Friday, August 17, 2012

USA!! USA!! US--THUD...

Thank goodness the Olympics are over. I can't handle any more injuries.

No, I'm not referring to the American sprinter who fractured his foot while running a leg of the relay. I'm referring to the injuries I suffered while watching the Olympics.

Here's the thing: I've never been an athletic chick. The closest I ever came to lettering in high school was in show choir. I'm a decent runner, but I have some difficulty navigating curbs. Which has led to my established cycle of hand/knee road rash cases every five-to-eight weeks. When I play softball, I am always -- ALWAYS -- the catcher. (For those of you who haven't rocked a summer softball league in awhile, the catcher's only purpose is to keep the game moving along and has zero affect on the actual competitive outcome. Which I didn't find out until halfway through the season. Which made me instantly regret the incessant bragging to friends about how I was so good as catcher that our coach would not let me move to any other positions.)

Basically, I'm not Sporty Spice.

And I'm certainly not Scary Spice. Or Ginger Spice. I can't pull off bangs, so Posh is definitely out...

Dammit, I'm Baby Spice, aren't I? She's the worst one!

Whatever. The point being, for three years and fifty weeks I am completely aware of my physical incapabilities.

Then they light that stupid torch. And all imaginary hell breaks loose.

I am ADDICTED to the Olympics. The drama. The backstories. The gathering of cultural representations in simplified, easily digestible forms: flags, uniforms, Opening Ceremony attire, 30-second sound bytes courtesy of Matt Lauer's research team. Simple, straightforward, basic. It is the Paleo diet of cultural exploration.

This year was no different.

Once the artistic hijinx of the London 2012 Opening Ceremony was over and the competition started, I wound up watching sports I would never care about outside of those five Olympics rings. Riflery? Long jump? Handball? It didn't matter. Half the time I didn't even understand how any points/goals/rounds were scored. But there I sat, rapt, until some final result popped on the screen, the winner(s) cried in victory and the loser(s) cried in defeat. And I, in turn, cried. Especially if they showed any family members also crying. For being an event focused on physical competition, emotions got a fair share of air time.

And then, during one commercial break, I popped in my headphones. Cranked it to some faintly patriotic orchestral music with a kick-ass drum section. With the pounding thuds in my ears, I stood up straight. Focused. Took a deep breath. Mimed drawing an imaginary arrow, nocking it against the bowstring, drew it back until the fletching grazed my cheek ... paused ... then let it fly.

BULLSEYE!

If anyone had peered in my window during the last two weeks, they would have seen me sprinting down my hallway, flapping my arms around and around, only to slam my hand against the closet door and immediately spin and stare at the opposite wall with frantic eyes.



That's what I was doing in the real world. In my head? Those same actions translated to me swimming the final 50 meters of the butterfly stroke, courageously reaching for the wall without taking a final breath, and beating my fiercest competitor from [insert competitive swimming country name here] out by 1/1000 of a second. Like any seasoned competitor, I naturally ignored the cheers from the stands and knew not to celebrate until I saw the official results on the scoreboard.

I was decent in imaginary archery and  faux swimming, but my best sport was (obviously) gymnastics. I ran at the vault with reckless abandon. I stuck every landing. I was a blur of ethereal motion on the uneven bars. And, in an unexpected twist, my song selection for my floor routine avoided the traditional classical compositions. Instead, I dared to blast Sleigh Bells' "A/B Machines", an aggressive mix of screaming guitars and sugary vocals that (as one person put it) makes you want to punch someone in the face. And I ROCKED the house.

Here's the catch: while some of my ideas worked out fantastically (plastic bag I tossed up then spiked down at my volleyball competition, I'm looking at you), others were ... well, less thought out. By the end of the first week my walls were stamped with dozens of handprints where I out-touched my swimming competition. Pretty hard to explain that away to friends who come over. ("What happened here?" "Okay, so, I was swimming the anchor leg of the relay...")

Another great idea that turned sour: I taped a ribbon to a ruler to compete in the rhythmic gymnastics all-around. Now I know why the gymnastics venue in London didn't boast any low-hanging chandeliers.




