Monday, November 30, 2009

The brass pole edition



Two boyhood dreams came true this fall. One was a disappointment. The other was well worth the wait. There’s a third, becoming a writer, that’s mostly just a pain in the butt when it prods you to look for connections and patterns when you should just tell people about something that stands perfectly well on its own.

So I won’t say much about learning to scuba dive after all, other than it costs a whole lot and encourages holding still, the first of which raises the necessary fun threshold to near-impossible levels while the other (for me) lowers the fun potential about as much.

Then there’s the other dream. I’d all but forgotten it. I got to slide down a fire pole this weekend. Admit it, if you were any kind of boy at all, and most kinds of girl, you wanted to slide down a fire pole. I mentioned as much a couple weeks ago, when I spoke at the Lansing Tribute to Veterans. One of the stops on my spring USO trip was an Air Force fire station at Ramstein AFB in Germany, where I got to admire their fire pole and even watch it in use – there was a call for a fuel spill while the other seven cartoonists and I were taking the tour – and even take my favorite photograph, one that shows how fast firemen move and how slow an old-style digital camera’s delay (and a middle-age cartoonist's reaction time) can be.


But I didn’t get to slide down the pole.

Shortly after that speech, a friend and neighbor called to thank me and mention that, gosh, his son is a lieutenant with a nearby fire department and that maybe I might want to be available when he rotated to a shift command at one of the area’s only two-story fire stations, if I could catch his drift. Saturday it came together, on a slow holiday weekend no less, and Patty and I got to tour the station, crawl all over a brand-new million-dollar truck and, yes, slide down the pole as many times as we wanted.

I’d say it was everything I expected as a boy, but I have no realistic memory of what I expected as a boy. I probably expected it would make me feel special, would give me a little bit of a thrill, would have me making multiple repeat trips back up the stairs, and would be just plain fun. Check. I’m sure I couldn’t expect anything like my future wife’s Facebook page or my own blog and the sort of lewd, socially marginal comments about brass poles that the photos would invite.


But if I could, I’d have looked forward to that, too.

Wednesday, November 25, 2009

Multilogue

I’ve always been better at dialogues than monologues (and even better at multilogues, if that were a word, which it’s not), which may be one reason my book is a whopping one-third footnotes. (No joke: Velo Press actually had to change the shape of the book to accommodate my digressions. It’s an inch taller than originally planned. We’ll make you skip around on the page, but we didn’t want you having to skip from page to page.) So today, let’s catch up on some comments.

Getting right to the footnotes, in an earlier post I asserted that if my digression-laden writing style invited comparisons between me and David Foster Wallace, those comparisons ended short of the clinical-depression part – or the genius part. Anonymous helpfully adds, “or the being-dead part.” To which I can only add: So far! I probably can’t avoid that part any better than I avoided the being-born part, but I fully aim to continue avoiding the depression part while I’m between the two poles. The genius part, well, I think we’ve established that’s just as far out of reach. Anonymous, by the way, is one of my smarter readers, and I’m happy for him that they finally found his fingers and teeth. I hate when I lose those.

Frazz


Thomas asks: “I read Sunday's comic about Caulfield visiting the hardware store. I'd like to know if you know a store that actually works in the manual way.” I loved doing that strip, because yes, it’s from my own life. There was a store near my house in Lansing called Dexter Hardware that did business the old-fashioned way, right down to the dust and cobwebs on whatever part of the cash register it is where the math takes place. It was a tiny place, but they never, not once, failed to have what I needed. And they sold me exactly the amount of stuff I did need and then showed me how to use it. If I needed one screw, they sold me one screw, not a shoeboxful. As a result, I would sometimes find myself there having planned on a credit-card purchase but with a bill that wasn’t worth the fees – and me without cash. They always sent me home with my purchase and my word that I’d pay for it the next time I stopped in. That store is empty now. I think it was simply a retirement issue, not competition from the megastores, but I still make a face at the giant warehouse outfits when I drive past, just in case.

Jim Smith thanks me for my work with the USO and for sharing the story about the tough-as-nails corpsman. And then Jim adds that it’s humbling to be thanked, that it was his honor to serve. It sounds preposterous at first, but I’m getting smarter as I get older. I’m still the humbled one – I am not a veteran – but as time goes on, it feels less like a shirked responsibility and more like a missed opportunity. Still, I identify a little too much with a line in the title song of Lyle Lovett’s new album, “Natural Forces:”
And now I sit here safe at home
With a cold Coors Light and the TV on
All the sacrifice and the death and war
Lord I pray that I’m worth fighting for
Paul twists things around the same way Jim did, thanking me when I ought to be thanking him, this time for the book-signing event at Schuler Books. Paul knows a thing or two about art and writing, so his compliments mean a lot. He tells me he shot some video of me speaking and posted it on YouTube, where either I can’t find it or I just got distracted by the Simon’s Cat videos. Like I’m doing now. Man, those are good.

