a high level of imagination with an odd level of reliability. INTJs are synonymous with science and engineering, they often hold positions of great leadership, often in the military since they are natural leaders.

The downside of INTJs is their relationships. They care immensely for their significant other and will go to any lengths (beyond any other type) to make it work. The reason they have a hard time is because they are easily mislead when even the slightest signal is read incorrectly. The best way to approach an INTJ is to tell him/her directly what you want and how you feel. Relationships often fizzle out because they don’t understand why other people behave certain ways and more often then not over evaluate and become impatient. Never EVER “hint” or “signal” anything to an INTJ, if you ever have, that’s probably the soul reason the relationship never started. Just be DIRECT.

On the plus side, INTJs are also perfectionists when it comes to sex. And no, I am not just saying this… studies show that the greatest sexual pleasure that a man or woman has received, was significantly more often coming from an INTJ… just give them a few instances to build upon. This may seem peculiar because one would assume the sensors or feelers would be the best. INTJs are perfectionists in bed too and will do anything to satisfy him or her. We often exhibit a high level of creativity and intensity. Although, in negative relationships INTJs are more likely to think about sex than actually doing it.

Here is a compatibility chart to see how suitable 2 types of people are in a relationship: http://www.socionics.com/rel/relcht.htm

INTJs are usually good at telling jokes, often dry, sarcastic and with a straight face. As a friend, they are hard to get to know but are greatly valued. The reason for this is because we are serious-minded people. On a parental side, the INTJ goal is to raise intelligent children that are able to think for themselves, and make their own decisions. INTJs will always challenge them. The downside with parenting is INTJs will often not pay enough attention to the child’s emotional needs, often rationalizing that it’s not a big deal.

Famous INTJs: Lance Armstrong, Augustus Caesar, Katie Couric, Peter Jennings, C.S. Lewis, Donald Rumsfeld, Michelle Obama, John F. Kennedy, Dwight D. Eisenhower, Sir Isaac Newton, Thomas Jefferson,  Friederich Nietzsche, Niels Bohr, Stephen Hawking, Isaac Asimov, Ayn Rand, Erik Sati, Susan B. Anthony.

MBTI Personality Test: http://www.humanmetrics.com/cgi-win/jtypes2.asp 

Feel free to post your results here and let me know how accurate they reflect you. This isn’t hocus pocus astrology… it’s an actual psychological test, the results are far less random and far less ambiguous. As far as the reliability, the MBTI test is almost always spot on, the downside is that people change slightly from year to year. You should retest yourself after about 9 months… you won’t deviate far from where you test at now (usually only 1 letter), but you still deviate slightly.

He Who Sacrifices Nothing, Will Get Nothing… Get Off Your Ass and Live

“The core of mans’ spirit comes from new experiences.”

I want you to ask yourself what you did today that you had never done before. How about yesterday? Or the day before that? It is natural behavior for humans to get into a groove of relentless cadence and it would be pure fabrication if I told you I wasn’t guilty of such action. Although, I will say that I believe I am better at “groove-less” living than most people on the planet.

Further down I will explain how you can improve your ability to make your life worth it. Some people believe that life on Earth is just a prelude to something vastly greater post death. I do not believe in such dreams. I believe we have one opportunity, one life, to accomplish everything we can achieve before we rot in the ground for all eternity. For me, it is blissful in knowing this because it gives me a purpose to try and experience everything feasibly possible in my lifetime… much like how a dying cancer patient might live their life knowing they have 1 month to live. If this method of thinking doesn’t jive with you, it’s okay, keep reading.

If it were possible to mark the days on a calender that you could consider “memorable” or you might label as a “new experience”, for all the days in your life… I wonder what percent of your life that would be. So if you lived to 75 years of age (27,375 days) and during your lifetime you had an arbitrary 1,000 days of new/memorable experiences, then that would mean only 3.6% of your lifetime is groove-less. And then you realize that 1/3 of your lifetime is spent sleeping if you get the recommended amount of sleep every night, 8 hours. I am sure some of you are thinking, “sheesh, I sleep at least 10 hours every night”.

Your ambition should be to live as groove-less as possible. It should NOT be to do well in the work force, to own a big house with a wonderful green backyard and white picket fence. If I were to inquire you to write your life story when you are 75 years of age, how many pages would your story be? And ultimately, would your autobiography be entertaining, eventful and exhilarating? Of course, all this is assuming you live to 75. For all anyone knows you could have an unknown disease right now that will rub you out next year.