By the second week of Olympic competition, my house was not the only one sporting wounds. Apparently I didn't stretch enough before the semi-final round in beach volleyball because my shoulder was killing me and I could barely lift my arm to the side. Also, during a daring dash to stop a soccer ball from going out-of-bounds, I lost my footing on the hardwood floor and fell, narrowly cracking my head on the coffee table. Who had the crazy thought that hardwood laminate was regulation turf?! And then put a coffee table with sharp corners on the pitch?! Crazy Brits.

By far, the lowest point came the night of the 100m sprint. I sat there, watching each finalist announced, munching on Sun Chips and icing my rotater cuff with a bag of frozen broccoli florets. (Yes, I recognize the nutritious dichotomy of the food I chose to eat and the food I chose to ice with. Those two weeks I ate more crap than I had in the last two months.) All attention was on Usain Bolt to see if he could repeat his record-breaking performance four years ago in Beijing. After bouncing a bit, fist-bumping the attendant in his lane, and playing up to the cameras, the announcer chimed out, "On your marks." Bolt strode forward, knelt on the track, and placed his feet on the starting blocks.

The result from the actual Olympic race isn't important. Set, starting gun, 10 seconds later Bolt won. Whatever.

The key thing is this: Faux Olympic lightning struck.

Starting blocks.

In all my years of running, I had never tried starting blocks! With those, I bet I could shave off a few seconds from my hallway sprinting time. Genius! Thanks, Bolt.

Shrugging off the melting broccoli and dusting off remnant chip dust, I ran down to the basement and grabbed two empty paper boxes left over from my move. Double-stepping it up the stairs, I headed into the dining room and knelt down by the furthest wall directly across from my track lane (hallway). Flipping one box on end, I propped my make-believe starting blocks against the wall. After thinking things through for a second, I decided to fill each box with books to provide a more stable base. I wouldn't want my foot to go through a starting block and thwart my brilliant idea. I mean, how embarrassing would that be?

After popping in my headphones to play some appropriate sprinting music (Radiohead's "Bodysnatchers") I bounced some final hamstring stretches and waved to the adoring crowd.


ON YOUR MARKS.

You know, putting your whole foot on those starting blocks is actually really difficult to do and not lose balance? Especially when said blocks aren't actually angled but rather completely perpendicular to the ground. Eh, just something I'll have to compensate for during my first few strides.

GET SET.

I raise up. Now all of my weight is balanced between my hands on the ground and my feet planted on the starting blocks. What was it that I heard in the behind-the-scenes piece about Bolt? Oh yeah, drive your knee to the ground to really get a good stride. Got it.

Let's do this.

*BANG*

I lift up my hands and drive as hard as I can off my starting blocks ...



... and slam face first onto the floor, skidding half a body length across the ground. My knees, hands, and right cheek immediately throb with rug burn. My headphones pop out of my iPod, instantaneously replacing Radiohead's pulsating guitar riff with ringing, harshly realistic, silence.

This is, by far, one of the stupidest things I have ever done.

I laid there for a second and think about what this must look like: sprawled out on my dining room floor, two feet away from paper boxes leaning against the wall, the Olympic telecast blaring from the other room. If things had gone worse and I had died in this attempt, my only hope would be that the CSI investigators wouldn't have been able to parse out what I had actually been attempting and just marked it down as a cold case.

In the background, I heard Usain Bolt talking with a sideline interviewer. I'm pretty certain Bolt hasn't ever had a start like this.

After a minute, I peeled myself off the floor and assessed the damage. No actual bleeding, just angry-looking red flushes on my hands and legs which throbbed as if to say, "SERIOUSLY?" The carpet took the biggest hit: I spied a skid mark of my make-up on my crash site.

Here's the odd thing about unexpectedly having something slam into your head (like the ground): you start to cry. I did, anyways. I think that type of physical threat must wire up with some survival instinct laying dormant since our primal days. It doesn't happen right away, probably because the first moments are supposed to be devoted to fight or flight. But it creeps up after a moment.

