Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Resolution #4 Update: A Month Without Cigars


Truly, it has been a rough month. I'm on my fifth week without so much as a deep breath of second hand cigar smoke. Friends have commented that I am out of my gourd or that I've gone through an "Invasion of the Body Snatchers" type episode. I have been replaced by someone healthier, less odorous and perhaps a tad more cranky (Renae thinks this part is not possible).

On the bright side, though I don't necessarily feel physically different, I'm sure this turning a new leaf (it's not a tobacco leaf, sadly) is good for me, healthwise, if not emotionally. It's still no fun to run 3 or 4 miles, but I'm able to do so without much trouble. I guess my breath is better and my clothes don't smell like stale cigar smoke. That's good, right? Also, our budget is a tad better since I'm spending nothing on stogies. On the down side, my anticipation of smoking a nice tasty Dominican or Nicaraguan cigar goes unsatisfied. I guess I'm thankful that the weather has been significantly less than savory for the past couple of weeks, but I know that will change and very soon. I'll long to park my butt on someone else's deck (since I don't have one), crack open a cold beer and light up a cigar. The thought of an 80 degree day in Chicago (I know, seems far off, right) and an afternoon with my buds over icy suds and some tasty 50 ring gauge Churchills has me chomping at the bit. I have been trying to figure out a way to get at least once cigar in my monthly regiment without causing detriment to my meager running schedule and my marriage. Okay, so I don't think Renae's that tough on me, honestly. There actually is a part of me that likes this ability to go more than two days without a stogie. Then there are the "fall off the wagon" moments. For example, recently a friend opened his humidor to show me about 75 Cuban cigars he had "acquired." It was about a week after I "quit." I nearly wept. Let's just leave it at that. I don't want to talk about it anymore.

So if you find yourself wanting to invite me to a backyard barbeque or a guy's night out over stogies and scotch, please feel free to do so. I need all the help I can get.

Friday, April 29, 2011

Resolution #4 Update: Goodbye Sweet Tobacco Goodness



Once again, I have been woefully short on ideas about which to write on this now sad blog. It's been nearly an entire month that I've deprived my one follower of bathroom reading. Allow me to apologize. Moving along, I actually do have something today. It's rather monumental. I'm going on my second week without a cigar. Shocking, I know. There is some explanation to this temporary loss of insanity. First of all, I am given the subtle reminder by my wife that I should be healthier, so short of ingesting more leafy greens, it has been highly recommended to me that I should also ingest fewer toxins. I guess that's good advice. Second,  since Renae and I plan to run a half marathon this August and since I already loathe running like I do romcoms, I should try to take measure to make the task less painful. Though I like to rationalize and tell myself that I don't smoke nearly enough to make running more difficult (hard to make it more difficult in my already Jabba like running pace), I'm sure that I'll see a difference once I allow a couple of months to go by smoke-free.

Needless to say, my timing sucks. The weather is changing, barbequeing will soon ensue and I'll yearn to have a stogie with my friends. Why didn't I think of this during the winter, when I was still lighting up in the freezing cold? It'd be far less difficult to make the transition. So, I hear that when you stop smoking, you put on weight by replacing it with more eating. I also hear that when you marathon (or half marathon) train, you stop dropping pounds. Essentially, then, I'll be punishing myself by not enjoying a good cigar on a perfect summer evening, beating up my feet and legs while trying to get to the 13 mile mark and last of all having any weight loss benefits of training cancelled out by my increased food consumption. Please explain to me how this plan is any good. Nevertheless, it is going forward. Renae seems to be a fan.

Friday, April 1, 2011

Resolution #4 Update: Skiing, the Slippery Slope

When you grow up in the Midwest, you don't exactly learn how to ski. It's more like sliding down a hill-sized mound of ice. That was the meat of my skiing experience. I had been to Devil's Head once in high school with my brother and a couple of friends to "give it a try." No lessons, no experience, no brains. Not a good combo. I recall going down the "expert" slope which was like a green in the Rockies. I had no idea how to turn, so I basically went straight down the slope toward a wood chipper fence. Of course, I also had no clue how to stop (snowplow! pizza!), so once I reached terminal velocity, I just decided to fall and dig up half the earth in the process. I vowed to never go skiing again.