La Professora echoes my gushing over the newly recognized Carnegie Professor of the Year, noting that he enjoyed the same strip Brian cited, cut it out and taped it to his framed strip about Machiavelli. This is why I love my job. If a cubicle wall or refrigerator door is like the Louvre for cartoonists, then professors’ doors and walls are like having your art hanging in the Louvre curator’s living room. Through the anonymity of the Internet and/or my incompetence at working it, I don’t know exactly who La Professora is, only that he is indeed a professor and that he posts some of his assignments online – and that I think I’d love taking his classes. Wouldn’t be easy. But I tend to screw up the easy stuff anyway.

Amanda posted a review of Trizophrenia on her blog, Kick Asphalt, and I still have goosebumps. Wow, was that nice. I’m a happy guy. And a big fan. Now more so of each.

And Patty reminds me that while we inevitably disagree on a few things, we’re in lockstep with our impression of The Corrections: “you're not alone. Your wife also thinks the Franzen novel sucked." Whew. I’m glad Amanda reviewed "Trizophrenia" and Jonathan Franzen didn't.

Have a great Thanksgiving. I believe I’ll take Friday off … back at you Monday.

Monday, November 23, 2009

The early leftovers edition

This weekend, we'll be enjoying Thanksgiving leftovers. I say: Why wait? I'm still enjoying leftovers from last Thursday, and I'm happy to share them with you now.

The aperitif:

I mightily appreciated all the comments about last week's dietary triumph and Trizophrenia book-release party. You'd think it couldn't get any better than that, although, wait a couple paragraphs. But Mollie gets special recognition for continuing the food theme (while being less gratuitous than I was when initiating it) with her "… you're like Sara Lee; nobody doesn't like Jef Mallett." Well done, Mollie. You, uh, take the cake.

The main course:
Frazz
If there's anything more gratifying than having a night like I had at Thursday's book signing, it's knowing that a friend is having an even better night. It's hard to picture, but I think Brian Coppola pulled it off. And if there's anything better yet, it's knowing that you got to play a part in both.

Brian teaches organic chemistry at the University of Michigan. He does this very well, so well that the Carnegie Foundation named him Professor of the Year in the Doctoral and Research Universities division. Organic chemistry has a not entirely unearned reputation as the ultimate inflexible, unfun, black-and-white, endure-or-die crucible. Brian serves it spiked with imagination, wonder, thoughtfulness and even enjoyment. At the same time, he doesn't pander to his students. It's harder his way; it hurts. It needs to; there are no breakthroughs without suffering. Brian has long been adept at walking that line between inviting wonder and enforcing rigor - the Carnegie Foundation is hardly the first institution to recognize him for such - but his field is about explaining phenomena as much as creating it, and that part he struggled with. He found his solution - though I would claim catalyst at the very best - in a certain comic strip. He told me this directly, and he told the world, essentially, in his acceptance speech Thursday. You need to read it, and you can here. Assuming his lectures are anything like his remarks, I hope the awards committee for his division met on a nice day. Because I have to believe this year's decision was easy enough to adjourn early.

Bravo, Brian. I'm humbled.

Dessert

Back at the Trizophrenia party at Schuler Books, while Chef Marc was treating my readers like royalty, he was treating my wife Patty like a goddess. He had brought a special and memorable treat he'd introduced her to when he was pastry chef at a Birmingham, Mich. restaurant called Toast: an impossibly rich version of the Hostess Ding Dong. Marc told us how rich, and I'm going to tell you. But I'm going to take a page out of Brian Coppola's notebook and use real-world, tangible data that's far more vivid than mere numbers:

Yesterday I went for a 12-mile run. Had I fueled solely by a single one of Marc's gourmet Ding Dongs, I'd have finished that run with three and a half miles worth of calories still in the tank.

That's rich. But no richer than my week. Which was, unlike the Ding Dong, cholesterol-free. Good thing, or I'd be back at square one on that game board.

Friday, November 20, 2009

More Songs About Book-Signings and Food



So let’s review this Very Good Day in 2-part, chronological order.

Part 1: The cholesterol.

The blood was drawn, the results were in, the time was up. I went into my doctor’s office yesterday morning to review my lipid profile, and then I went home. Straight home. No stopping at the pharmacy to begin a lifetime sentence of expensive drugs that would predispose me to certain kinds of tissue damage -- or arguments about the power of drugs vs. the power of an elevated level of activity and fitness that's difficult to maintain when you can pull or tear a muscle doing what you used to call warming up.

I had dropped my total cholesterol by almost a quarter, from 239 to 184. Triglycerides and risk ratios dropped as well. Every single category is now well within the safe range. My doctor was astonished: “I’ve never seen anything like this before.”

