Friday, September 07, 2012

Jogging track at Oxford

I was recently jokingly accused of affectation because I'm an unabashed East Coaster, complete with Sperry's and a string of pearls. (The irony is that I'm from Vermont, where people wear Teva sandals to one of the only nightclubs in town and shop at stores like this one.)

And then I wore my Oxford athletics sweatshirt:

"Oh, you took your pretension so far east you took it across the ocean?" ...(the teasing being slightly undermined by the sweatshirt draped over my friend's shoulders, sleeves tied)... "You ran track at Oxford?"

Not quite. Here's the backstory.

My relationship with track and field started when I was a seven-year-old running rec league at the same track I would later pound in high school. Unfortunately, I then forgot about track until a middle school friend told me I should join for fun.

So starting freshman year of high school, I spent my early spring afternoons at track preseason workouts. A few weeks of sore quads and hallway sprints later, after shoveling off most of the track and running on the slick snow in what I deemed a futile and dangerous attempt to melt it, we got outside. Dirt, gravel, red rubber, cold lungs, new leaves, cheap spikes, battered batons, bright locker rooms, even the scent of deodorant I used senior year — it all takes me back to those days. I was neither fast nor talented, but I loved the sport.

(My basketball career followed the same trajectory: rec league as a youngster, followed by a large gap and a high school career where I won spirit-of-the-sport-type awards but never really scored many points.)

But anyway, watching sports at Mason made me miss those casual high school years, so when I studied abroad and learned that all sports at Oxford are clubs, I eagerly looked into basketball (which, by definition, I should've been good at as an American) and athletics.

I did venture a bit beyond my two traditional sports: Most of these clubs have "taster sessions" to lure bright-eyed freshers into their sport, so my flatmate Claire and I went to a crew taster session just to say we'd rowed on the Thames (or the Isis) at Oxford. It went well until the final stretch, where I caught a crab, punching my oar into the novice in front of me. Claire, while not suffering any such embarrassments, decided her time would be better spent enjoying the other millions of things England has to offer. But I'm not quite as smart as she is. I went on to athletics.

The athletics taster session consists of jumping next to a measuring tape and sprinting back and forth in a tiny gym while the regulars applaud you and make you feel deceptively good about yourself. Real life starts one night later, with a workout of 4x200m, 4x200m, 8x150m and 8x150m. Total of about 1.75 miles, for those of you doing the math. Not too far. I showed up in my oversized neon t-shirt, quite pleased with my ensemble and still on a false high from the taster session. Pride goeth before a fall, folks.

Up to that point, my exercise consisted of a few two-miler jogs, with three solid years of post-high school lard layered on. You can imagine the outcome of that workout: my Spandex-clad backside chugging along on the darkening Iffley Road track, tracing Roger Bannister's four-minute-mile steps at a crawl. I later learned that my team included such notables as a Rhodes scholar who pole vaulted for Harvard. I was in way too deep.

But on the bright side, deep waters forced me to dig deep. I never really understood what that meant, until one solo workout in the dark when I realized that "digging deep" is code for "ignoring pain." Of course, the more I thought about it the more excited I got that I had finally figured it out, and that kept me going until I realized that my mental toughness lasts about fourteen seconds and it takes a lot longer than that to run 300 meters. But at least now I know.

And so I remain a proud Oxford University Athletics Club sweatshirt-wearer, even though my neighbors back home who went to Cambridge say that because I did not matriculate at Oxford I have not earned the right to shoe tabs (I'm still not sure what shoeing is, but tabs are Cambridge-ites and I shoed at least two of them at the Freshers Varsity meet). I will always think about digging deep in workouts, even if that just means timing my efforts so that I start working right when the Nike Training Club voice tells me to stay strong. And I will fondly, and with much humility, recall the time I spent jogging track at Oxford.   