I held to that vow until I met my wife. She is to skiing what I am to eating... practically a professional. She's good and she's fast. So, a couple of years ago, she convinced me to go to Colorado, and I even took lessons. The problem is, the lesson never traveled from my brain to the rest of my body, so I fell A LOT. Most of my energy was spent trying to pull my 200+ lb body up so that I could fall again. I left Colorado frustrated, tired and humbled. Well, it just so happens that my wife wanted to see that happen all over again, and my brother thought he'd come along to witness it. So, upon our visit to San Francisco this past week, we packed up and headed to Lake Tahoe to go skiing with my brother and his family. We toted along my two beautiful nieces, 10 and 5. The oldest one loves to ski and has been doing it for the past few years. She's good, too. Even the tiny one, who is an athletic fury, was skiing down the slopes with no poles and no fear. I, however, had poles and an overly healthy amount of fear. I guess when you're 6'2", 205 lbs and 41 years old, you feel that falling down a rocky snowy mountain face is less fun than, say, napping in the sun after a good meal.


Well, I called upon my bizarre need to feel a sense of accomplishment and spent three days improving my paltry skills. My wonderful wife has always waited for me to crash and then come to my aid, but I was determined to become fully independent. The second day of skiing, I has forgotten to get something from my room a the lodge. My brother told me he'd meet me outside after he did one run. Well, I came outside and waited for 15 minutes. No brother to bee seen. So, I took the lift I thought he used and as I was halfway up the mountain, I realized it was the wrong lift. I was going up the steep one. I thought to myself, "This could be bad." I got to the top and thought, "Oooh. I chose poorly." Well, after inquiring if there was an easy way down, I discovered that the run I had to take was a tad steeper than what I was used to. Well, rather than risk the walk of shame back to the lift to try to get a humiliating ride down, I decided, "What the hell. I'm already used to falling." So, I made my way down, scanning the snowy descent for any possibility that I might careen off the edge. Well, after no less than 5 mild falls, I made it to the bottom alive, and I felt that much better for having tried it. The rest of the trip turned out to be a fantastic experience, and I now want to come back every year. With the encouragement of my family and my tiny niece yelling at me, "C'mon, Uncle Amos! Let's get moving!" I was transformed from lumbering ox to mildly clumsy amateur skier. I may even be hooked. Just don't tell my wife.

Thursday, March 10, 2011

Resolutions #1 and #3 Update: Driving the "Sports Bus"

I've been AWOL for a couple of weeks because of vacation, but I'm back and have very little in the way of valuable things about which to write (shocking, I know). I can say that my unpaid writing gig has grown by leaps and bounds (except for the money part) over the past couple of weeks. I've found an opportunity to write about cars on a daily basis, and I've made some solid PR connections to actually test drive more cars myself. My most recent opportunity was actually somewhat dreaded. Let me start by saying that I loathe giant, purposeless SUVs that are driven to the strip mall in Naperville by women on cell phones. I mean, what's the point in driving something that has enough torque to warp the earth's crust, enough size to transport half of the Chicago Bulls and enough off-road capability to traverse potholes on Lake Shore Drive with ease, only to lollygag it in the left lane while doing your mascara? SUVs are for camping, off-roading and tranporting lumber. I wish I had ordered the heat-seeking missiles option every time I see SUVs in lazy butt mode, doing nothing but take up precious space. Plus, all they do is block your view and take up 1.5 parking spaces. It's just plain annoying.