Baby Spice Status: Confirmed. At least my mother wasn't there to witness my defeat.

Aaaaand back to the couch I go.


Saturday, August 4, 2012

Olympics Live Blogging



UPDATE-O-METER: 11:55 PM

----------------------------------------8:45 AM----------------------------------------

That's right, people. It's happening. It's HAPPENING. Today, I will be live blogging my viewing of the Summer Olympics. Complete access to my personal analysis of all things Olympic, or whatever distracts me while watching all things Olympic. If you came for nuanced analysis of athletic performances ... you should probably check another site. If you came for uninformed commentary with a pinch of snark focusing mostly on outfits -- er, uniforms, well then ...strap in. You will find that here. Unfiltered. Unfettered. Unspellchecked.

New posts to follow below. See that Update-O-Meter at the top of the page? That will show the timestamp of the last entry, so you can just refresh the page and easily see whether you should look for a new update. Or you could just keep obsessively scrolling down. Especially if you have OCD.

Let's DO this! USA! USA! USA!

(Oh, and feel free to comment below and add your own thoughts! This endeavor may get a little lonely, so I'll take any human interaction I can get, even in the form of anonymous comment postings on an internet site. Welcome to the modern age.)

----------------------------------------9:15 AM----------------------------------------

First sport viewing down: women's beach volleyball. Italy versus ... I can't remember. This is not a good sign. Anyway, the important thing is that Italy won. And that the ladies were FINALLY wearing bikinis, instead of those long underwear teams were rocking earlier this week. The Olympics have been saved!

Next up: Women's 50M Rifle. Hey, isn't this what the Olympics is all about? Learning about random sports I will immediately forget as soon as that torch is extinguished?

After a few minutes of watching the US Rifle Team, I'm starting to realize something: in riflery, apparently you put the gun on a STAND?



WHAT?? How is that in any way fair? You don't even need to hold the gun? Does the winner have to at least share the gold medal with that stand which was, let's be honest, doing most of the work?

Oh, wait. Okay, they are holding the guns now. Apparently they pick it up when they shoot. They just use that stand to rest between shots. Riflery assumption crisis averted.

And, with a bulls eye shot in the final round, USA wins! GOLD!


----------------------------------------10:00 AM----------------------------------------

The Latvian basketball team's uniforms remind me of the ones that my Catholic middle school team rocked. The level of play also seems eerily similar. That is all.

Correction: that's Lithuanian, not Latvian. Hope I didn't unintentionally start a civil war by mixing those two up. My bad.

Correction #2: Lithuania is actually hanging in there. I apparently was looking at the time instead of the score.

----------------------------------------10:20 AM----------------------------------------

Bored with basketball (college I love, pros ... not so much), I flipped it over to another station, just in time to see ... SERENA WILLIAMS SMASH SHARAPOVA ON THE COURT AND WIN THE GOLD! Which, I feel, is a victory not just over Sharapova, but over Enrique Iglesias as well. And that is something worth celebrating. (Who can be your hero NOW, Enrique???)


----------------------------------------10:35 AM----------------------------------------

Springboard Diving for the ladies is up next. These commentators aren't quite as snarky and negative as those trumpeters of doom and gloom over in gymnastics, but they're close. "See that foot furthest from us? It was just a LITTLE bit flexed. That'll cost some deductions." "She needs to get a bit more angular momentum, or spin, on that dive." Um, that chick just folded herself in half, flew threw the air, flipped three times, and went in the water with nary a splash. All in about 2 seconds. Let's cut back on the slo-mo critique.
Then again, this might be my bias for being impressed with anyone who can do diving. In my entire life, I dove off the diving board head-first once. I was twelve. It hurt. I got the wind knocked out of me. I thought I was going to die. After that it was cannon balls only for me.
All of this splashing and wet hair is motivating me. Time to finally get off the couch, brush off the Timbit crumbs, and take my shower. Be back soon!

