Friday, October 31

To Trick or to Treat?

Of Halloweens Past
I used to love Halloween as a kid, though it conflicted with my Sunday School upbringing. (I will never forgive mother for buying me a plastic costume in grade one from Bargain Harold's. I was the devil. And the mask was plastic and stunk of chemicals, with the tiniest holes for sight and breathing).

Nevertheless I just adored the candy, (still do).
My brother would go trick or treating all hours of the night going to countless neighbourhoods, and coming back home with trash bags full of candy.

My sisters and I were much to young and were only allowed to go to the houses around our block. Our candy would last a week or two at best.

Brother Sam's would last for months. But he always hid the garbage bags in the basement where his room was. We would take shifts uprooting the basement and his room, but could never find it.








Our only luck came one year when he carelessly left the bag under the stairs in the open. But by then it was full of reject candy. You know the kind, Kerr's toffee in the black and orange wrapper, Rockets, or the cheap people who gave home made candy apples...Why?






...Beware of house number 1437!



Halloween of Today
I went to the grocery store to see what I would give the kiddies and I saw a bag of assorted candies cost $11.99!

Oh hell to the naw.

I refused to pay that much for people's children to rot their teeth. Plus it goes against my code of good eating lately, why should I be the only one chewing on a carrot stick.

So I decided to buy a bag of assorted vegetables, i.e brussel sprouts, yellow zucchini and red potatoes. Much more nutritious and the whole batch cost less than $1.99/pound.

So when the goblins and ghost show up at my door talking about "Trick or Treat", Ill gladly do both, and trick them with treats chalked full of vitamins and antioxidants!

How 1,500 plus inmates in the Philippines prepare for Fright Night





Happy Tricks and Treats!
Perdita

Wednesday, October 29

Don' Worry Be Sappy!

Sad + Happy that is what I am these days.

I am excited about my ten hour drive this weekend back to my training base in Illinois. But sad about leaving my friends and family and the medical team that have been my life line since the spring. But I know this is what we have all been working for, to get me back on track and healthy for fall base training--the most important component of my training.

More than anything I am lamenting no more access to West Indian food! Despite my healthy eating these days, I just like to look at it, smell it even.












Also I sense some nervousness about how much pain I will be in after running hill workouts, "twice a week" I'm told, as opposed to the usual one.








Getting into real shape is gonna suck, but I am ready to embrace it.









In nine years I have not been home for this long of a stretch. I have carved out a little place in everyone's week. Now I am taking my sunny presence from them.

- The Canada Post man who has come to know my radiant smile...Ha!

- Osmow owner of "Osmow's" who makes the best chicken Schwarmas in Ontario, is gonna wonder where his little hurdler went.

- And I can't imagine the disappointment of the old guy at Krispy Kreme who recognized me and gave me a dozen donuts and made me leave quickly without having to pay.


My friend J, says once I get there Ill be fine. She is right. I hate leaving people, but once I get my solitude, I'm in my element.

So I am living up my last few days in town, I have a mani and pedi appointment with my mama this week. As well as her favorite pass time, bingo!












Toronto is great, but I do my best training and find my best focus in a small college town south of its border.















Sad about leaving, but happy about reaching another milestone.
Dita-P

Monday, October 27

Reports From Vancity

I am back from Vancity, it was pretty chilly there for workouts, which surprised me. But I bundled up and went at it like a champ.

I used the week mainly as a regeneration week. Doing my physio exercises in the morning, then getting my workouts in the afternoon, then got treated in the evening. I saw one of my Docs for a routine reassessment of my foot, and took some video footage of my running mechanics.

As far as my body I am getting a lot of my musculature back pretty quickly. My left calf is still minimally smaller, however based on research it can take a year to get back some strength gains in certain individuals in that part of the body. Hence the reason I am isolating parts of my left side (glutes, hammy, plantar foot muscles, etc) to bring them up to par with my right side. This is done through very tedious exercises that bore me. But alas it must be done.

My running mechanics look fine, apart from my left hip that was rotated forward. The treatment sessions brought a lot of balance back, and I noticed immediate differences in my movements when they were completed. The movement of my foot was good, (the biggest concern after a cast).

