Tuesday, November 21, 2006

CONGRATULATIONS 3S FOR OUR 1ST YEAR ANNIVERSARY


More photos from the party!
http://www.flickr.com/photos/21906931@N00/

Hello guys,

I want to congratulate you all for a great 1st year specially to Juan Meza for the great job he has done and to all our sponsors, without them all this would not have been possible.

Thanks to Swim, Bike and Run for the great party on Saturday, also to Ricardo and his band Manik (great Pink Floyd sound BTW). Thank you very much to our sponsor Accelerade and all of you that brought food.

Great job to everybody that participated in a race this year and to our top 3 on the 2006 rankings: Boris Fernandez, Juan Meza and Sandro del Bosco.

Congratulations to the 2007 board:
President: Juan Meza
Vice President: Rod Lauredo
Secretary: Ricardo Camacho
Treasure: Tak Osawa
Training Coordinator: Venus Vega
Marketing and communications: Joaquin Duro

To all let’s keep training to have even a better year on 2007.

Un abrazo,

Joaquin Duro
Marketing and Media Director

Friday, November 03, 2006

You laugh because I am different, I laugh because you are all the same …

I read this on a bumper sticker yesterday while riding my bike in Virginia Key. It struck me as a good answer to give to people when they question your belief system or way of life. Triathletes are often accused of being mad or insane for all of the training they do and their tendencies not to drink or socialize that much. Lately, one of the questions that I have been facing is the “Are you sick?” or “You look so skinny!” This is very good for triathletes and runners but to other people in the USA it is a sign of not being a big, strapping American. In my opinion, the majority of people in America are overweight, (and by the way, it is not just my opinion) so losing some weight will benefit you not only in your sports but also in your life.

I was talking the other day to a really good runner, who is now in his forties. He told me how he used to run so fast in college because he weighed 125 pounds and was 5’11” tall. “ Now I am one-hundred sixty, too heavy for faster cadence of the legs.” When I asked him what happened, he told me, “too much junk food.” For me it was sad because this athlete really enjoys being out there and competing, and at the same time he felt hopeless about his situation. The extra weight really puts a lot of pressure on his cardiovascular system and joints. Imagine running while carrying seven extra five-pound sacks of potatoes! So what can he do? The advice that I gave him is the same that I will give you.

There is so much junk food out there. So you eat a little today, some tomorrow and after a while it starts to add up. By the end of the year you have added a pound or two if you are lucky (some people add more) and after ten years … well you do the math. So you get used to this new, larger you accepting it as the way it should be. You know as you age you are supposed to gain weight and be less active, right? I don’t think so. I have seen many people become healthier in their forties than when they were in their twenties. I am in better shape now weighing 158 pounds than when I was twenty-five and weighed in at a whopping, muscle-bound 180 pounds. My friend, Omar, certainly is a lot fitter now than when we started running together six years ago. He has lost twenty pounds and now weighs 132 pounds, running a 5:30 mile like it is nothing. Omar today follows a raw food diet that is really paying dividends for him. I am not at his level yet, but I certainly watch very closely what I eat. I eat foods that are very high in water content like vegetables and fruits. I also eat lots of grains like quinoa (very high in protein) and all kinds of beans. I started controlling my food choices. There was a time back in those 180 lb. days that I could not go through a day without eating ice cream! Eating healthier has a domino effect. The healthier you eat, the easier it is to make that choice. You are actually programming your body to want healthy food instead of junk. Now that I am in the off-season I am choosing to go down in my weight instead of up, like most people do. I am choosing to commit and be disciplined. You have the same choice. A few quick facts before you eat that next bowl of ice cream: about 60% of America is now overweight with high cholesterol and people that maintain the same healthy weight for long periods of time live healthier lives than those who do not. Now it is up to you… dare to be different. Dare to be more fit and healthy.

Boris Fernandez