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Do Not Rain On Our Run Parade

Erin and Ellen are planning on thinking about considering signing up for a half marathon.

Ellen: And now we wait.

Erin: For what?

Ellen: For our friends to rain on our run parade.

Erin: Do I get to be Barbara Streisand or do you?

Ellen: Once again,  WHAT are you talking about?

Erin: Your real IQ may be Mensa-worthy, but your pop culture aptitude is a serious cause for concern. Now I’m not only worried about you—I fear for your daughters as well.

Have you really not seen Funny Girl? It is not only one of MY favorite movies of all times—it’s a bona fide, rock solid, true classic. I LOVE me some Fanny Brice.

Ellen: STILL not getting the connection.

Erin: Hellooooo!! The song you referenced? “Don’t Rain On My Parade” is THE song from that movie. Ask any drag queen.

 

Ellen: I’d rather ask a drag queen about Streisand movies than ask our friends what they think about us running a half marathon. Can you say holy-debbie-downer-overreacting-out-of-left-field-dogpile?

Erin: Not three times fast. But our tweeps are so supportive! Seriously, I send one little tweet about lacing up new running shoes and I can barely tear myself away from the computer. It’s a virtual lovefest!

Ellen: Sure, the internet is super supportive. . . until we get our integrity speared by passive aggressive emails or our comments bombed or an icky post dropped onto our Facebook page.

Erin: Oh, yeah, THAT.  But to be fair to our solid three dimensional friends, I think that their two and three cents comes from a deep well of love and, at least in my case, a fair amount of concern.

How could you doubt us? We ooze athleticism!

Ellen: Okay, but I don’t need ANY more negativity worming its way into my head. I myself can’t believe that my legs are going to make the distance. I’ve felt the adrenaline boost of a 5K, but in my day-to-day running it seems far away. My legs always feel like lead.

Erin: What is this adrenaline rush of which you speak? The only 5K I have ever run was for my kids’ school, and while there was a fair amount of dramatic bouncing and surging, in the end it would not qualify as a legit race mostly because my competition was nuns in full habits.

But here is the ugly truth: I hate running. I have to wear two bras, I’m slow, and my hair fights me—viciously. So in the end, my chest hurts, my legs are sore, and I have hair clinging to my eyeball. It is sadism at its best.

They are spry and have God on their side.

Ellen: So maybe our friends are doing us a favor by questioning our abilities to run this race. You certainly haven’t presented a very good case for yourself.

Erin: Hold on a hamstring stretching second! I’m a new woman. This Swimmer Girl has found her inner Runner Girl. I may not be a superstar, but I’m committed. And to quote our girl, Fanny, I am ready to march my band out. I am ready to bang my drum.

Ellen: Okay Fanny, you may need to be committed somewhere because it sounds crazy that you are running at all if you don’t like it. Why are you doing it?

Erin: TV Tag.

Ellen: Are you even going to make me ask you?

Erin: Oh, you don’t remember TV Tag? Google it. Seriously, did we grow up in the same country? The same era? The same DECADE??

Ellen: I KNOW what TV Tag is. I don’t know how this relates to your Chariots of Fire saga.

Erin: I broke my leg in seventh grade playing TV Tag. My competitive streak goaded my athletic ability beyond its limits. I jumped a shrub and the shrub won.

But in all seriousness, that injury changed my life. My ankle has permanent problems, People, the kind that inspires a doctor to prescribe running as the ONLY way to strengthen it.

So here I am today, chugging along, marking my miles, and trying to dispel the myth that running is not my thing.
 Again, don’t tell me not to fly, I’ve simply got to. That’s from Funny Girl, you Cultural Wasteland Refugee. You know, in case you were wondering.

Ellen: Again with the Funny Girl, but here’s my deal: I love to run even though my body rebels. I have osteoarthritis behind my patellas, chronic plantar fasciitis, and an ankle tendon that has been surgically repaired. I try to console myself that each foot strike strengthens my hips. A broken hip can kill you.

Erin: Yikes.You had me osteo, and now I will never look at a flight of stairs the same way again. But if I’m riding the Sadistic Train, you’re the engineer. Why do YOU run?

Ellen: Running makes me feel like an athlete. I was always the smart girl, and while I played sports, it was never really my niche. I was the smart girl on the tennis team, which is a very different category than being the smart tennis player.
I vividly remember wanting to get up and throw on my shoes to jog around the block. But I didn’t feel comfortable doing it. It just wasn’t something my family did.

Erin: So that explains why you force . . .

Ellen: Empower . . .

Erin: Your girls to run a 5K with you each year.

Ellen: As Jellybean (11) puts it, “I can’t even complain about being made to do this because everyone says, ‘Ooo, what a great mother you are for doing this with your kids.’”

Erin: She’ll thank you later. 

Ellen: It might take a couple of decades, like when she hits the “Fifteen After Forty”

Erin: Preach it, Sister. It’s so much like the “Freshman Fifteen”—but without the great skin and rocking social life.

Ellen: Yeah, my mind is not as crystal clear as it was in college either. Running helps to clear it. In a thirty minute run, I work out blog posts, scheduling dilemmas, and parenting challenges.

Erin: And let’s not forget that it just FEELS good to achieve goals. 

Ellen: There are no gold stars for folding laundry.

Erin: There’s not even gratitude, although sometimes the teens will give me an appreciative hug when I finish one of their loads for them. But running is a whole other story.

After I started my 10K training and ran my first five miles in a little under an hour, I was so completely psyched, I felt like I had just won a race. Or that pretty gold star. 