Once again I was told to be smart with my transitions and to change the volume, type, intensity, frequency of what I am doing properly.

So my trip to Vancity officially marks my last week in Toronto, it was good to get the once-over and confidence that things are going well. With that knowledge and the time line going as planned, I will be leaving for my training base in Illinois at the end of this month.

This is what I have wanted, but I can't help but feel "SAPPY" (Sad+Happy). :(

More on this later...off to work.

TTYL,
P

Wednesday, October 22

Not 19, Not 29

I’m in Vancouver for the week, visiting my Chiropractor, “The Bur”. It’s a long way to come for treatment sessions but he’s that good.

I can’t count the number of times I have come to visit over the years, sometimes it’s for as little as 48 hours. It depends on the time of year, his schedule and what my body decides to do with itself.

My time here is always very reflective, my surroundings induce this. No TV, perched on top of a mountain with an abysmal phone signal, surrounded by the ocean, bears and 'cyotes.













All I can do is climb a mountain stare out at the wilderness and think.













Today’s deep thoughts:

In the last few years my visits to Port Moody, BC in need of the best treatment an elite body can find have become more frequent. “The Bur” made the mistake of misrepresenting my age as he picked me up from YVR the other night, “Preddi, how old are you now, 29?”.

Ugh. I looked at him cross eyed from the passenger seat.

Annoyed. Feathers ruffled.

“Excuse you? We both know I am 28 and some months, so please stop the nonsense”.

But the truth is I am getting older. Many of the things I could get away with when I was a 19 year old college freshman at Illinois, I don’t dare reenact at 28.

For instance I would show up for practice in college and me and a certain partner in crime, would pick and choose which elements of the warm up we would participate in.

“Let’s see:
50m of Side shuffles?...Pass
60m of B-skips? Hmm...mebbe.
40 Lunges? I’ll give you 3—my best offer”.

Crime partner and I, would find great pleasure in this, and laugh our heads off silly, going through the motions but never truly completing 50% of the warm up. Then we would hop into our spikes, ready to do the hardest workout of the week, and complete it unscathed.

A hazardous result that only fortified our intent to do it again the next time.
(This would go on for semester after semester until I finally got my act together as an upper classman).

But, I can’t imagine myself pulling that stunt now, forget dedication and accountability. I am talking about ruptures and stupidity.

Admittedly my body doesn’t have the same resilience it did a decade ago. The approach I take with it has changed. I am more careful with it, respectful of it. Of course my craft depending on it is the main reason.





My coach stresses the importance of taking care of the “little things”. The little things are what tack on years of quality races to your career. The cool down, the diet, a good sleeping pattern, quality treatment, ice baths, managing ones personal life, and "Perdita avoiding Krispy Kreme".



Not doing the little things catch up with you. Not when you’re 19, 21 or 25...but when you have been doing this longer than you thought you would.













Relax. By no means am I announcing the twilight!












As it stands hurdlers get better with age. As our natural speed, power and explosion decline, (ala ageing 100m sprinters), if we can hone in more thoroughly on the strong technical component of our event, we can race, and be competitive into our thirties.
(Putting aside such things as motivation, injury avoidance, priorities, etc.).

















So, without me knowing it I have adopted the mantra of “The little Things”. As if subconsciously sensing this shift from neophyte to expert, I made the transition silently.















One day I could care less about my cooling down, then the next I was manic about it.

I have been in track and field ever since I was nine years old. That is along time to demand excellence from one body. Imagine the number of repetitions, high levels of intensity, stress and taxation bestowed on a single frame. Mine.

So I guess a trip to Vancouver, with its thought provoking effects, is part of the little things. After all I may not be 19 anymore, but I certainly am not 29!

Peace out,
Perdeets

Top 100 Canadian Sporting Moments

An article about a book chronicling the greatest 100 sports moments in Canadian history. I expect a lot of hockey, but perhaps it will surprise me.

Source: eyeopener.com
Date: Tuesday, October 21, 2008
By line: Erin Valois


Rye grad picks 100 greatest sports moments
James Bisson’s favourite Canadian sports memory is the 1987 Canada Cup, a tournament packed with superstars and amazing hockey.