Even better is that I did it entirely by changing my diet. (Well, almost entirely. Fully entirely if you consider psyllium, i.e. Metamucil, a food group.) Such an approach had what you'd call side effects if they were less desirable. My weight dropped without my muscle mass dropping, which means my body-fat percentage went down. And I feel much better in general, and I run and bike faster (I would probably swim a little worse, with the lost buoyancy, if not for the swim coach and program that coincided almost exactly with the new diet). All this without any fancy program, or diet pill, or, really, even professional advice. I just quit eating some foods that were largely unhealthy and nearly completely optional. I also reduced my overall intake, which is logically easy when you consider that most of the foods I quit cold-turkey are foods that fall under the category of "convenient." And when the diet began just after Ironman Louisville.

But easy doesn't necessarily mean pleasant, and the fact is there are times when I miss my cheese, my butter, my Oreos (not that I ever buttered my Oreos, but only because it didn't occur to me until just now). So in a weird way, I'm almost grateful for the cholesterol diagnosis. Clearly, I had weight to lose but didn't know it. Clearly, I could feel better but didn't know it. Clearly, I could run faster but didn't believe it. Now I know. But knowing it and maintaining the willpower are two different things sometimes. It's easy to think that an El Azteco pig-out this evening can be corrected in time for a race six months from now. But now it's also easy to believe that that same, isolated meal will set off some kind of alarm at the pharmacy that I've violated my cholesterol probation and I'll be shackled to Crestor without a trial. That's equally illogical, but it might just be the external motivation I need when the internal motivation wavers.

Part 2: The book-release party

Mega thanks to everyone who came out to the Trizophrenia book-release party and signing at Schuler Books. You guys took care of the party while I signed and signed. I don’t know exact numbers, but I know standing room only when I see it, and I have to say I love how it looks. The store’s event coordinator told Patty it was a bigger crowd than a recent book-signing with my hero Elmore Leonard, and bigger than the crowd for the event going on simultaneously at their partner store across town with best-selling (and also awesome) writer Anthony Horowitz. The store closed at 9:30, but I didn’t get the last book signed until after 11:00. Incredible. Touching, really.

The odd thing is, among all the wonderful emotions, I felt guilty. A lot of friends – proving what good friends they are – interrupted their lives and traveled, quite a ways in a lot of cases, to the party. And I got to spend very little, and in a lot of cases, no time with them. But that’s because they know they can find me any time and I’ll happily sign their books without making them stand in a slow-moving line that snakes back past Science Fiction. And even better, they still stuck around after they bailed out of the line. Part of that was because Marc Barringer, my friend and fellow racer who also happens to be a preternaturally talented chef, had catered the event and given everyone a spread worth sitting through anything. And part of it was because, however it happened, I’ve got really cool friends, and they seemed to enjoy talking to each other every bit as much as talking to me. Which is perfect. The best parties are the ones where the host could disappear and no one would know. Sort of like I did.

That was a nice day. In two parts. If we’ve learned anything from either, it’s not to underestimate the power of food.

Wednesday, November 18, 2009

Forgetfulness is bliss

Fifteen years ago (!), there was a line in a movie about life being “like a box of chocolates.” Because you never know what you’re gonna get.”

And how. Who knew that Forrest Gump was gonna get that year’s Oscar for Best Picture over Pulp Fiction and, for God’s sake, The Shawshank Redemption? That Tom Hanks was gonna get Best Actor in the title role over John Travolta and Morgan Freeman in those other two films, and Paul Newman in Nobody’s Fool? That Tom Hanks would not win Most Hamfisted Mentally Handicapped Person’s Accent Since The Guy Who Does The Menard’s Commercials? (And the fact that such an award, and probably Menard’s itself, didn’t exist then is no excuse.) Or that Forrest Gump won Best Adapted Screenplay over the aforementioned Nobody’s Fool, an adaptation of what is easily one of the truly great American novels?

For that matter, somebody didn’t know what they had in their hands when they didn’t give Richard Russo the Pulitzer Prize for Nobody’s Fool after he wrote it in 1993, though to their credit they gave it to him in 2003 for Empire Falls, which is still a giant of a book but certainly no Nobody’s Fool.

But Forrest Gump did give us one of the most over-used painfully obvious aphorisms since “candy is dandy but liquor is quicker.” As with a lot of theorems, the real truth is in the axioms. Here’s mine:

“You never know what you’re gonna forget.”

