Yeah, it’s been awhile. It’s either feast or famine on the
weekends.
Today, I took a group to the Hakart copper and brass place. This falls
to me because the sort of “social coordinator” position is frozen right now and
I’m on the board of the closest thing there is to a substitute and because, well,
everything falls to me.
The trip is easy enough, and I hadn’t been before, so I didn’t
mind. We took a van and a small group and everyone came away with stuff. I
bought a little bell and a two-egg frying pan, plus a fat candle in a little copper
tub.
We finished a bit ahead of schedule so we asked our driver
to find a place to eat. He kept asking what kind of food we wanted and it was like,
whatever is fine. I mean, we’re in Turkey. It’s going to be fantastic! So we
went into a kebab place and oh, the chicken kebab I had was wonderful, but all
the other stuff they brought out before was fantastic, too.
We’d all had about the same thing, and we decided to split
the bill evenly and cover our driver’s cut. The waitstaff handed it to me and I
DREAD doing math on the spot, but it was the absolutely easiest group bill
ever. (Which is the only reason it’s notable enough to mention some eight hours
later. Bear with me.)
Tab: 446TL. People dividing tab: 10. Appropriate tip: 10
percent-ish. People dividing tab: all bearing cash because the copper place
didn’t take credit cards. I asked for 50 each and, within less than 48 seconds,
had 10 crisp 50TL bills. Not one person gave me two 20s and a 10, and neither
of the two couples handed me a 100. So easy it was comical.
Success! Tomorrow is a rug-shopping party (like I need one)
and the remote possibility of a towel run. I finally bought some Turkish towels
and have decided I want all the Turkish towels ever created, especially the
ones from Jennifer’s Haman. They are awesome. I bought two small towels for the
gym and to dry hair and then thought, geez, these things are too nice to take
to the gym. Then, due to some bad laundry timing, I had to use one in the gym
and now I’m never using anything else. The thing is fabulous. I want to get the
same towels in slightly larger sizes now. And a robe. And whatever else they
have. The stuff is just so awesome.
Last weekend, I took a road trip to Kars, which is close to
the Armenian border, to see the ruins of the city of Ani. Here’s an Atlantic
article on the city, with much better photos than I took: https://www.theatlantic.com/photo/2014/01/the-ancient-ghost-city-of-ani/100668/.
I took the cheap way to the ruins, which was the city bus. A
guy sat down next to me, and we chatted a bit. He was traveling with two female
friends. He worked with one (he had a Ph.D in ceramic and taught at a
university, and she taught at a college, which, I think, means middle school in
Turkey). The college teacher and the other woman were old friends. Anyway, once
at the ruins, they invited me to wander with them, so the four of us took off
in the other direction as the rest of the people on the bus (about 25 total),
so we were alone in our excursions.
The place is utterly fabulous. Each time I walked into one
of the structures, all I could think was how amazing it was. The frescoes were
just phenomenal, and very creepy because in the defecation of them, people had
scratched out the eyes of the saints and such and some of them were just so
ghost-like.
Back in Kars, I went up to the fortress on the hill and also
the museum. Since I’m currently not allowed to visit museums in Istanbul, it
was really awesome to visit, and to use the museum card I bought last year. You
pay a flat rate and get free admission to all museums for a year. I bought it on
Thanksgiving, having no clue that in a couple of months they’d be off limits.
So now, even if I don’t get to another by November, I at least made it worth my
while. (And man, it was worth it.)
In all my running around lately, I haven’t had time to note
my actual running around, which was the Puma Ignite 10k a couple of weeks ago.
It was the Sunday after a rainy, rainy week, and the forecast was pretty bleak
for the day. It wasn’t awful, but it did rain and was a bit cold at the end.
I went with a group of eight colleagues, most of whom were
on one of the guard teams and were therefore really in shape. I knew going in I’d
be the slowest one in our group but I was fine with that and so were they. The
course was 10k, and it was one of those that was 5k one way and then just turn
around and come back, and as I was in sight of the 3k mark, the first guy was
on his way back. It was like, please enjoy some coffee and tea, because I will
be awhile.
The race atmosphere itself was really amazing. There were more people than I thought there’d
be for a rainy, little-known race, and the sponsors were out strong. Fiat and
Phillips were both there and had these freebie wrist sweat band things that
were awesome, especially considering what I usually do is a fairly redneck
method of triple-looping a bandana around my wrist. There were several flavored
water drinks (fizzy and flat) and both coffee and tea places. Oh, and a
running/health team place had stickers that said “Slow and Sexy” and “Fast as
F*ck” (with an “*”).
I am not “fast as” anything whatsoever, and was not
optimistic about my time. I have not exactly been crushing it in my daily runs
on the treadmill; I just don’t get into it at all. Every day I hope that this
is the day I start to love running, but so far, no dice. I stopped trying to go
fast and am trying to just pace myself.
This time, I ran almost the first 3k, then did the run/walk
thing. After about a three-minute span of feeling sick (this came after a pint
of water), I realized that I was fairly comfortable, if bored. I swear,
running, no matter what I listen to, is just boring. I tried to put together a
decent playlist that would motivate me, but it’s just so boring. I kept chanting,
“I can do all things through Christ that strengthens me” and fully hoped
running counted as strengthening. I’m slow and always will be, but I was hoping
for around 1:15 or so. My best time, if
you can call it that for how slow I am, was 1:09:something.
Finally, I saw the end and whatever song that was on,
clearly not motivating enough, ended and I figured I’d get something really
upbeat on and push me to the end. And it was … “Amazing Grace.” Alan Jackson.
At first, I thought, no way, this is just too slow and then I figured why not?
Just be thankful, run steady, and finish the race. And I did, not out of breath
or anything.
There was no clock or anything that I saw, so I did the
circle thing around the sponsor booths, collecting chocolate milk, water, the
fizzy fruit thing and (of course) tea. Only then did I remember to check the
time, and it was around 10:15. It had started at 9, so I thought I might have
cracked the 1:15 time but didn’t think I had bested 1:10. The 1:09 thing came
when I was “training” (I use these terms loosely) at a much faster pace. I’ve
slacked off and just try to keep steady.
Anyway, when they posted the official times, I was 1:08:55!
Yay, best ever! Amazing Grace, amazing finish.
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