Last week I lost a scavenger hunt. Well, some employee at Parrot Jungle lost it
for me because instead of running around the park as the organizers
@Hispanicize intended, I found a well-meaning teenager who could give me the answers. We had about twelve questions to answer and
one photo to take. The teenager answered
ten, Joe the boys and I got the other two, while some dude took our picture. We ran back in record speed to our assigned
meeting place. It was Memorial Day weekend
in Miami; it was HOT and I was dripping in sweat but content to have won. The boys were ecstatic and Joe, in all
fairness, was a good sport but couldn’t care less.
Then the other family arrived and the person in charge of
our hunt reviews the answers. It is not
over until we know all the answers were correct. They kept us in a cliff hanging suspense for
about fifteen minutes while the other teams who played the game as intended
returned to our base. I overheared one
of the organizers that one of the questions was incorrect and I had a feeling
it was one of ours. After all, didn’t I
put all of our eggs on one teenager’s basket? And one carrying a Macaw to boot!
Picture Needed For Our Scavenger Hunt |
And then I turn the finger on me and maybe the one who is
afraid of failure is me. Ok, not maybe …
I know I am afraid of failing even if
I have had many failures in my life. But
my failures in adulthood have more to do with “you win some you lose some”
situations. Oh well, you can’t make it to the podium in every triathlon. Oh well, they don’t make that car in the
color I like. These are different than venturing
into unknown territory and sticking my neck out for something. I’d rather fight where the odds are good. I play blackjack, not roulette. But what do I want to teach my kids? To try hard only when there is a good chance
of winning or to go all out?
I heard this poem the other day and it got me thinking:
Life should not
be a journey to the grave
with the intention of arriving safely,
in an attractive and well preserved body.
But rather to skid in sideways,
body thoroughly used up,
totally worn out
screaming “woo hoo” what a ride.
In general I don’t like rides and I don’t like
rollercoasters. Give me predictability,
rules and order and I tend to work well within that framework so here is one
big step in venturing into unknown territory.
I want to do an Ironman.
And I want to do it on a November weekend in Panama City, Florida in
2013. Did I really just write that? I guess I did.
As of today, I am totally unprepared: physically,
emotionally and financially. There are
many costs that go above and beyond dollars such as the toll on my family, the
toll on me, the actual riding a bike outside of my house (you can read what I
am talking about here).
Before I finalize the paragraph I almost talk myself out of it. But I must
remember the skid. I want not only to
skid, but I want to skid sideways. And
yes, I could credit card a new bike, and credit card the race costs but the mom
in me feels like those resources should go to my kids. If I am going to follow this pipe dream, I am
going to work for it. And if I fail, my
hope would be to fail epically but have my kids watch me pick myself back
up. I want to try.
And if you want to follow my journey to Panama City, Florida
… come visit me at this new blog: www.triathlonmami.blogspot.com. My journey
is not just as a triathlete but as a mom, wife, teacher, Latina and all the
other roles I play (and that I know you play too). So please click now and become a follower and
help me get closer to being an IronWOman (I can’t help it, my Wellesley
education won’t let me leave it at Ironman).
I am learning that if you are going to stick your neck out,
then you have to work to not get it chopped off. To get to the Ironman competition I must
train. To finance it, I must write. To be happy in the process, I must be open to
risk. No one can do it for me. So maybe the lesson to my kids today is that
next time, to have a chance of winning the scavenger hunt, we shouldn’t rely on
random teenagers but do it ourselves.