Thursday, July 26, 2012

Bieber and faceplants

The company that owns The Palm Beach Post is consolidating the copy desks. That means that after less than two months of interning here, the desk moved from the newsroom to a new segregated space (I'm not joking: I am the only girl down here, and I am the only person that sits on the east side of the currently occupied banks of desks). I came back to work after the wedding to find my old desk bravely standing amid several demolished ones. A few people huddled at their surviving work spaces, cheap paneling and straggling wires trailing in the rubble. I gathered my few things, sobbing softly, and traipsed downstairs.

It's not all bad. Down here I have huge windows behind me (i.e. light without distraction), nine huge TVs in sight (surprisingly not a distraction), and a view of the intermittently passing trains (a mild distraction). The downside is that we are ramping up to editing the sports sections for four papers, but we are on the very first bit of that ramp, and for a few more days I have little to do.


When I find myself in this aimless situation I try to improve my mind by reading about sports. Unfortunately, that often brings me to Deadspin, a wonderful sinkhole of vulgar but entertaining stories (be warned, if you click any of the ensuing links) that vaguely relate to sports. Wednesday's catch was a feature about singing the national anthem at a minor league ball game. I saw the writer is also a GQ correspondent, and I clicked through to the magazine's site. A feature on teen pop star Justin Bieber stood out (why? I dunno). It was four pages long. (And, as several of the Post interns discussed, any mid-story clicking requires a higher level of reader dedication.) I accidentally clicked to the end, painstakingly clicked back to make sure I didn't miss a word, and proceeded to soak up details of a mediocre interview with the baby king of pop.

After I finished reading the article, my first thought was that I would have written it with either more snark or more philosophical reflection on the perils of fame.

Then I thought, WHAT IS SPORTS EDITING COMING TO? Bieber-critiquing? Really, Rebecca? I knew I was really in trouble when I went home making Bieber puns in my head (there are problems with that on many levels).

(Incidentally, with my acute aptitude for drawing parallels, I realized that Justin and I both have the attention span of a chihuahua on caffeine (much like my dopplegänger). If we were friends we would probably need a safety guard just to help us cross the street without chasing butterflies and getting hit by cars.)

My thoughts were punctuated by some heels-induced slapstick (ladies, take note: vanity is not always worth it). I took one step onto a tile floor in the new office space and felt my foot slide backward while the rest of my body obediently followed Newton's first law of motion. I landed completely flat, trampoline-artist style, with no casualties except for the innocent recycling bin I took down with me. If this had happened around my family or friends, I would be guaranteed an ab-workout-level laugh. Instead I politely answered polite inquiries as to any injuries and have politely laughed along to a few good jokes about it since.

I was told to make the most of my internship. Good thing I have a couple weeks left.

Monday, July 23, 2012

Marriage Pie

The weekend of Natalie and Thomas' wedding started early for me, so early that I was (a) very excited and (b) unprepared for any glitches. It was gushy and lovely and worth every minute. But it started with a trip to West Virginia instead of DC, so I knew right away that my summer theme — BE FLEXIBLE — was still in play. But displaced plans make for much better stories. 

Weather delays and cancellations on the uncharacteristically wimpy Eastern Seaboard meant that on Wednesday night I flew from Florida to Charleston, WV, arriving well after midnight. Much to the chagrin of some family members, the bride and groom drove five hours from their homes in Virginia (one way) to pick me up. This was not at all to my chagrin, however, because I got to spend stress-free time with two of my best friends, and it gave me an easy way to start my toast (like I told everyone I met while traveling, "This groom would do anything for his bride!"). 

On the drive to Charlottesville, we stopped at a McDonald's in the haunting hours of the morning, where Thomas was bright and upbeat as always (this is not sarcastic) despite me and Natalie dallying at the drive-through. The guy at the window told Thomas he was the best (most cheerful) customer they'd had all night, and unable to contain myself, I leaned forward and blurted out, "They're getting married!"