Well, lo and behold, I have been given the "opportunity" to test drive the all-new Infiniti QX56 land barge this week. I remember the first time Renae and I saw this beast on Lake Shore Drive several months ago. It looked like a melted mobile home. In a word, fugly. Well, it was dropped off at our condo this week to test, and we luckily got one in a darker color (which actually manages to make it look smaller, if that's possible). The interior is like a private jet. Leather everywhere, techno doo-dads that dizzy the mind and even a heated steering wheel. The first time I boarded it, I felt like I was hovering instead of driving. I was worried that the car was so wide that I would sideswipe just about everything else on the road. I'd pull up next to Cadillac Escalades and utterly dwarf them. My borrowed SUV was faster, had more features and had a grille the size of a chain link fence. In a bizarre and partially embarrassing way, I actually started feeling pretty good about myself... until I looked at the abysmal gas mileage. For something this thirsty, it should be measured in gpm (gallons per mile). I averaged 10.3 mpg on my commute. That's up there with V12 Ferraris and the Space Shuttle Discovery. Now, also keep in mind that this hulking behemoth has a 400 horsepower V8. That's nothing to sneeze at, even with a car this heavy. Well, I've been pretty good about keeping my driving speeds down (especially since I now take the train to work), and I thought I couldn't go that fast in this thing. I was wrong. I was trying to pass a sloth in the left lane the other day and got on the throttle in the Infiniti, and it took off like an iron sarcophagus with booster rockets. I was seriously impressed. Soon enough, I was at 80 mph on Lake Shore Drive, and I had to slow down, otherwise I'd become the fastest moving object with its own gravitational field.

So, I'm nearly a quarter of the way through this resolution year, and I'm breaking #3 in an entirely new vehicle. Plus, I have become the giant SUV driver I normally despise intensely. Believe it or not, I love this thing. It's no sports car, mind you, but it is kind of a Sports Bus. It handles surprisingly well for its size, it doesn't have an overly mushy suspension, and it goes like stink. It also affords me to write about it from a unique angle and though it causes me to break Resolution #3, it does help me keep Resolution #1. So what if it looks like a car got stung by a million bees and holds more gas than the Exxon Valdez? Okay, so it's still fugly. I still want one. It'll eat Prii for breakfast.

Thursday, February 24, 2011

Resolution #1 Update: iCaved In

If you've been one of the three people who read my blog, you'll know that I'm now a train lemming, dragging my sorry butt to the Metra and joining the herds of commuters. No, I haven't chosen "my seat" and I still haven't fallen prey to the mentality that I must get on my train at all costs, sacrificing good manners and personal safety to make my 6:00 train. Not yet, anyway, and I hope that never happens. 

An interesting part of the commute is that each day I notice more and more people reading iPads or other electronic tablet devices. I actually find it a little annoying for some reason and I find comfort in seeing people read real books (except for anything "self-help"). But I have to confess that I'm this close to getting the ubiquitous iPad, despite my mild disdain for them. I am fascinated by technology, but I'm also somewhat reluctant to get one because I think it contributes to a lack of focus. Everything is quick these days, and no one can sit still and do nothing (except for watching TV, which I have to thank my wife for taking out of my life, and I'm all the better for it). But I'm rationalizing getting an iPad by telling myself it will help me write more and make better use of my time. I keep telling myself that.

Well, it looks like I've convinced myself that I'm going to become another kind of lemming, a technology lemming. My wife and I have had numerous conversations about my "need" for an iPad. Well, the jury's still out on that one, but I think it would be a great tool to do research and writing without carrying my giant laptop from work on the train every day. Plus, my fingers are far too fat to type on my tiny Android phone keyboard to write anything substantial. So, if the iPad 2.0 is actually released in the next couple of months, you just might see me annoying people on the train with another gadget. I promise not to play Angry Birds on the train (the screen is WAY too big for that). I just hope it at least helps me generate content that translates into something legitimate, like a new career or even a published novel. So, I guess it's okay, as long as I don't accidentally step off the train platform while reading the darned iPad. I guess there's always 3.0.