----------------------------------------11:55 AM----------------------------------------

And I'm back. Caught the end of trampoline, also known as Cirque de Soleil recruitment camp. (How is trampoline in but squash and cricket are not?) Saw the American flag fly away while Serena Williams was receiving her gold medal. ("Serena put the win in windy." Well played, NBC commentator.)

Then off to the track for some running/sprinting. Oh yeah, the Summer Olympics have track and field sports in it. And yes, I teared up twice during the package about Oscar Pistorius, the South African runner who is a double amputee and is competing in the Games. So happy to see him do well! I know he's a long shot in the final race, but it would be amazing to see him on the medal podium!

Oh, wait. What is that ... do I spy ...

TORCH SITING! TORCH SITING!




----------------------------------------12:00 PM----------------------------------------

I'm sorry.

Did the commentator just say that US runner Merritt had been on competitive probation because he tested positive for an anabolic steroid that he said he took unwillingly through an over-the-counter male enhancement product?

Commentator's response, "Merritt claimed he was not trying to get a competitive advantage."

My response: "Tell that to the ladies. HEY OH!"

Due to a strained hamstring, the runner "made it around the turn in the race and had to pull out early." Sweet, sweet irony.

----------------------------------------12:15 PM----------------------------------------

Men's Volleyball.

That's a lot of Russian man thigh.

----------------------------------------12:30 PM----------------------------------------

Men's Volleyball Commentator: "He doesn't just wear sleeveless shirts around the court. He wears them EVERY DAY."

Awwwww yeaaaaah. Suns out, guns out.

----------------------------------------12:45 PM----------------------------------------

Set win for Men's Volleyball against the Russians! Looking like a good day for the US of A. Or a strategic choice by the broadcasting company to only focus on the sports in which America is highly favored. I'm totally fine with that.

Side note: when did the rules of volleyball change so that a team doesn't have to be serving to score a point?

----------------------------------------2:20 PM----------------------------------------

Full disclosure: I have had the Olympics on my television all day. But, for the last hour, I MAY have been distracted by other things. Namely, cleaning up my house. Since yesterday was the last day of a grueling Orientation season at The University, filled with surprisingly calm students and horrifyingly vicious parents, I hosted a party for all of us professional staff who had survived. And, of course, the party had a theme.


And I am nothing if not committed to a theme. I decided to make sure to have culinary representation from various Olympic country competitors spread around the house. Some of them were pretty easy. Italy and France? Wine table and mozzarella-tomato-basil appetizers. Canada? Timbits. Great Britain? Scones. I decorated each area with flags from the countries, to add a bit of festive flair.



That's when things got a little difficult. And possibly a little racist.

Something about hanging a Chinese flag hanging above a plate of egg rolls and fortune cookies felt weird. So I popped those back in the freezer. And I swapped out a Mexican flag for a Texas one to put by the guacamole. (Hey, Texas was its own country for awhile.)

It actually turned out to be a lot of fun! And, when I shut the door after the last guests at 1AM (I forgot how late 23-year-olds like to party) I looked around my house and thought, "eh, I'll get it in the morning."

So the entire time I've been watching the Olympics this morning I have been staring at random paper plates and half-eaten tomato kabobs and overflowing recycling bins. And I couldn't take it anymore. So I cranked the volume on the volleyball game and ran around my house collecting and cleaning.

Trust me, if there was an Olympic event for Sprint Trash Collecting, I would OWN that match.
And it seemed to work out well for the Americans! By the time I was finishing up, they were up two matches to one over Russia. Now that I'm watching again, they seem to be struggling. Maybe they only can block attacks when I'm knee-deep in empty bottles.

----------------------------------------2:42 PM----------------------------------------

A note about swimming, since Peas brought it up in the comment thread:

I know this is going to be an unpopular position. But I'm over it. Over Phelps. Over Lochte. I'll still tune in for a race by Missy Franklin, but I'm definitely getting fatigue in the aquatic center. But it's been eight days. I think the world has mastered how to swim up and down a pool. At this point, my fingers are pruned from just watching. I also have a conspiracy theory: since there are so many combinations of stroke and length (50M free, 400M relay), I think the reasoning was, hey, that means that everyone will pretty much get a medal. Sort of like six-year-old soccer tournaments, where participation trophies are as large as the First Place one. And then came Phelps. And ran through the trophy tent, grabbing anything gold he can find, saying "ALL MINE! NO, ALL MINE!"