Well, this guy's night was already boosted, and news of pending matrimony made it even better. He leaned out the drive-through window to get a better look at the two of them and said, "Really?! Do you want some marriage pie?" 

And that, my friends, is how to get free pie AND cookies at McDonald's. (I did feel weird eating them, as I am not a part of the marriage, but I'm not one to turn down empty carbs.)


The pie proved useless, however, when the gas light flicked on 20 miles from the nearest gas station. We coasted down as many hills as we could, made an illegal u-turn, and slid into a deserted pit stop just in time. 


We fell asleep at Thomas' house around 5 a.m. I woke up at 10 a.m. and staggered upstairs, blearily greeted friends I hadn't seen in months, and tried not to fall over as I shook off the weirdest lack-of-sleep hangover I've ever felt. Thomas flipped on a vinyl (the soundtrack to Disney's Robin Hood) to set the mood as we munched our Eggos. Then more bridesmaids arrived and the ladies were off to a day full of packing up Nat's stuff, checking in to the hotel, getting decorations and programs and gifts ready, going to a bachelorette dinner, crashing a bachelor party, drinking really, really bad wine and sleeeeepingg. 

It was Toad's birthday too! Ribbit.

"Come on Becsy!"

We have the key to the church! It's official!

Directions: not our forte.


Chaps

Two more days :)

Friday we drove up to Ash Lawn to decorate for the reception. After a few hours of being mildly helpful, I volunteered to drive to the nearest Walmart and pick up a staple gun. Anna, the youngest bridesmaid and a sister of the groom, quickly volunteered to join me. Mind you, I'm an average driver, I didn't know the local speed limits, we were on the side of a hill (mountain?) in the middle of Virginia, and we were behind schedule. Fortunately Anna is used to her sister's driving, and except for the time I braked while she was sipping lemonade, we got along just fine. 
 
Playing with sheep at Ash Lawn

Name-carding (sorry for verbizing, Charlyne)

Fake-bouqueting

Real-bouqueting

Side story: Everyone made it to the rehearsal in time, where I realized I didn't have to worry how I looked during the wedding because my place in the line up was right in front of the precocious flower girl and dapper ring bearer (who refused to dance together at the reception, despite many attempts at bribery).  

Diana, Anna and Lauren at the rehearsal

After the rehearsal dinner a few of the boys stopped by the hotel and we got a sneak preview of the first dance. Thomas' twin and another groomsman sang and played Jon Foreman's In My Arms — perhaps the most beautiful first dance song I've ever heard. 

Then the girls settled down by playing the box game: pick up an empty cereal box with your mouth without touching the floor. Once everybody does that, cut an inch off the box and try again. It's a bit like doing the limbo, and it brings out a strategic-athletic side you probably didn't even know you had.


Then the day itself came. Aside from some last-minute seamstressing (there are saints among us), preparation went beautifully. At one point we had a four-person train of girls doing or getting their hair and make-up done (all those years of girls' nights paid off with useful skills). 

Rapunzel hair

Sisters!


The wedding itself went smoothly I only tripped once walking down the aisle (success!), and I think an usher was the only person to notice. Natalie managed not to cry (we thought it would be a waterworks wedding for all involved), and both the rings were present and accounted for (which was not true two days earlier, according to every ringbearer's worst fear).

When we got to Ash Lawn to take pictures, I desperately wanted to play with the calves in the field. But Stephanie insisted the mothers would trample me and, to my shame as a Vermonter, I didn't have the data to prove her wrong (any input from any farmers reading this?). So I stayed on the people side of the fence, but of course when a big black Bessie came to violently rip branches off a tree by the fence, I fed her some leaves (Stephanie: "SHE'S GOING TO BITE YOU!" Me: "COWS ARE HERBIVORES!").  

Flashback to sophomore year...missing Ashers!