Not that forgetting is a bad thing. An entire cheap-liquor industry is based on the desire. This morning, I managed to achieve blissful forgetfulness without a single drop of George Dickel; just travel, unsympathetic deadlines and sleep deprivation (cue that Dorothy Parker line back up). I stumbled into swim practice having, at some point since Monday, become newly and completely unaware we were scheduled for a lactate-threshold workout. The details are unimportant; it’s just as unpleasant as it sounds. A lactate-threshold set is about as pleasant as, even if a good deal shorter than, Jonathan Franzen’s The Corrections, which I’m happy to say was hip-checked off the Pulitzer podium by Empire Falls, so at least that turns out okay. (note: I seem to be alone in my distaste for Franzen's masterpiece.)

Anyway, I’m glad I didn’t have to spend my drive to the pool worrying about a lactate-threshold workout.
Sometimes ignorance really is bliss. No wonder I’m such a happy guy.

Don’t forget tomorrow evening’s Trizophrenia book-release party at Schuler Books and Music in Lansing. I know I won’t. Not before, and not after.


Angels in the cornfield

Monday’s entry, “The Good, the Bad and the Sticky,” generated a lot of interest within the comments section, and via my e-mail, and scattered throughout most of my conscious moments since. Rick is doing well – let’s get that said right away.

A few people close to Rick have been accusing Jim and me of being, to use their words, angels. Rick’s wife, Jeanie, serves up in her blog, The Marmalade Gypsy, an argument so well written that I’d be half inclined to believe it if I didn’t know myself better. But I have to admit there are similarities. She posts photos of stone statues of angels, and then a couple photos of me, and we have pretty close to the same amount of hair.

Seriously, it’s all very much appreciated, and if I’m any kind of an angel, I’m just one of however many it is that were dancing around on that particular pinhead (which, between professional rescue personnel and good Samaritans, was a lot, bringing us closer to finally answering that old puzzle). I feel overwhelmed by Rick’s loved ones’ kindness. Which gives you a little insight into Rick’s desire to keep breathing during those nasty initial moments.

Monday, November 16, 2009

The good, the bad and the sticky

Jim and Rick and I were flying along on our bikes, the wind at our backs, the road straight and flat and empty, wide open before us like some kind of Irish cyclist's blessing. We were making the most of one of those irrationally nice November days you know could be your last good ride of the year when Rick glanced off a chunk of dried horseshit, lost his handlebars, lost his balance and sealed the deal.

It was bad. Jim and I both knew it before we could turn and see it. Too much silence after the impact. Rick was a rag doll. The first sounds were small comfort: gurgling, a serious fight to breathe through a compromised airway. Rick would finish his ride in an ambulance and his weekend in neurological ICU, and we'd honestly be relieved he made it there.

Rick is a very good cyclist. All three of us were. Nobody screwed up. It was bad luck, that's all. But it wasn't all bad luck. Help arrived practically as soon as I called, a swiftness as freakish as it was fortuitous. We were a quarter mile from the corner of nothing and nowhere. I'd learn later, while picking up Rick's bike at the township hall and fire station, that the rescue crew and ambulance had been on a training exercise only a couple such intersections away.

When I finally looked at my own bike, I noticed that one of the three bottles I'd had mounted on it was missing. Huh. I wasn't the one who crashed; there's no reason I should have lost a bottle. Except … of course. We had a lot of generous and competent help from passersby even before the ambulance arrived. There was a lot of blood. No doubt someone had taken a bottle from its cage to flush out some of Rick's wounds. There was an exactly 33.3 percent chance they'd grab the bottle filled with water instead of a sticky, mildly acidic sports drink. Rag doll Rick got lucky again.

The story ends well. No broken bones. No brain injury. No deep regrets to look back on, and a few good habits reinforced.

I would never ride without a helmet. I'm not an idiot. But I am dumb enough that I used to carry my cell phone grudgingly, graduating only to inconsistently; I'll now carry it religiously and gladly. I could be prone in the past to forget to carry identification; much less so now.

Replacing all my opaque bottles with clear ones might be overkill. But I won't say it didn't cross my mind.

Friday, November 13, 2009

The heads-up edition

Frazz

Today's Frazz isn't much of a lead-in to today's topic, but I'm going to force it anyway. It's about marathons and walking funny. And maybe about what you can see and what you can infer, or at least a chance to talk about how drawing cartoons is even more fun when you make it harder than it needs to be. Drawing Frazz trying to dig his britches out of his nethers: Funny. Drawing it convincingly from only the shoulders up, if you do it right: Funnier. What you don't see is what you get. It's like the Blair Witch Project, only with chafing.

