Tuesday, January 29, 2008

Tooth Fairy visits Marietta....News at 11:00

DATELINE: Marietta, GA (Reuters)
This just in: Olivia Brookshire has lost her first baby tooth. The evacuation took place during "snack time" at the Wood Acres School yesterday at approximately 11:15 a.m. The tooth was saved in a napkin and placed under Brookshire's pillow at 8:25 p.m. Authorities estimate that sometime between 9:17 p.m and 3:00 a.m. a hagard winged fairy stole the tooth and replaced it with $1.50 in U.S. currency. Pictures to follow....

Friday, January 25, 2008

On the bike....some

There are maybe 10 people that know about my silly little blog. A couple of them just want to know how the cycling is coming along. In short, it's winter....

I broke my main frame on the trainer a few weeks ago. I've got a lot of bikes, but most of them are old. The good ones I have are my track bike and my cyclocross bike, both of which aren't for the road. Here's where working in a bike shop pays off. Mike has given me permanent loan of a LOOK 565. This is a handmade, full carbon fiber French frame. A really nice ride. It's ultimately probably not what I want to race this year because I need something a little stiffer, but it's what I can get with two pennies to my name.

I've been trying to ride to work on the days I'm at the shop. It gets me a little more than 2 hours on the bike. I'm also trying to get on my trainer a couple of times a week and do some video workouts. Everybody keeps coming in the shop asking when I'm going to race. It's realistically going to be April. I hate the cold and I refuse to race on the road unless I'm in shape. Cyclocross was fun, but I won't stand for getting my ass kicked for long on the road before I quit.

I'm applying for an assistant teaching position here in Cobb County that is to be filled soon. I would take it if offered. It pays more than the bike shop and I get weekends off. I am trying to get into the GATAPP program which will allow me to go back to teaching full-time and work on my certificate. I'm certainly not doing this so that I can race a bike, but it would allow some more freedom with my schedule if I get it. The main motivator is making some more dough and still getting to spend time with Olivia.

When I'm on the bike I'm beginning to feel pretty good. I'm starting to do some upper body work because my back is hurting like always. Knock on wood, I've been pretty pain free this time around. I think this time around that cycling is more of a therapeutic thing than a competition thing. That said, anyone that knows me knows I hate losing :)

Wednesday, January 23, 2008

Death....

Ohhhhhhhh.... shit......:-(

Monday, January 21, 2008

kickass snowman

Olivia and I sculpted this guy in honor of the soon-to-be-top-5 ranked Tennessee Vols basketball team!

Thursday, January 17, 2008

The snowstorm, corn on the cob, and the damn treehouse

I worked 15 hours yesterday as we did inventory at the shop. It started snowing in the late afternoon, a real rarity here in Atlanta. When I got home after midnight, stately Brookshire Manor was covered in a soft blanket of wet southern snow. Like a moron that had never seen snow, I stood on my front lawn at 1:00 a.m. and took a picture.

Olivia was in a good mood when I took her to school this morning. She's excited because she's got a loose tooth. Apparently it hasn't affected her ability to talk my ear off all the way to school.

Unbeknownst to me, we are having a "sleepover" party at my house on July 4th. Olivia is going to cook my favorite food, corn on the cob (who knew?). Sure, I LIKE corn on the cob, but it doesn't register on my favorite food radar screen.

The sleepover will take place in the damn treehouse (see earlier post). I've been thinking about this damn treehouse. I had a plan where I'd take a couple of hundred bucks in materials and a couple of days of labor and probably make something she'd enjoy. Uh, wrong! Apparently the treehouse is going to be big enough for sleepovers for her friends where "it has to be big enough to play Duck, Duck, Goose".

I think the damn treehouse is about to become one of a long line of lessons in DISAPPOINTMENT for Olivia. Hopefully, her mother has prepared her for this. I kid about the damn treehouse, but it's hard for me not to laugh when I think about what her vision is and what reality will be. Anyone reading this knows I'd fall on a hundred swords for my daughter, but I'll probably always be known for things I didn't do. She is, after all, a princess.
This poor tree has no idea what my daughter has in mind.>

Saturday, January 12, 2008

Mensa Matters

If I get another call from an Ivy League school about my daughter I'm going to scream! Olivia got her report card yesterday, and, once again, she has left a sea of 5-year olds drowning in her academic wake. My little girl whips other Kindergartners with half her brain tied behind her back!

Seriously, Olivia is doing great in school and it makes me one happy dad. I beat myself up a lot over the fact that her mom and I are divorced, but she honestly seems to be handling it about as good as I could hope. She has her moments, but so far school has not been a problem. I can only dream that one day she will matriculate at the University of Tennessee and eventually claw her way up the corporate ladder and work in a bike shop like her dad....

Friday, January 11, 2008

The Ride

Tuesday was my day off. I decided I'd go for a ride on the Silver Comet Trail - it's a former railroad track that has been paved. Ultimately, it will go all the way to Alabama. It's very well maintained and goes through some beautiful parts of Georgia.

Tuesday started cloudy when I left about 8:45 from the trail beginning in Smyrna. It started to clear a little about 20 miles in. I was feeling good, there was no traffic, and the scenery was much different since the leaves are off the trees. It wasn't until I went through this long, high tunnel that I realized I had never ridden out so far on the trail. I decided to keep riding. I got hungry around 35 miles and saw a sign indicating that Rockmart, GA was about 5 miles ahead. I figured I could stop there to get something to eat. I only had two water bottles and a couple of packets of 'Gu'.

I got to Rockmart and pretty much rode through it - it was smaller than I thought. I kept thinking I'd see a trailside store of some sort. I got to the other side of the town and pulled over to a park bench. I'd been on the bike for almost 2 1/2 hours. I originally only intended to ride that long!

I turned around, went off the trail and found a gas station. It was then that I realized i only had two bucks on me. I bought a huge candy bar and a pack of crackers, filled my bottles and headed back. Up to that point I had really been ejoying the ride - nice weather, lots of streams, ponds, wildlife that I wouldn't usually see.

People often ask me how I took so much time off the bike after racing seriously for a few years. It was easy....because I didn't LIKE riding bikes. I liked RACING bikes. Sure, I grew up pretty much attached to my bike, but it was a means to get from here to there and a source of fun as I jumped it off walls and tore through the woods. Riding a bike for the hell of it as an adult didn't offer a lot. I'm finally learning to enjoy it again.

So, I'm about 35 miles from my car, not exactly happy with my meal and I've seen all the shit since I just rode the same stretch of trail. The ride stops being fun. I trudge on for another hour and start to feel the effects of over 60 miles in the saddle. My knee is hurting a bit, my butt is not so comfortable and I'm craving something good to eat. The last 20 miles sucked. I got to my car, threw my bike on the roof and headed straight for the border - Taco Bell.

I wish I could bottle the feeling I had for the first two hours of that ride. Unfortunately, the ending is what I keep remembering....