Friday, February 18, 2011

Resolution #1 Update: The beginnings of a novel









The Weight of Three Dreams is a novel I've started and hope to finish within the next 12-18 months. That's a lot to take on, especially in light of the cursed writer's block, which seems to occur regularly. It's a work of fiction that incorporates my parents' Korean heritage and Korean history. I will attempt to self-publish. Here's a sampling of two of the chapters.

One / Ha-na

Jong Ha Park emerged from his rickety bed to a bitter cold morning. Unfortunately, the bitterness had too easily made its way into his garage apartment on the edge of town in Billings. And sadly, it was not an apartment above a garage. It was the garage. In fact, every winter morning felt the same way here… positively arctic. The forlorn sunken warship-like, less-than-adult height toilet had frozen weeks ago, so he was forced to use a bucket or trudge his meat-lockered body to the “great outdoors” to relieve himself.  Six months ago, when he was on the bus from Chicago, he never would have imagined it could get this cold, but Montana proved him wrong. Even the harsh winters of Pusan, South Korea seemed easily more than tolerable compared to this. At least back home involved the active participation of a wood-burning stove. His only comfort now was the fur seal-like “damyo” or Korean blanket his sister had sent him. As loud as a bevy of caution horses, the orange, white and red dyeing job was clearly an eyesore, but it retained his body heat so well that it was, in fact, a life-saver.

The water he had boiled the night before was still unfrozen in the blue speckled basin he’d left it in. Though the water was not quite the perfect temperature for a morning shave, Jung washed his face with his new favorite soap, Ivory. There was nothing like this in Korea. He appreciated its beautiful simplicity and the near perfect rectangle in which it was formed. He always tried to keep it pristine and make it last as long as he could. He mildly lamented the point when the letters imprinted in the bar would disappear after enough use. The new Gillette safety razor was even more of a fascination for him. The turn of the metal handle made the top open like the door for a plane’s landing gear. It was the only item of substance he owned, with its grooved handle and hefty weight, it felt like it was worth something, even though it only cost him a few dollars. He lathered up and let the suds park on his face for a little while before employing a few gentle strokes. Though he didn’t have a preponderance of whiskers for a man his age, there was still work to do. He strived to present as clean of an image as possible, for he knew that much of how he appeared to people in the states would cover over his lack of understanding for the language and for the customs of his host country. After toweling off and finishing the rest of his morning routine, Jung threw on brown slacks and a white button-up oxford, and though his gray wool overcoat was getting a bit worn, he felt ready for the day ahead of him.

Along with winter’s chill in a tiny garage, he chalked up all his difficulties as sacrifices made to his cultural and deeply ingrained quest for a good education.  He was lucky enough to make it to the states as a student, having left his whole family behind in South Korea, to pursue his goal of getting a college education in America. This was no small feat for the fourth of eight children in an impoverished family in small, rural Korean town. Most days back home, he was primarily concerned with getting the next meal or how many holes his shoes could take before he could no longer wear them. It was these kinds of hardships that made him thankful he had his slightly worn and creased brown wingtip oxfords rather than complain about not having any winter boots in frigid Montana. Shoes were just good. There would be bigger challenges today, or at least they seemed so to him. There was no hope of becoming proficient enough in the English language to understand everything he was studying. He would settle for enough to score at least a solid ‘B’ on his exams. Sure, locals and students had been more than helpful to him, as they were purely fascinated by this young, handsome Korean man who’d come to their town for college. How he’d ended up there was another story altogether.

Two / Duul

White nursing uniforms had become commonplace, even here. The Florence Nightingale look had pervaded even the far east, with requisite cap, stockings and white shoes. To Mee-Ae, the uniform made virtually no sense at all, in a profession where blood, dirt and germs were a regular part of the day. But this was what she had chosen for herself. Her sister, Mee-Yung, had lovingly pushed her on more than one occasion, to see this part of her life through. It would, as she said, lead to something. She knew not what. Tall for a Korean woman, Mee-Ae Kim stood 5'4" and though her 105 pound physique occupied very little space, her personality accounted for a rather substantial presence. Never one to back down to a challenge, Mee-Ae frequently stirred up trouble at school, but not the kind you would imagine. To Mee-Ae, some of her instructors were not competent enough, and she would rally her fellow students to walk out in protest for more qualified instructors. In her favor, school had never been difficult for Mee-Ae.  In a culture of female subservience, Mee-Ae had not the gentleness of spirit to quietly remain at home, waiting for her supposed husband to return from work.  For 1952, she was quite progressive.

