Wednesday, February 16, 2011

San Dieguito Half Marathon

Last week, my lovely girlfriend Annapurna and I headed off to San Diego to run in the San Dieguito Half Marathon. Although I say run, it may be not the right word. Instead, you spend two hours talking to yourself, hoping your knees hold up, and quietly singing the words to whatever is on your iPod. Despite my description it is surprisingly enjoyable. The Rancho Santa Fe area is absolutely beautiful. The area is lined with homes, or more aptly, estates with corrals, tennis courts, iron fences, and stunningly paved driveways. 


The day before the race we ran a bunch of errands. We did however have an awesome lunch at CafĂ© 21!  Anna had a ham, apple, and swiss panini
with greens and strawberries I had a delicious spicy monte cristo sandwich with their homemade potato chips. It was a REVELATION (I believe that is what your are supposed to say about good food). But anyways, the place was seriously awesome and I highly recommend it.

Fast forward to race day, we arrived around 7:00 a.m. to San Dieguito Park. The place was already popping with activity and the first twinge of nerves began to build. We made our way down a ridiculous dirt hill that wound back and forth. I couldn’t help wonder who was going to drag me back up after the race. After an hour of pre-race warm-up, which mainly involved trying to huddle together in the sun, we were ready to race! As the gun sounded it was remarkable to see the impulse of nearly every runner to immediately manipulate an electronic device rather than start running. The first mile Anna and I ran together, but as we neared the first turn, we parted ways. During the Long Beach Marathon, we ran together longer, but one of my first few songs was Eye of The Tiger, so I couldn’t contain myself.

1 hour and 52 minutes later…

To make a long story short, we finished the race. Although I felt good throughout, as I was given my medal I started to feel a bit dehydrated. The feeling was similar to waking up on the floor in a frat house. I had a bad headache, my eyes felt sunken into the back of my head, and after I started eating a banana my neck began to cramp. In hindsight, I probably should have asked for an IV from the medical staff foreshadowing), but I figured a few bananas would do the trick.

We get home Annapurna’s house and the most exciting crime-detective-drama case was unfolding outside of her house. There were cop cars everywhere! A guy had stolen a car, driven it nearly off a canyon cliff, and ran down into the canyon to evade the police. Rather than solve the case myself, I felt like I should probably lie down.

After a nap, a little lunch and a ton of water, it was dinner time. It was no ordinary dinner mind you; it was Valentine’s Day eve! We went to Sea Rocket Bistro and although I didn’t eat too much, it was great. We ordered a variety of different tapas, clams, cheese, meatballs, meats.

We left the restaurant and I still wasn’t feeling great. We get back to her house and in two seconds BAM I throw-up everything! I will save you the graphic details, but at midnight on Sunday, I was just checking out of the hospital. Thankfully, I had Annapurna, her family, and my family to come hang out and make sure I was ok. Once I had an IV in me, I felt a lot better. There were no serious problems and I was told to hydrate better, what a concept. In the end, Anna and I are retiring for a while with the half-marathons and in search of a new hobby. Any suggestions?

“Whoever controls the media controls the mind”

Informed citizenry is an essential component of democracy. If the people are truly in the driver’s seat of the American political machine, naturally, you hope they have their license. In America, educating democratic citizens on political issues makes them more capable of electing representatives who will serve their interests. Given its importance, is it working?

American media is a for-profit industry, where large organizations compete for your readership, viewership, and support. More accurately, these large media corporations are more focused on selling advertising than unbiased news coverage.
This for-profit model is not without drawbacks.  Corporations have learned that the news is often boring. As a result, they have discovered that entertainment is the true source of profit. Your modern “political” news source is heavily focused on political scandal, outrageous sound bites, and extremely polarized viewpoints.

Authoritarian regimes on the other hand, have state run media, which means that all news is filtered through state bureaucracy. As a result, there is no watchdog searching for government corruption or wasteful spending. The citizens of this country are subject to the indoctrination of their government.  Often times, a political voice, one that disagrees with the ruling party, goes unheard.

Now the question must be asked, are we informed as citizens or is our media failing us? Although it’s quite obvious that America does not have the most informed citizenry, I don’t think we are destined for peril quite yet, but the consolidation of news media is not helping. If the media is controlled by fewer and fewer sources, fewer and fewer people are having an influence on our political minds.

How can we be saved by news? News is everywhere! You can read 10 regional newspapers, watch local, national, and international news on 10 channels, and scrounge the web for smaller news sources. But, where do you go for solid information? Facts and analysis on one channel may be are extremely different from another. One source paints a candidate as the villain, while the other hails him as a hero. 

The invention of the internet has changed the way news media is delivered, hopefully for the better. People have access to media voices that they may have never heard. This diversity of news media, which can reverse or halt a trend of consolidation, seems to be a great push for democracy. As long as fresh voices are being injected into a realm of media, all sides of the political argument can be waged, leaving it up to the voter to decide

Go Greek

All realms of politics begin with a question. Here is one that I would like to explore: how do babies learn to speak? Babies learn to speak by taking in information, recognizing the patterns within them, like their own name or the sound of the mother’s voice, and then adapting to those sounds. Eventually, they understand the complex patterns and intricacies of their native language and begin formulating their own speech. Most importantly, babies come into the world with the ability to learn any language in the world, only their environment dictates which one they take up.

At this point, I expect you to be thinking, what the hell are you talking about? Political socialization, or how we form our political views, works in the same way. Our political views are indoctrinated into our minds by the world around us. We take in this information from a number of sources, our family, our school, the media, and our religion. We naturally become deeply ingrained in our political beliefs. There is a reason you are advised against arguing politics with people, you are unlikely to find much success.

Why then, do people get so mad when talking politics? In my view, just as you don’t have much influence over the language you speak, your favorite foods, and your sexual preference, you don’t really have too much control of your political beliefs. Agree to disagree becomes the only possible solution. Instead, the rhetoric turns derogatory and no resolution is made.

Instead, go Greek! By that I mean be like Plato, who always tried to see understand things from the opposite point of view. So before you go crazy in your next political argument, remember to go Greek.