More and more everyday I consider taking 6 months off and just start backpacking my way west, maybe make my way up to Canada and/or Alaska, or maybe head south to Mexico… who knows!? That’s the beauty of it. This sort of trip would be easier for me than some simply because I’m not married with children. That most definitely does NOT mean that you can’t do that if you are married with children. This is your life and you damn well better live it. He who sacrifices nothing, will get nothing. And that will be my inspirational quote of the day.

I have optimism that my words have inspired you to embark on a new life journey filled with Utopian achievement, ha, maybe I should have worded that better seeings how this is slow going for any mortal soul, including myself. Every week, NO MATTER WHAT, write down on a piece of paper something you would like to do that you have never done. Or write down a place you have never been, even if just local. Every week! If you don’t accomplish it, you can’t check it off! You could call it an ongoing bucket list. To add to this, minimally, you should have a big new-experience at a minimum of once a year. Something that doesn’t exactly take 1 day to fully experience. This could be anywhere from a vacation to a new state or new country. It could be a week long camping trip, skydiving, sailboating, skiing/snowboarding, build a car, ride dolphins, write a book, etc etc. If you don’t, what are you doing?

Feel free to post comments or share this with friends/family. Ideas are worth spreading.

The Story Of My 3 Grand Mal Seizures, 5 Day Amnesia, And Epilepsy Diagnosis

It has been over 2 weeks since I have made a post, and for good reason too. Some of you have seen my last post about me being in the emergency room. I actually posted that and don’t have any memory of it. In that post, it says that about 36 hours of my memory were lost, well, it actually was more… I just didn’t know it at the time. I have virtually zero memory of almost everything from January 15th, and it gradually gets better and better as time goes on. My memory right now is still not up to par but there were about 4-5 days where I have no memory, or just fragments of various random instances. This will be a relatively long post, so brace yourself if you choose to keep reading, it is the full account of what happened to me. Most of which I have no memory of, it’s just based off what I have been told. Also, if my diction is hard to read, it’s probably because my brain is still a little scrambled and the fact I am on some pretty powerful drugs… the neurologist says it should improve.

January 15th, a Saturday, I slept in and woke up feeling like I had run a marathon, I was exhausted. All I remember is waking up, going to the bathroom, getting some food, and that’s it. Apparently, around 4 pm, my Chinese roommate heard me scream briefly and then heard a thump. At which point he came to my room and saw me laying face into the floor violently shaking from head to toe. Full body convulsions, and I wasn’t responding. Logan had come straight from China and wasn’t too familiar with 911 and my other roommates weren’t in the apartment. He said my face was turning blue and I was having a hard time breathing. He called my other roommate, Christian, without a response… to my luck, he was just walking in the door with his girlfriend who is a soon to be Registered Nurse. By this time Logan is freaking out. He grabs Christian and his girlfriend tells him what to do, ‘lay him on his side, get a pillow, remove all hard objects from the area’ as his girlfriend Ashley calls 911.

Christian was holding my hand trying to get a response out of me as I continued convulsing and Logan began to pray for my life as Ashley waited for the Ambulance outside. According to Christian and Logan, I was foaming at the mouth and blood was coming out of my mouth and nose. My eyes were also dilated so much that they were completely black. Grand Mal seizures are when neurons in your brain are firing randomly and out of control throughout your entire body… this caused my tongue and jaw to tense incredibly fast resulting in me biting pieces out of my tongue. I also had to-the-muscle rug burns on both my feet, my arms and my face. I tore my rotator cuff in my right arm and I keep partially dislocating it if I am not careful.

Okay, back to the story. Once the EMTs arrived I had stopped seizing but was still unconscious and hard to breath. Slowly I came to but was still not responsive. The paramedics helped me to the stretcher where they took me down the elevator and out to the ambulance. What is interesting is that during the State of the Union Address, a memory I hadn’t had was triggered from that night. I remember hearing somebody call my name saying “Can you hear me?” and then asking me, “Who is the President of the United States” and “Where are you right now”? I also remember not being able to answer. I also don’t know who it was that was asking me those questions. I am assuming it was inside the ambulance.