Life has been a marathon for me for the past few years, indeed. Although, with a few exceptions, it's been a marathon of the metaphorical variety, so I don't walk funny. But like Frazz up there in today's comic, I'm guessing you don't have to see everything to get it. That old like about a duck paddling furiously below the surface while looking calm and still above the waterline isn't me. No mystery man here. Look at the smallest segment of my life and you've got the whole picture. What you won't see is me complaining. Well, not legitimately or convincingly. Most of the stress is the kind of stress I spent a lot of years wishing for. Two noteworthy examples are coming up this week:

Tuesday (Nov. 17), I'll return to the Bob and Tom Show, a syndicated morning radio show -- no, make that THE syndicated morning radio show -- famous for its boob jokes but known for its underlying intelligence, though you won't get any of them to admit it. Check local listings; the show runs 6 a.m. to 10, though guests don't typically come on until 7. I suspect they'll keep us on as long as we're interesting, which, the three previous times I've been in the studio, has been for the duration. Now, I said "we." I'll be on the show with good friend and superior cartoonist Dave Coverly, of Speed Bump fame. Dave and I both illustrated CD covers for The Show this fall. He designed their commercially available release, "Dead Air," while I did the one that goes to overseas troops via the USO, titled "Radio Waves" (apparently still not released so you can look at the cover I did for last year's "Welcome to the USA").I think this means when we stop for gas on the way down, Dave buys the coffee.

Two days later and a few hours closer to home is the book-release party for Trizophrenia! That's Thursday the 19th, at Schuler Books and Music in Lansing at 7 p.m. Come on out -- this is going to be fun. And not because of me, but because, whatever talents I may or may not have in whatever amounts, my favorite one is my ability to somehow attract the smartest, most interesting friends this side of the Round Table at the Algonquin and that side of the Ironman World Championships. One of those friends put out every bit as good an invitation as I can, plus her blog, Kick Asphalt, is well worth checking out, so here you go. In addition to all those good people and interesting books, we're looking as having some great food there as well. Watch what I eat and see if you can guess how my cholesterol-report doctor's appointment went that morning.

Speaking of that cholesterol, reader la Professora tips me off that "My father had to have annual physicals for his pilot's license. For a month before, he'd take a kelp extract to keep his cholesterol numbers down to the FAA approved levels." Hey, I'm a lapsed pilot; maybe I should try it if I bomb this blood test and can beg m way into another one. Much appreciated, La Professora.

And David asks what kind of secret diet I'm on that has me dropping 10 pounds after registering a low body-fat number at Ironman Louisville. The open secret is that I just quit eating crap. No junk food. No cheese. Easy on the dairy and meat. When you start out with bad habits, it's easy to improve, and my habits were worse than I thought. The super-secret secret is that I wouldn't be surprised if I registered a falsely low reading in Louisville anyway. They weighed you at sign-in so they'd have a baseline if you showed up in the medical tent dehydrated. They measured your body fat because, I suspect, the big sponsor who made the scales makes a model that measures body fat. And it does so buy running an electric current through you, electricity running one speed through fat and another through muscle and bone and, in the case of some of those guys, steel. It goes from foot to foot and takes, as electricity is wont to do, the shortest path, up one leg and down the other. And my legs are the leanest parts I've got. (See "long torso," in the above comic strip.) So who knows? (And, now that I review all that, who cares?) No, the big thing is, I just quit eating junk. Sure wish it had been something else sometimes ...

Wednesday, November 11, 2009

The 6 percent solution

Frazz

Now we’re coming up on crunch time. No, I don’t have a big race coming up. It’s something bigger. I have a blood test.

Stop. Wait. There are blood tests for some pretty dire and scary things out there, and this isn’t one of those. But it’s big enough.

Back in August, I had my annual physical (for the second time since I turned 40; no one ever said cartoonists and writers were too good at math). I scheduled it for a week before Ironman Louisville, thinking I was smart. I mean, you don’t want to embarrass yourself at your physical. (Actually, it was profoundly stupid, since the last thing you want is to get sick just before the big race, and in terms of germ habitat, doctor’s office lobbies rank third, behind only kindergartens and Howard Hughes’ imagination.)

Anyway, I was healthy enough except for one thing: I was 6 percent body fat, and apparently all of it was in my bloodstream. My cholesterol levels had reached a crisis point. It was time to go on statins, cholesterol drugs. Now, make no mistake, I’m happy we have drugs. I just don’t want to use them. Especially drugs that list muscle weakness among their side effects. I’m still using mine. So I cut a deal with my doctor to give me three months to make whatever tweaks remained available to make with my diet.

Surprise! Upon closer inspection, it turns out I’d been eating a lot worse than I thought. I had visions of going to a dietician for some highly expert and expensive modifications, but the difference between what I’d been doing and the basic Michael Pollan mantra (1. Eat food; 2. Not too much; 3. Mostly plants) was good for a seismic enough shift on its own.

What I can see so far is good. I’ve lost 8 or 10 pounds from my Ironman weight. I go faster easier without that extra weight. (Der.) And I feel terrific. And while I’d much rather look better, go faster and feel terrific without giving up cheese, freezing in the pool and having to go shopping for smaller pants, it all has to be taken as good news. But that’s all relatively superficial stuff. The linchpin of the whole thing is about to come down. Blood draw Friday, office visit and results next Thursday. It’s my new priority-A race for the year. Let’s hope I make the podium this time.