The whole bovine business was merry and fine until the wedding party, lined up by the fence, was disrupted by a shrill scream from Stephanie's end of the line. Dear Bessie was snuffling her way over to us, determined to both be in the photos and ask me for more leaves. She ended up just licking my elbow. Who knew cows drooled so much? Thankfully one of the debonair groomsmen offered his handkerchief (chivalry is alive!) and we moved on to dinner. 

From there it was a pretty typical wedding/dance party. Hope you're having fun in the Rockies, Nat and Thomas! Like I said in the toast, the first time Thomas told me he had coffee with Natalie, I didn't know the freshman girl rule of assuming a marriage was pending...but it's hard to go wrong with two blond-haired, blue-eyed, guitar-picking, history-majoring, classics-reading, hammock-using, Frisbee-playing, Jesus-loving people. I should've known marriage pie was in the works all along.

Monday, July 09, 2012

I have got to stop tweeting before bed.

Bookending sleep with social media has its downsides. Or upsides, depending on your perspective. Late last night Carmelo Anthony tweeted a photo of five of the world's best basketball players, kicking back at a Johnny Rockets. Apparently I fell asleep with that image percolating in my labyrinthine gray matter.

The court is smaller than normal — which is typical in Europe, I'm informed — and I trip out of bounds at least once. I canNOT make a layup. The wood floor is the color of Grade B maple syrup.

It must be a scrimmage since there's no other team. I'm the only girl, and I'm sorely underqualified. But for whatever reason, the powers that be decided to put me on Team USA. Most of the guys are supportive, even though they're not thrilled a 5'8'' female will be subbing in for LeBron in London (OK, let's be real: I know I'll be a benchwarmer). The only one who's being a jerk is Djokovic. I still can't figure out why he's on the team. Don't you play tennis? Because in this situation, clearly he's the one who's out of place.

Waking up is always a bit of a reality shock.

Saturday, June 23, 2012

See you in 2014, Mom and Dad...

"A stint in India will beat the restlessness out of any living creature." 
Life of Pi

Clearly I haven't had my stint in India yet, because I spend my free time at work either plotting absurd cross-country trips, re-planning my life (God laughs, then gets serious with me), or choking down yet another sports column (which can sometimes be rewarding, even amidst the glut of NBA coverage...by the way, thanks for winning, LeBron. I'm happy both for you and for normal deadlines at the paper again). 

But here's the result of my restlessness. Just think:
  1. This particular dream trip is a bargain at 260 hours. If you think it's not worth it, consider that I would be traveling north anyway to get home from Florida.
  2. I'll be able to visit all the people I thought I'd never see again. So I'll cry leaving them again, which is both cathartic for me and a great chance for you to invest in facial tissue stock.
  3. If anyone is free for the Anchorage-to-Yellowstone stretch, I'm willing to move my pillow for you. Books-on-tape recommendations would also be welcome.   


View Larger Map

I should probably go to India before I start planning my road trips for the rest of the continents...

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Florida notebook

Well, I made it to Florida, and now I have a phobia of long car trips alone. The combination of a very long, flat I-95 and a passenger seat occupied by a pillow meant I spent far too much time thinking and listened to one too many overplayed radio singles. But I'm here, and sweating slightly less than I was two weeks ago! (The air conditioner in the car has started clicking at me, though...hopefully that doesn't mean it's about to give up on its endless chore...)

1. I apologize for the lack of photos. I will try to remedy that soon.

2. One highlight so far was seeing a high school friend. He's finishing up his internship in Miami, so I got to go see him before he takes off. He took me to South Beach (which I had only heard of in reference to the diet) and later we went to a restaurant to watch the Heat-Celtics Game 7. We could possibly have gotten tickets, but it is probably for the best that we didn't because he's a Boston guy. Sad ending.

3. Another highlight was finding a church right away and eventually meeting some fellow twenty-somethings. The second week I was there was "Change Sunday," so instead of a sermon there were two testimonies. The first guy is a street-turned-Christian rapper, and the second is married to a girl with a voice to rival Martina McBride's. Possibly the most musically diverse and entertaining church service I've ever been to.