But today she would be the proper young lady, coolly present in a group of 215 women, graduating from nursing school. The ceremony would be held outside, each nurse dressed in her pristine uniform, seated on a white wooden folding chair… a veritable sea of whiteness, peppered with the stark blackness of the graduates' hairdos on a green lawn. The brown bobby pins securing her white cap to her hair were pinching, but she was far less bothered by that than she was by the tardiness of her family, not because she wanted them there but because she hated having to make space in her brain worrying about something that should just happen on a day like today. But her family was not so enthusiastic, either. Mee-Ae was a burgeoning soul, trying to emerge from a murky and stultifying morass within her family, one which had grown exponentially over the years. She was largely ignored as her family mourned the death of their eldest son, since gone for twelve years now. The darkness had never left, and Mee-Ae knew it never would.

Monday, February 14, 2011

Resolution #4 Update: Rice Krispie Treats, My Drug of Choice

A couple of years ago, my wife and I stopped by a Noodles & Company at the local mall because we were hungry and didn't plan very well. We typically don't eat out that much, but we were starving, so we dropped in and had a bowl of Japanese noodles with sauteed beef and bean sprouts (side note: whenever I order an asian dish at a non-asian eating establishment, I always think the wait staff says to themselves, "Figures."). We were pretty impressed by the flavor at this fast-food type place. The noodles were perfectly cooked, the sauce was flavorful and the sauteed beef was incredibly tender. I was unprepared for the dessert. We had grabbed a couple of rice krispie treats at the counter. They were thick cut (about two inches) and in the shape of a rather large isosceles triangle. Other than the unique shape, they didn't look much different than your average rice krispie treat you may have grown up with. Okay, so they're so big, you can use them as wheel chocks for a small car. Well, dessert nirvana ensued and Renae and I stared at each other in disbelief. I think I said something along the lines of, "Tell me this is not the most amazing rice krispie treat you've ever eaten??" and "Are there drugs in here?" Keep in mind. It is so massive, it could easily be eaten after two meals, as opposed to one. For efficiency's sake, we devoured them all at once. Renae said, "It's like it never ends!" Well, that was only the beginning.


We've been slaves to the rice krispie treat from Noodles & Company more times than we can count in our 1+ year marriage. I think we look for opportunities to drive past one of these establishments. Just yesterday, instead of going to the gym as we do every Sunday after church, we decided to get some shopping done at the same mall. I was hungry, so I turned to my wife and she said, "Do you want a rice krispie treat?" I was salivating like Pavlov's dog. I could've opted for a nice bowl of noodles (the Asian in me has a right to it, you know), but the drug-laden triangle was calling my name. So, I shamelessly entered the den of wretchedness known as Noodles & Company and nabbed the biggest one in the wire counter tray. The process is very fast, but with hummingbird-like precision, I move between the two counter baskets and scope out what I perceive to be the largest treat available. I think we're probably the only people we've ever seen go up to the counter and rather than order a meal and wait to be served, we dig our talons into a couple of the treats, pay quickly and dash out to get our fix. I was in and out in less than 20 seconds, then I proceeded to consume it like a pit bull after a hapless rabbit. All that remained after 5 minutes was a mangled cellophane wrapper and two vestigial crumbs on my face. You want it so bad, you don't care what people think of you. So, that's where we are (or at least where I am. My wife has exercised far more discipline than I). I'm was far less focused on pushups yesterday than I was on pushing one of these into my face. It's a tough battle. I'll just sit in the trench and eat another treat.