Overtly and consciously preoccupied with keeping busy today. Started early with some work from Herkimer Coffee in the U-District, followed by a coffee meetup with someone with whom I run in the same circles online, but who I had never met in person. Hello William Carleton, Esq.! Great to finally get to know you IRL and trade blogging tips and tricks. If you are a startup junky like me, you’ll enjoy Bill’s stuff at http://www.wac6.com/, and he’s syndicated on Seattle 2.0 and BigStartups as well (and a couple other places too, I think). Nice guy. Good writer. Good at his job. All in all, a great guy to get to know.
Next: a phone call re: side project, which is in that last-minute get-some-stuff-out-the-door phase – a normal coordination/tension/communication funhouse, nothing unusual. It’s actually sort of fun to work in a completely virtual environment now and then.
Keeping busy…
Appointments, the second of which was with my new eye doctor, who looks and acts sort of like a cross between John Goodman and … another actor whose face and voice I can totally envision, but whose name (and roles) escape me for the moment. He tells me I have a scar on each cornea. I’m thinking to myself as he tells me this, “In the grand scheme of things, given everything that’s going on right now, a scar on my cornea is really about as insignificant as a grain of sand in the desert.” But I suppose I should take his advice and swap out my contacts more often. I go back in a few weeks for a fitting.
Picked up a check, which is always nice, especially considering the source. Deposited it. Thought like a VC and wished it were for 10X.
Went to the gym and busted my ass on the treadmill. This is my last hard workout before this weekend’s 5K, and I ran HARD. I did intervals, and ran as fast on the treadmill as I think I ever have. To put this in context, though, consider I didn’t start running on treadmills until after college. I think I could pull a 6:30 or 7-minute mile right now, but for the 5K I’m shooting for a 9 minute per mile pace. If I get that, I’ll be happy. It’s a baseline, and the point is to get a time under my belt that I can improve upon. I’m already thinking about signing up for the Jingle Bell Run next month.
Got blown off for a conference call with a new business acquaintance, which almost never happens anymore. I think this is because your reputation for things like reliability, promptness, follow-through are all so exposed in this new online era. Perhaps this person got hit by a bus. I don’t know. For the record: I hope he didn’t get hit by a bus. I’m just saying it was strange.
Back to Starbucks to work (keeping busy!) and to blog a bit, and consider an upcoming change of venue on Friday that is being imposed/offered/granted/thrust upon me. It is what it is, and I am going to try to take the attitude of making lemonade out of it, despite all sorts of complicated feelings I have about the subject. What can one do, but do one’s best? Exactly.
Friday I’m back to work at my normal job, and it should be a fairly relaxed day. I know my team has kept things humming along during my absence this week.
This weekend will be a period of huge adjustment for me and I hope to get through it mostly whole and mostly unscathed and mostly happy. Of course by Sunday I’ll have written six additional blog posts. Speaking of blogging – someone close to me told me that my blog was “weird” and that if they were just getting to know me, they would think I was weird too. I wonder, dear reader, if you feel the same way? Or is that an opinion shared only by those who don’t spend a lot of time online? Is the near-real-time, overly-exposed side of me that appears in this blog a refreshing bit of authenticity, or is it (to borrow a formerly trendy term) an overshare? Curious to hear what others think.