Comments and conversation

Frazz
Reed points out that Jimmy was incorrect with his assertion that Chuck Klosterman may have me shot for threatening his world record for gratuitious footnotes. He says David Foster Wallace has retired that trophy, and I’m inclined to agree. I like to say I’m just like David Foster Wallace, only without the clinical depression. Or the genius. (Note: If you read nothing else this week, read the interview I linked you to. It's a great interview of a great mind.)


As it happens, this isn’t the first time Reed and Jimmy have crossed paths. Reed is my editor at United Feature Syndicate; Jimmy is Jimmy Doom, lead singer of the seminal Detroit punk band The Almighty Lumberjacks of Death. I recently drew Jimmy into a Sunday Frazz strip, which of course was then handled by Reed. That’s my purpose in life: To bring cool people together.

Scott asks: “Given all that you do (triathlon training, writing Frazz, eating, sleeping) and that there are only 24 hours in a day, how do you manage it all? Any tips for the rest of us?” Now it’s Scott’s turn to be incorrect. He probably shouldn’t have put “sleeping” on the list. I don’t do enough of that, which is even dumber than sitting in a doctor’s waiting room a week and a half before an Ironman. I’m not proud of this and I’m not endorsing it as any kind of solution. It’s my own deal with the devil, and as soon as I can weasel out of it, I will. The more flattering answer is that you adapt to your conditions, and if you give yourself abusive conditions, you adapt to that. If you leave yourself time to waste, you learn to waste time. The axiom has to be reversible. Plus, you’re more efficient when you’re fitter, and wider awake when you’ve been active. Until you pass out.

But mostly, I … uh … I don’t really manage it all. I’m constantly off the back, in the weeds, deficit spending. But, hey. That’s the new economy.

Monday, November 9, 2009

Jef Mallett is good for the Jews


Trizophrenia: Inside the Minds of a Triathlete has been out long enough now that people are actually getting beyond Peter’s foreword. And while I’m glad they’ve enjoyed the foreword, I already knew Peter was terrific. I was a little more nervous about my own stuff. People seem to be liking it, though, which is gratifying news right there. But the even better news is that I somehow ended up with such smart readers and friends, and their feedback is just plain fun to read.

I’m intensely uncomfortable with the whole self-congratulation thing (also, I invariably leave someone out who deserves to be mentioned), but I’ll share some of it with you anyway.

Bill writes, on bikeraceinfo.com, “…pure Mallett. It's fantastically funny, brilliant, observant and entertaining, even if it is about triathlons. Plus, it's filled with lots of hilarious cartoons by one of the most talented and meticulous artists in cartooning today. That would be Jef as well. Get it.”

A different Bill has a reading protocol we can all learn from: “… of course, my first read employed the same technique I use to tackle the New Yorker: I look at the cartoons first. Love your illustrations. Now, on to the text.”

From my coach, a truly elite athlete who has the chops and experience to call me out if I got any of it wrong: “WOW!!!!!!!!!!!!!!  I just love it.  As I was reading through it, I kept telling myself...."Yup, I've done that"..."Yup, I felt that way too"......and....."Yup, that's exactly what happens!" Your illustrations are classic too.  You bring a whole new, comical, dimension to a sport that so many of us "stone-faced" triathletes take so seriously.  Interesting style, too, with the added footnotes.  Footnotes bring perspective and deeper understanding to the quirky world of triathlon.”

Mollie, on whythissiteisdifferent, maybe leaves some context to be found – and it's findable, right there on her blog – but I like it strictly on its own merits: “Jef Mallett is good for the Jews. Return the favor by reading his new book, “Trizophrenia.”  It’s a mechiah!”

And not to prioritize, but anyone who wants to top Jimmy’s phrasing has their work cut out for them: “Beyond the evangelical and motivational nature, the wide array of references and metaphors are mind-warping and never dry even while I'm learning something I thought I had only fleeting interest in. If it was a sex manual, you'd be drawing Frazz in limos and airplanes from talk show to talk show. At the very least, I hope it makes you a rock star on the triathlon circuit before Chuck Klosterman has you assassinated for shattering his Guinness World Record for footnotes. I am now going back to my comfy place and finishing the book.”

There’s more, lots more. But I’m starting to feel self-conscious, we’ve all got work to do, and I wasn’t bright enough to start a file of all these and have run out of time to go hunting them all down.

I hope you get a chance to read the book, whether you buy a copy or read it over Bill or Jimmy’s shoulder. But don’t get it because I’ve guilted you into it. Read it because it’s good for the Jews.