4. This is a paltry list compared to what I've actually heard in the newsroom, but it gives a small flavor to the atmosphere:
"Yes! Celtics are already winning!" (Boston up 2-0)
"I have young Rebecca working on that..." (see Harriet Flynn, I'm not as old as you think)

5. Since getting an iPhone (thanks Mom and Dad! I knew there was a reason I stuck it out to graduate), I've become addicted to social media. I press snooze and then scroll through Instagram and Twitter before I roll over in the morning. I may need intervention.

6. The internship is fine. I have more downtime than I prefer, but I also have much to learn so it makes sense that I need to earn trust. I'm getting good at trimming stories down to the essential information (I read Hemingway when I got here for inspiration). The worst part, though, is working nights (as most copy editors do), and therefore having the opposite social schedule of the rest of the world.

7. However, all this downtime at work and home (plus the iPhone) means I'm actually reading. Here are a few tidbits that I could either relate to or that made me think:


I was within and without, simultaneously enchanted and repelled by the inexhaustible variety of life.

I began to like New York, the racy, adventurous feel of it at night and the satisfaction that the constant flicker of men and women and machines gives to the restless eye.

Jay Rosen on "The View from Nowhere" and journalistic objectivity, or why I am more likely to be a media ethicist than a journalist

It says that human beings are, in fact, capable of stepping back from their position to gain an enlarged understanding, which includes the more limited view they had before the step back. Think of the cinema: when the camera pulls back to reveal where a character had been standing and shows us a fuller tableau. To Nagel, objectivity is that kind of motion. We try to “transcend our particular viewpoint and develop an expanded consciousness that takes in the world more fully.”

But there are limits to this motion. We can’t transcend all our starting points. No matter how far it pulls back the camera is still occupying a position. We can’t actually take the “view from nowhere,” but this doesn’t mean that objectivity is a lie or an illusion. Our ability to step back and the fact that there are limits to it– both are real. And realism demands that we acknowledge both. 

8. In addition to my media obsession, I'm also obsessed with writing things down. Hence this blog post (I'm wearing out my journal). Is this healthy? I may need a hobby. Beach basket weaving, here I come.

Sunday, May 27, 2012

What happens in Nebraska

You may think that not all that much goes on in that fly over state (miles and miles of back roads and highwaysJason Aldean is right). And you're right. But for 10 days there were six sports statisticians (the boys) and two average sports enjoyers (the girls) and Charlyne, crammed around a cozy ring of tables in a big room, learning not to verbize and not to allow sentences that are, quite simply, Dumb.

So here's a brief record of what we did when we weren't having guest lectures from everyone from Penn State's Malcolm Moran to The Hartford Courant's Scott Powers (that sentence, I now know, includes a false range). For all you who weren't there, feel free to skip to the end of the post. But what I'm about to transcribe made me laugh probably more than I had all semester, so without further ado, here are a few Dow Jones News Fund sports copy editing training highlights:

  • Going to a baseball game (UNL v. Wichita State) the first night we were all in Lincoln. Yes, UNL got creamed, but it was an all-American experience, complete with a little country music. 
  • Adventuring. Thanks to the group's natural curiosity (endemic among journalists) and our decadently long lunch "hour," we made it to:
    • The UNL library
    • The Nebraska History Museum
    • A local ice cream place
    • The Capitol building ("Ernie Chambershe's a legend around here!") 
    • An art gallery ("Was that the ORIGINAL 'Migrant Mother'?")
    • Visited Lloyd the mammoth statue
    • Memorial Stadium (football and Heisman shrine)
    • Yia Yia's and Lazlo's and Runza (I'm impressed by the local usage of end-of-the-alphabet letters) 
    • The old train station (with a lovely old caboose, similar to the one my family vacationed in once...but that is another story altogether...)
    • Nebraska with the boys
      Maine with the Dells
  • Finishing an ENTIRE round of "Cheers, Governor!" You go around in a circle counting up to 21, but each time you make it to 21 you replace a number with something else. If you mess up, it's back to uno. Here's our brilliant rendition:
      1. (Knock on wood)
      2. "Dos"
      3. "Five"
      4. "Four" (stand up)
      5. "Three"
      6. A preposition
      7. "Fourteen"
      8. (Flex)
      9. "God Bless America" or "Oh say can you see?" (sung)
      10. Roar
      11. "Chopsticks!"
      12. "Dos Equis"
      13. "Friday the Thirteen"
      14. "Seven"
      15. Somebody's name
      16. (Change the Pandora song)
      17. (Punch someone)
      18. "Would you like a pretzel?
      19. (Take a chocolate-covered pretzel)
      20. (Snap fingers)
      21. "Twenty-fun" CHEERS, GOV'NOR!
  • Playing trivia at Charlyne and Denny's home. (Team Middle Earth won, thanks to the brilliance of Mike and Matt. My contributions were limited to the definitions of picador, phrenology and lepidopterist.)
  • Giving roommate gifts to our new-found friends.
  • Listening to Jackie's answer to a quiz question. Her answer went something like this: "Pistol Pete was a 1920s baseball catcher who got his nickname by showing up for his first game with a loaded pistol. It was his first and last appearance in a major league game. It was also his last appearance in public. His current whereabouts are unknown." 
  • Listening to music everywhere we walked, thanks to Matt's iPhone in his hood. ("You're the modern-day kid with a boombox on his shoulder!")
  • Walking past the Famous Lincoln Arby's! 
  • Making a mirage ("Do you mean collage, Mike?" "No, I said mirage and I'm sticking with it.")

I was so blessed to meet each of the interns and faculty in the training programI wish you all the best, and I look forward to keeping in touch with each of you!

Now I'm home for a far-too-short seven days before actually starting my internship in Florida. I'm loving being around my family and church, soaking up as much of their focus and love as I can. Life is full of super-short chapters right now! But it's all exciting. I'll leave you with a few family photo shoot gems:

Elisabeth, Leah, Hannah, me, Jacob



We take ourselves entirely seriously.

I'll miss you!

Friday, May 18, 2012

And hello, Nebraska!

Since my last post I returned to the U.S., re-acclimated to American accents, made my first 10-hour solo drive (Colchester to Fairfax) and graduated from college (well, that technically happens tomorrow). Now I'm in Nebraska, missing Vermont but having fun training for my summer sports editing internship at the Palm Beach Post.

I got to Lincoln on Monday after tearfully leaving all my friends at Mason (long-term goodbyes are apparently the theme of my life this past year). The rest of the interns trickled into the tiny airport and onto UNL's campus, where we were installed in dorms that are nicer than any apartment I'll live in in the next five years (and probably ever, if I continue to pursue journalism). We had dinner out to get to know each other (my roommate, Jackie, just got back from a semester in Morocco, where she wrote this amazing story!) and then, on Tuesday, we dived into eight-hour training days.

We started the week with intensive technical drills with UNL's Charlyne Berens. Yesterday we heard from Nancy Stockdale of the Des Moines Register and today we learned from Malcolm Moran of Penn State University. Tonight I ran and now I'm sitting out on my balcony listening to Kenny Chesney and enjoying a sunny, 8 p.m. Lincoln breezeit doesn't get a whole lot better than this! I'm just sad I have to say goodbye again to people so soon.

For a more in-depth look at what we're learning, check out Matt Walks' blog

Selleck Dining Hall
    Jackie, Kevin, Kyle, Brandon, Matt, Mike and Kevin
    Exploring; that's the state capitol in the background
    Some striking weeds (for you, Matt)
    We modern journalists understand exactly how you feel
     A real-life corn husker
    Leaving our mark at the Nebraska History Museum


    The girls!