A selfie on my final 35 year old morning |
This year saw the toughest year of my professional career, with politics at work getting the best of me, and my having to make a tough call to leave a job I truly loved and saw myself in for the long haul. As they say, the toughest decisions are often the best. Sure enough, I am in a new role with a new company that I'm extremely excited about, with lots of opportunity in front of me, and the power to make things happen. I miss my old job and colleagues, but also know what I missed wasn't what it was anymore, and am feeling blessed to be where I am now.
My first (but not last) half marathon |
Speaking of injuries, while I did spend many months dealing with the injuries I mentioned above (I didn't really run consistently after the half for eight months, and was in an air cast for a while), this year marked the first in a while where I didn't have or wasn't recovering from surgery. I've had some operation or recovered from one basically without interruption since 2008. Two knee surgeries, back surgery and double hernia surgery over four and a half years, with a bout of swine flu thrown in the mix for good measure. While I certainly had some injuries to recover from, my body did what it was made to do and healed and grew stronger. My mind did, as well, as I learned a lot about smart training, evening out inequities in the body, and taking time when you need it. I also learned about how much capacity I have to do things and do more of them - even when my mind tells me otherwise (the half had a lot to do with that learning).
My second, toughest century ride |
With newbodi.es, I had a great year. I got to do some really valuable continuing education. I coached an awesome young lady to a fantastic weight loss, but more importantly a new 'whole health' life that will absolutely endure. I got to meet Dean Karnazes. I became a FitFluential ambassador. I also launched my video podcast and YouTube channel, and recorded 31 episodes, including doing a couple of great interviews of people I respect a ton (thanks again to Dai Manuel and Alex Hutchison for joining me).
On the home front, my family continued to deal with my wife's illness, yet also benefit from the learnings and health consciousness we've gained as a result. Despite the hardships of it, we're also better off in terms of the food and healthcare choices we make. I know I would be hard pressed to be as fit as I am if the woman across the table from me was eating junk, so my health is clearly benefitting from what my wife is doing to manage hers.
We also saw our son start elementary school, which was exciting and sad at the same time. He's amazing, and loves school so much. As a parent, it's hard not to be filled with joy and pride to see him so happy and thriving.
So, I'm not writing off 35. I'm not lamenting or mourning its passing. I'm thankful for the year I've had. I'm excited for the years I will have. I owe both of those feelings to what I lived while being 35 and how I grew while being 35. My wife said it brilliantly when I told her about this post. She said, "I see any year as a gift, and they all taught me things." So true. Be whatever age you are, be grateful for how you lived it and for what will come after it, and enlighten.your.body.
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