Marc’s Musings

Life’s short. Live passionately.

Archive for 2006

Christmas Lights

December 30th, 2006 by Marc

A friend of mine, Hildy Gottleib, just sent me this.

All I can say is WOW. (Watch it past the Hallelujah Chorus.)

Category: odd | No Comments »

No more excuses!

December 28th, 2006 by Marc

I’ve been wanting to do this for over a decade. Now I have no excuse. For Christmas, my amazing wife bought me Homebrewing for Dummies and The Homebrewers’ Recipe Guide.

Better still, she corralled my family to give me money for my birthday (on January 6th) so I could purchase the equipment!

Java Stout, here I come!

If you have any advice to a newbie like me, feel free to comment below.

Category: books, coffee & beer | 4 Comments »

Songs for Christmas

December 23rd, 2006 by Marc

My ultra-cool sister-in-law recommend this album by Sufjan Stevens.

We LOVE it. It’s definitely a seasonal favorite, and we’ve only had it a couple weeks!

Category: family life | 5 Comments »

Resolutions part 2

December 23rd, 2006 by Marc

As I said in an earlier post, I just love this time of the year. I love goal setting so much, I created a process called the MagnetGoals Goal Setting Process.

Try it out for yourself for free. You can download the workbook as a PDF at: http://fundraisingcoach.com/magnetgoals.htm

I’m working on my 100 things to do in 2007 right now!

Category: leadership | No Comments »

Special Needs Needhams

December 22nd, 2006 by Marc

Mom and Dad came over yesterday so we could make Needhams.

I love them and have mixed emotions about the fact my kids like them too. It’s nice to share a treat with them; but there aren’t as many for me!

Here they are. Real Needhams are square and covered entirely with chocolate, so I’ve decided to call ours “Special Needs Needhams.”

Maybe they’re even gourmet!

Category: family life | No Comments »

Resolutions part 1

December 21st, 2006 by Marc

I just love this time of the year. I’ve been in a sweetspot of visioning, planning, and goal setting for a couple weeks.

I’ve got the VCW, family, and Inland calendars more or less in one place. I’m working in the VCW budget and have already done work on the family one (healthcare benefits changed again so we had some good and hard conversations at home).

Having recently had another check up at NitroFitness, the gym I’ve been going to for over a year now, I’ve found my body fat is down about 4%. Not where I want it but definitely moving in the right direction!

That reminded me of an article I wrote a couple years back about excercise called “The 15’s: Fitness for the Rest of Us.” It’s published in a few places including SelfGrowth.com. This is what helped me get started on a regular excercise habit. I offer it to you now in it’s entirety.

The 15’s: Fitness for the rest of us - By Marc A. Pitman  

We’ve read it all before. Exercise is good for us. 20 minutes of aerobic exercise, three times a week will increase our energy levels and change our life. If we want to have a long and enjoyable life, we need to be intentional about our physical fitness. If we want to lose weight, we need to take in fewer calories and burn off more.

Health clubs probably make a mint off of all of us that have signed up during the high of a New Year’s resolution to get in shape…and then never used the membership to its fullest. I travel a lot and often choose my hotel based, in part, on whether it has a fitness “club.” But I rarely use it. Do I feel more virtuous by being in the same building as one?

A few times in my life I’ve gotten into a really good routine of aerobic workout. Then some pivotal life change would happen—graduating from college, a child being born—and I’d be off track for months. Even during those “on” times, something seemed off. For one thing, why did it always seem to take much longer than 20 minutes to get 20 minutes of aerobic activity?

WHY DOES 20 MINUTES TAKE SO LONG?
Every one that’s watched a Richard Simmons’ video knows you should stretch before and after a workout. But to stretch without warming up is to do your muscles an injustice. Who wants to be unjust? So, you’re there at least 15 minutes before you even get your heart rate up. Then it takes 5 or 10 minutes to hit “official” aerobic activity. Then, if you can make it 20 minutes, you are supposed to cool down, letting your heart recuperate from actually being used. After that is the obligatory stretch.

For overachievers like myself, the stretching was modeled after the hour long aerobics classes I’d taken on and off over my life. So not only was it another 20 minutes, you still don’t want to be unjust, but it really ended with a relaxation/meditation sequence. All of a sudden, the 20 minute resolution I’d made in a fit of virtue is now taking 90 minutes and I’m late for work! Strangely, every morning I seemed surprised that 20 minutes really took 90. Every morning. When will the madness end?

Some of you have no problem at all with this. Exercise is a normal part of your daily routine and you budget your time accordingly. Wonderful! Then there are the rest of us. I’m not a medical expert but getting exercise to be as normal as eating is one of my magnet goals—one of the goals that make up my daily compass. Here’s something that I’ve stumbled on that may help those of us that don’t have it all together. I call it “the 15’s.”

THE 15’S
Shortly after I turned 30, I bought a treadmill. (For some reason, my wife thinks the two are connected.) One of the cool features of this treadmill is a simple set of lights that tells me if my exercise is merely “warm up/cool down” activity or “fat burning” intensity. I found that if I do a 15 minute mile, a “4” on our machine, I’m in the “fat burning” mode the whole time. I love to read and at this speed I’m still able to read a book. This pace is a quick walk for me so I’m not bouncing around as I would if I were jogging. And, since it’s walking, I don’t feel I need to stretch. It would obviously be better if I did but I rationalize it be saying I don’t stretch after walking to the store.

This system worked well for me but I noticed that my upper body wasn’t getting as buff as I’d liked. So I started doing 15 crunches and 15 push ups. Those take no time at all. And the pay off is incredible. The “20 minutes of exercise” really is 20 minutes. And I find myself benefiting from those 20 minutes all day long! I wake up as completely-—or more completely-—than with a cup of coffee! So I get to actually savor my coffee later at breakfast. And I’m still reading my books!

I shoot for doing my “15’s” three times a week. That’s 3 more miles per week than I was doing before. I know it’s better if I add the warm up and cool down and increase the aerobic time to 20 or 30 minutes. But I’m just glad to be doing something. Especially something that’s working consistently. [Disclaimer: I’m sharing something that I’ve found beneficial. You should always consult your physician before starting this or any exercise program.] 

 

 

Category: leadership | No Comments »

Greatest Miracle?

December 19th, 2006 by Marc

I love listening to the teaching of Dwight Pryor.

Here’s a quote from the lecture I’m listening to today:

One of the greatest miracles happened at Cana. Jesus took water, turned it into Welch’s Grape Juice, and convinced everybody that it was wine! What a great miracle occurred in Cana! :-P

Category: church planting | 3 Comments »

Gandalf the red-nosed…

December 17th, 2006 by Marc

Weird how things get combined in kids’ minds.

I was telling Emily about my sermon today on the Magi. I likened them to Albus Dumbledore or Gandalf.

Across the table, our four year old daughter starts singing, “Gandalf the red-nosed reindeer!”

[Special thanks to my wife for the awesome visual!]

Category: church planting, family life | 1 Comment »

Wolf Scout

December 14th, 2006 by Marc

Cale started Scouts today!

Isn’t he handsome?

(And yes, that is green grass in Maine on the 14th of December!)

Category: family life | 2 Comments »

12 Byzantine Rulers

December 13th, 2006 by Marc

If you haven’t heard these excellent lectures, do youself a favor and listen. It’s like NPR for antiquity.

Category: history | No Comments »