Christian followed me to the hospital in his car while Logan stayed back to answer the questions of the police. When I was in the ER and he was talking to the doctors I went into another seizure while on the stretcher. The nurse then asked if I was kidding… which was kind of wrenching when Christian told me that she asked him this. HELL NO I WASN’T KIDDING!

I was injected with several milligrams of Ativan, a very high potency sedative… normally only about 0.5 mg is needed. At which point I had multiple IVs going into my body with various fluids and during all this they had contacted my parents who were 5 hours away telling them I had been ambulanced to the ER but that was all they could say due to the HIPAA laws. So they were freaking out and frantically packing for an unknown number of days and had to drive 5 hours without any information as to what was wrong with me.

Once stabilized, I was placed into the Intensive Care Unit in the hospital where I was still hooked up to all sorts of monitoring machines. I had multiple XRays, EEGs, MRIs, CT scans going where they found out I also have a bad case of pneumonia. The EEG showed abnormal brain waves that coincided with my diagnosis. While in the ICU, people were finding out about what had happened and calling, texting or facebooking me and apparently I was responding and having full conversations with them… I just have absolute zero memory of it. People also visited me and fortunately I only remember them showing up, but that’s about it. As far as the multi-hour conversations, nada.

After my condition was deemed safe for me to leave the ICU, I was wheel-chaired over to the recovery room where I stayed in a bed for a couple more days. Sorry if my lack of timescale is annoying, for me, most of this isn’t a memory just an account of what happened. I ended up being in the hospital for somewhere around 4 days, not entirely sure though.

My parents were in town for all that I remember because I don’t have the memory of them arriving, just the memory of them randomly being there. It’s sort of hard to explain my amnesia because at the time in the hospital I could tell people what was going on but as time went by, I couldn’t tell them what happened. The best way I can explain it is to say that I knew why I was in the hospital but not how. Almost impossible to think that, but that’s just how it feels.

Once released, I ended up spending about a week with my parents in hotels just to be monitored and to recover. I say hotel(s) because we didn’t know how long my parents needed to stay and since we were using Priceline, we were skipping from hotel to hotel.

All but 1 of my classes was dropped for the semester and I kept not a single problem solving course… which is difficult to say seeings how my major is Aerospace Engineering. The single course is philosophy and it’s just so I can maintain student status and continue with my student loans. I have also been diagnosed by an epileptologist with Juvenile Myoclonic Epilepsy. Normally it is shown first in young children but because I have always been healthy, it has taken this long to show itself. I have had it all my life and will always have it until I die.

What are the life changing ramifications? Well, for starters I will be on a black box drug the rest of my life. I can’t drink alcohol. I can no longer be in the Air Force or now join any other military branch. It is illegal for me to fly a plane for the rest of my life, this is something I have been doing and been a dream of mine. It is also a required class in my major to fly a plane so I am unsure if I can graduate now because of it. I can’t swim unless heavily supervised and not in choppy water. I cannot drive for 6 months seizure free. 1 of the 3 big sports that I can no longer do is mountaineering, which has been a set life dream of mine (here). My trip to Mt. Rainier this summer has since been canceled. I could keep going but it’s just not healthy to.

It is weird because in both these posts I link below, I talk about things that involve what has now happened just days later. In a recent post I talk about how life is like a train, always moving in a general direction and it’s hard to slow or stop unless something massive derails it… well, my train was just derailed and it’s going to take my life into a total new direction and it will take a while to get it going again. http://iantimberlake.wordpress.com/2011/01/03/why-free-will-makes-your-life-pre-destined/

Also, ironically, I recently posted about the benefits of coconut. Just a week before my seizures I added coconut into my regular diet and on the list of things it helps prevent is epileptic seizures.  http://iantimberlake.wordpress.com/2011/01/13/what-is-the-healthiest-thing-in-the-world-to-eat-that-is-also-a-medicine/

Life throws you screw balls and you just have to learn how to deal with them. This one was a big one for me and will/has changed my life until the day I die. You just need to learn how to manage and roll with it because the alternative is completely unacceptable and just not fun. To be clear, I am the same person now as I was 1 month ago with the exception that I now am informed of the condition I have had all my life. The worst thing is the paranoia in knowing something could happen at any moment and I won’t know it while it’s happening. Thank goodness it just didn’t first happen while I was driving or swimming or alone or I would surely be dead.