Now, I know, it's about the best person winning. And Phelps is definitely great. But it's just starting to seem like a lack of portion control.

As for Lochte .... ssssshhhhhh. Just, just sssshhhh.

You are a fine athlete, a strong competitor, and an ambassador of neon-colored shoes and patriotic grills. But I don't ever need to hear an interview with you. Ever.

In fact, I just realized something: oftentimes, when sharing a particularly hilarious anecdote about work, I will employ a certain speaking tone and style to represent the student archetype.

That voice... sounds... EXACTLY like Ryan Lochte. Here, all this time, I was doing a spot-on impression, just of the wrong person.

Again, they are fantastic athletes. I'm glad that they are doing so well and representing the US in the pool. But let's towel off and start exploring some other sports. Like, I don't know, one that happens outdoors and thus is actually only played in the summer.

And, now that I have that off my chest, time to check back in to the Men's Volleyball game. How we doing, boys!

Crap. Back to cleaning.

----------------------------------------7:00 PM----------------------------------------

So I MAY have just fallen asleep on the couch for the last four hours. It was my own fault: I turned on the soccer game. I love going to see soccer games, but for some reason watching it on tv is like drinking a bottle of NyQuil. I'm out like a light.

Time to scavenge for food before primetime Olympic coverage starts!

----------------------------------------7:15 PM----------------------------------------

But first ... I'm sorry ... but is John McEnroe rocking a thick-chain necklace with a padlock pendant and the ring of Sauron?




Yes. Yes, he is.

Hey, maybe it was forged in the dark Satanic mills of the Industrial Revolution portion of the Opening Ceremonies.

Oh my lord, and he just referenced Skrillex. If I ever go to a Skrillex concert and John-freaking-McEnroe is rocking out beside me, I will rip that padlock necklace off of him and smack him with it.

And, as the cherry on top, here was his response to the question about Ryan Lochte's sneaker designer potential: "The sneakers that I saw, I would recommend sticking to his day job. But that's not to say I haven't made some dumb purchases myself. But I'm a little more, believe it or not, a little conservative. I always thought my idea of cool was wearing a James Dean t-shirt and a jeans and jacket, although I've brushed it up a bit for this show. I don't want to think about all of the dumb purchases I've made in my life."

Look down, John. Look down.

----------------------------------------9:00 PM ---------------------------------------

Things I learned in the first hour of tonight's prime time coverage:

  • Jamaicans are really fast.
  • Somalians raised in the UK and trained in the US are really fast.
  • The South African accent may be even sexier than the British accent.
  • Men who rock kilts also rock purses.
  • Bob Costas is not okay with people finishing his sentences.
  • Bob Costas is not interested in wearing a kilt.
  • If the temperature falls under 65 degrees Fahrenheit, it is fashionably acceptable to rock a sports bra OVER a long-sleeved tee.
----------------------------------------11:15 PM ---------------------------------------

Things I learned in the second and third hours of tonight's prime time coverage:

  • Finishing in a sprint is all about keeping the eyes wide.
  • Kobe Bryant loves cheetah-printed phone covers.
  • Kobe Bryant loves chewing gum.
  • Kobe Bryant chews with his mouth open.
----------------------------------------11:55 PM ---------------------------------------

Okay, last element of the NBC broadcast is an interview with Michael Phelps. I'm happy for him, but I prefer Michael Phelps in the pool and not in the interview chair. So I'm calling it a night.

Thus concludes a full day of watching athletic perfection on the television as I sat/slept/ate Pizza Combos and brownies on the couch. The irony is not lost on me. Thanks to Peas, Greg, and Megan for hanging with me today! And, once again ...Wow, the Olympics are DELICIOUS!.