Friday, November 6, 2009

Thank a veteran


Tomorrow I'm speaking at a Veterans Day Tribute here in Lansing. My friend and superior cartoonist, Dave Coverly of Speed Bump fame, will team up with me to be the keynote speakers. This sounds odd, because neither Dave nor I are veterans of any military service, let alone combat. But last April, he and I joined six other cartoonists on a USO tour that visited military hospitals in Washington DC, Bethesda and Landstuhl, Germany. It was an eye-opener. Not that we went into it blind, but you really can't be prepared. It's like seeing the giant redwoods in California for the first time. You think you've studied up on it, but until you see it in person, you have no idea. The trees are so big. The soldiers are so impressive.

I can't send the audience there, but maybe I can help them study up a little more. When I got back, the Lansing newspaper City Pulse interviewed me and did an incredible story about the trip. The reporter, Bill Castanier, asked for a quick description of a memorable moment. I must have written about the right one, because it still gives me goosebumps when I read it back. I'll read it tomorrow. You can read it now.

One more note first, though: Whenever you get a chance, thank a veteran. It's impossible to do too much, or to do wrong. I'll confess I feel awkward every time I do, given that I'm a perfectly able-bodied and able-minded American who's enjoying the benefits of their military service while having provided none of my own. But none of them seems to hold it against me. Indeed, they act like the humbled ones. And we both go on our way feeling a whole lot of good. Any veterans reading? Thank you for your service.

Here's one little piece of why:

This Navy corpsman was third man in, with two Marines clearing an abandoned house when a booby-trapped refrigerator blew up and cut them down. He couldn't get to his feet, didn't even have both of them anymore. So he dragged himself to the squad leader and applied a tourniquet to what was left of the sergeant's leg, then gave him orders: I'm going to save the other guy; I need you to keep yelling "I will not die" at the top of your lungs.

As long as he could hear his leader screaming, he knew he was clear to attend to his other squad member. Same tourniquet application, same orders to scream. He dragged himself back and forth between the two men several times before he took the time to put a tourniquet on his own leg. He remembers cutting open his squad leader's pantleg and watching a shin roll away like a fireplace log, neatly sheared off at the knee and ankle. He remembers being a little surprised at the trail of blood-mud that described his path between the two men. He remembers, just before passing out as he was being hoisted onto the medevac, being able to see the sun shine clearly between two perfectly cauterized holes through his foot. Had he had a better angle, he could have seen the sun shining through most of his lower leg that way.

A year later, just about all of it spent in the same room on the same floor at Walter Reed, he was showing a bunch of slackjawed cartoonists the scars on that leg. The other leg was gone, and this one was still touch and go. Somebody called him a hero, but he snorted. He just did his job, that's all. Give the Navy credit for training him so well, he said. But he did allow that he was up for a Silver Star for valor. Someone else snorted. What does it take to get a gold one, for crying out loud?

Stay dead, he said. He had died, for two minutes, but his timing was good. His heart stopped while surgeons were already inside his torso clearing out shrapnel, so it was an easy reach to massage the heart back to silver-star status.

So, what was next? This guy seemed capable of anything except what he wanted, which was to return to the fighting and save more Marines. But he would get his nursing degree and return to that same floor at Walter Reed. Nobody knew the floor better than him. Nobody knew what the patients had been through better than he did. Nobody, but nobody, was going to tell him no.

Wednesday, November 4, 2009

Another great interview, and getting back to Uncle Fester

I could take a few lessons from ShirleyPerly and her blog The Humble Triathlete. She just posted an excellent interview with me. It’s well worth checking out. I sure enjoyed the interview. She’s interesting and fun and asks great questions. And you’ve still got time to post a comment and be eligible for a free copy of Trizophrenia. Because this particular blog entry is titled – and now we’re getting to the part where I can take a few lessons from her – “Creator of Frazz Giveaway.”

I could use such a lesson, and maybe eventually I’ll remember to write the header after I write the blog entry. I’m easily distracted, and this past Friday I wrote the title “Uncle Fester Runs a Marathon” and then spent a little too much time on Catch-22 and decided I wasn’t going to be able to share my race photos without going on longer than a blog ought to (another thing I have trouble with). So back to Uncle Fester.

I mentioned I don’t photograph well when I’m running. See for yourself. Link here to my Grand Rapids Marathon photos from Action Sports Images. These not only continue the trend, they may retire the trophy. For even more fun, compare them to the relative supermodels in the photos from the finish of the New York Marathon. I don’t know what it is, but it’s always this way. Action Sports Images is blameless. Given that I signed up for the race spontaneously, and with supremely casual run training in the six weeks since racing Ironman Louisville, I was asking for disaster well beyond bad photos. Here is a glimpse of how my mind was working less than two weeks before the race. Be warned, it’s no prettier than my photos:

1) I'll be speaking on Saturday at a book event in Grand Rapids
2) Patty and her sister and mother are attending a concert in GR Saturday evening, so we're staying overnight.
3) Oh, hey, my friends Brian and Jenna are racing the GR half-marathon on Sunday.
4) Maybe I should race it, too.
5) Sheesh! The entry fee is $93 at this point. Forget it.
6) Oh, look, it's only another $11 to enter the full marathon
7) ...