Ellen: You are rocking your training, but you know what has convinced me that we can move running a half marathon from the “Planning On Thinking About Considering” category to the “We WILL Do This” category?

Erin: New shoes? The knowledge that we’re not getting any younger? A lifetime supply of Motrin? Better jogging bras??

Ellen: BATS!

Erin: And you complained that my Funny Girl reference was vague? Even after YOU brought up the song. . .

Ellen: Just listen. I was running the other night at dusk when bats started swooping down from the treetops. My feet ate up the miles as if jet engines had replaced my Asics. I had forgotten what adrenaline felt like. It felt like success.

Erin:Well, now all I need to do is find us a nighttime marathon, a threat of deadly disease, or some impending apocalyptic disaster to make your running dream come true.

Ellen: OUR dream. We can do this. Together.

Erin (singing): “Get ready for me love, ’cause I’m a “comer”/I simply gotta march, my heart’s a drummer/Nobody, no, nobody, is gonna rain on our parade!

Ellen: Good grief! Maybe we’ll just high-five each other at the finish line.

Would it be awkward to do this after crossing the finish line?

 

And of course we’ve found some help on the interwebz.

Ellen swears by the Chi Running technique to reduce pain and injury.

Erin has gotten her training groove on at Marathon Rookie.

 

But if you need a little inspiration beyond two 40 somethings hauling their butts over 13.1 miles and the comic relief that might provide, here’s a little ebook Britely to help give you a boost. Go ahead and flip through it, it won’t take you away from this site. Watch out for the zombies!

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The Script For Saying “No” With Style

Ellen: I need a little more “No” in my life.

Erin: Well this conversation is starting off in a happy place. What does that even mean?

Ellen: I am drowning in “back to school.” It’s all flooding in: the schedules, the homework, and worst of all, the requests for my time filling up my inbox. My summer only ended 15 minutes ago, but my plate is piled so high, it looks like a Biggest Loser contestant fell off the wagon.

Erin: I hear you. I ‘m still pouring sand out of my shoes while trying to dole out sandwiches and loose leaf.

But I have two words for you. Nancy Reagan.

Ellen: I’m giving YOU two minutes to explain your ridiculous self. Go.

Ellen: Erin’s idea of a timely reference. Erin: TIMELESS! There is nothing wrong with timeless!

Erin: Think Nancy Reagan circa 1986. Think red dress. Nancy sitting on the couch with President Reagan imploring millions of kids to “Just Say No”. . .

Ellen: To drugs. You get that she was talking about drugs; which is what I’m going to need if you don’t get to the point soon. Do you realize you just made a 26 year old reference? More importantly, how is this related to my overloaded schedule?

Erin: You really need a better appreciation of the classics. I’m saying to channel your inner Nancy and just say “No”.

Ellen: I’m going to channel something in a minute, but you did get my brain churning again. Man, I am rusty from the summer. But YOU don’t even remember that you’ve already shared the “How to Say No” technique that, no joke, changed my life.

Erin: Hold on there, Sister, I’m not sure I can stand all this love. But what are YOU talking about?

Ellen: Why do you never embrace the GENIUS of this technique? It is a SCRIPT for saying “No”! It brilliantly removes the awkward!

Erin: I guess I’m just so used to using it.

Ellen: Okay, I’ll give you that. When you’ve been foolish enough to display competence in distributing Goldfish crackers and juice boxes like we have, you get placed on the “Call to Volunteer” short list.

Erin: If only all the volunteer jobs were that easy. Don’t get me wrong, I support volunteering, but maybe not everything is worthy of my time…

Ellen: Oh, I hear ya. Chairing the dunk tank at the school carnival? I’m there!

Erin: Selling Girl Scout cookies? Meh, I’ll do it.

Maybe this guy does need some love. Or dignity. Ok, we can all agree that he needs something.

Ellen: Knitting scooper cozies for underprivileged dog walkers? Pretty sure I’m busy until three weeks past forever.

Erin: We jest, but that’s why you have to slip into that Nancy alter-ego once in a while. While most of what we get asked to do is very worthwhile. . .

Ellen: And it’s usually asked by people we highly respect. . .

Erin: We still only have 24 hours in our day like everyone else.

Ellen: That is why this technique is so magical. It shows respect while still making it clear that you really mean no. There’s nothing worse as a chairperson than being strung along with maybes and half-hearted commitments.

Erin: Well, I can think of a couple of worse things….

Ellen: Save it for another post. I AM going to embrace the genius and present without further ado. . .

How To Channel Your Nancy and Graciously Say “No”

1. Thank the person. (We know, right!) “Thank you for asking me to knit scooper cozies.”

  • We definitely don’t want you to be insincere, but this generally stuns people into silence.

2. Compliment them. “You do such a great job of making sure dog walkers are comfortable and stylish.”

  • Once again, sincerity is key. This person probably does need to be thanked. They are giving their time for something they believe in.

3. Compliment them again and then just say no. “And while you do such a wonderful job, I must say no because I don’t have the time to devote to your project.”

  • This is to the point, honest, and does not leave any wheedle room.

Ellen: No more hemming and hawing! No more stumbling over excuses! And more importantly, no more looking like or feeling like a donkey diaper for saying no.

Erin: But the key to making this part of your arsenal is to practice.

Ellen: Stop laughing because we are not kidding. Every good actor has to practice her script. Those words have to roll off of your tongue for them to be sincere and to not leave further room for begging.

Erin: Now if you will excuse me, I’m going to go call my sister and see if SHE appreciates my Nancy Reagan reference.

Ellen: Yeah.

someecards.com - Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms present Nerdy Girl Funny

 

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