It turned out better than I deserved. I finished safely within that vast range between impressive and embarrassing. I felt good throughout the race except in the final mile and a half, and even then I felt what seemed to be the right level of bad. My first- and second-half splits were dead even, which is incredibly promising. And the 3:43 I posted is only 13 minutes off a qualifying time for the Boston Marathon, which I know I can find if I take drastic measures like, you know, actually training. So now I’m looking at a Michigan winter of serious run training for another attempt in the spring. Maybe I half knew that during the race. That might explain the photos.

And keeping up my end of the conversations with those who were lucky enough to get through whatever wall GoogleBlog or whatever is putting up:

Mollie makes fun of my photo, specifically the wheel I’m using as a prop: “… you’ll rack up more miles if you sit on the seat of the bike instead of leaning against the wheel.” A good point. That photo is on the “about the author” page of Trizophrenia, too, and has prompted the question of how much Zipp paid me to lean on their wheel. Put it this way: They’re willing to double it in my next book. Or triple it. Same difference. I just like the wheels, and it beat putting on a wetsuit for the photo shoot.

Ellen celebrates her first triumph in guessing Caulfield’s Halloween book, and her first time carving pumpkins without a local newspaper handy. “I can read the important parts (Frazz and very little else) online, but nothing beats a newspaper for catching the pumpkin carving mess,” she writes. I appreciate her priorities, and I miss my daily newspapers, too. And I’ll be on the lookout for tips on how to get pumpkin guts out of your laptop computer.

Finally, Steve finds he has to correct me again. Not only do I not know my algorithm from my logarithm, I called him an actuary when he is, in fact, a computer programmer. I fault my mnemonic skills – they both rhyme with “herd.” Yow. Did I make that joke? Lucky for me, Steve is cool enough to prove it inaccurate, and even better, cool enough to forgive me even if it were true.

Monday, November 2, 2009

Questions and answers and hotties and algorithms

I get more interesting when other people ask the questions, especially when a reporter like Herbert Krabel is asking them on behalf of Slowtwitch.com, one (I have to be conservative with my superlatives, if that’s grammatically possible) of the original, and one of the very best, sources of triathlon information and journalism. Check out his interview with me, posted this past Friday. We talk about my book Trizophrenia plenty, so I can shamelessly link to that, too, but we covered a little of my history and personality and motivations. It's good stuff. Bonus: On Slowtwitch’s home page today, my photo ends up directly below a photo of triathlete Desiree Ficker en route to her 10th-place finish in yesterday’s New York Marathon. Media-wise, this is the closest I’ve gotten to a known hottie since the liner notes of Fountains of Wayne’s 2005 release “Out of State Plates,” when Frazz’s picture showed up just below the Playboy Magazine cover with Rachel Hunter.


If you’ve still got time after that, I’ll clear up a few odds and ends.

I’m not sure why this is – I’m not the most fluent computer guy, and I’m new to this blog-site business – but a lot of people , including but not limited to Mollie, Anonymous, my wife Patty and yet another Anonymous, were not having any luck posting comments. Mollie finally found a work-around, Anonymous and Anonymous went back to their busy weekend duties making faces and scaring people, and Patty just took it up with me directly. I’m currently addressing the problem by wishing really hard that it will go away and that you'll be patient and keep trying.

Speaking of Anonymous, my triathlete- and actuary- and generally more competent friend Steve went straight to e-mail and corrected me in that the proper term for the mathematical programming thingamadoo I’m trying to scam with my links to who I suspect the anonymi really are is algorithm, not logarithm. Much appreciated, Steve. I’m of North Atlantic heritage and very pale. If certain rude racial stereotypes hold any validity, I’m lucky to have any rithm at all.

Saturday I ran the Booathlon Duathlon in nearby Potterville, a town that’s just about the size its name suggests. I did the 5K run – 10 mile bike – 5K run with my friend Fran. Fran is blind, so we did it with the use of a tether and a tandem. It was a great match. She ended up Women’s Masters Champion, and I got to spend 10 kilometers racing right next to someone who still has no idea how bad I look when I run. Hold tight, folks, and hope for a boring couple of days. If nothing more urgent comes up, I’ll post the link to my Grand Rapids Marathon Uncle Fester photos Wednesday while Halloween is still top of mind, while there’s still uneaten candy. And odds are we know just what kind of candy it is:
Frazz