“It was the only time you could see Wayne Gretzky play with Mario Lemieux,” he says.

“I remember watching it when I was 10 years old, running around in my basement and screaming every time Canada scored. I was grounded.”

Although this moment plays clearly in Bisson’s head, not every Canadian knows about one of the most famous hockey games in the country’s history. So the 31-year-old Ryerson journalism graduate decided to write a book about Canada’s proudest sports moments.

Bisson is the writer of “100 Greatest Canadian Sports Moments,” released in September. He graduated from Ryerson in 2003 and works at the Canadian Press as a reporter-editor.

He wrote the book because he says people love talking and debating about sports, but no one had written this type of book about Canadian sports before. The biggest challenge was finding a way to keep readers interested in events that happened more than fifty years ago.

“We had to find a fresh way to present the information,” he says. “It helped to get new quotes and perspectives from the athletes.”

He started the project by making his own list of top Canadian sports moments.
Bisson created the final list for his book through input from a panel of sports journalists from various media outlets, including the Canadian Press and The Score.

“One person’s opinion is only one person’s opinion. I didn’t want this to be a vanity project, so it was good to have the panelists,” he says.

“I believe every moment in the book is justified, there isn’t any filler.”
The book is filled with colourful pages of Canada’s top athletes and their achievements. It’s easy to understand, especially for amateur sports fans, as Bisson clearly explains each significant moment.

From #75 — NBA franchises in Vancouver and Toronto, to #3 — the Blue Jays’ second World Series win, the debate swirling around Bisson’s choices for top Canadian moments will be the focus of drunken pub arguments for years to come.
And Bisson doesn’t just recognize recent Canadian moments — he added a couple throwbacks to the mix.

“One of the best moments is about Percy Williams who won two gold medals in track and field in 1928. I think the influence of television really dictated the book because people remember what they see,” he says.

“It’s great to see people remember something that happened 80 years ago. I think the people who voted for this moment to be significant made it special.”

Bisson says he’s interested in updating the book in a few years.

He says the Olympics in Vancouver will create moments in Canadian sport history that deserve recognition.

But right now, he’s just enjoying the response to his first book.

“It’s great to see all these people share their stories and see their passion for sports,” he says.

“I love touring around Canada and hearing people talk about the book and debate about different moments.”

Sunday, October 19

"Wait For it...Wait for it"

I got this in an email. I wasn't going to let it play all the way thru, because I saw the interview already.
But I was told: "Wait for it....wait for it!", you do the same, it's hilar!

Ciao,
Dita


Thursday, October 16

My daily read, passing it on today because it's pretty interesting.

Surprising Signs You'll Live Longer Than You Think
Source: health.msn.com (10.17.08)
By Line: By Sandra Gordon

1. Your Mom Had You Young
If she was under age 25, you're twice as likely to live to 100 as someone born to an older mom, according to University of Chicago scientists. They suspect that younger moms' best eggs go first to fertilization, thus producing healthier offspring.

2. You're a Tea Lover

Both green and black teas contain a concentrated dose of catechins, substances that help blood vessels relax and protect your heart. In a study of more than 40,500 Japanese men and women, those who drank 5 or more cups of green tea every day had the lowest risk of dying from heart disease and stroke. Other studies involving black tea showed similar results.

You really need only one or two cups of tea daily to start doing your heart some good—just make sure it's a fresh brew. Ready-to-drink teas (the kind you find in the supermarket beverage section) don't offer the same health benefits. "Once water is added to tea leaves, their catechins degrade within a few days," says Jeffrey Blumberg, Ph.D., a professor of nutrition science and policy at Tufts University. Also, some studies show that adding milk may eliminate tea's protective effects on the cardiovascular system, so stick to just lemon or honey.

3. You'd Rather Walk


"Fit" people—defined as those who walk for about 30 minutes a day—are more likely to live longer than those who walk less, regardless of how much body fat they have, according to a recent study of 2,603 men and women.



Similarly, overweight women can improve their heart health by adding just 10 minutes of activity to their daily routine, says recent research. So take a walk on your lunch hour, do laps around the field while your kid is at soccer practice—find ways to move a little more, every day.

4. You Skip Soda (Even Diet)
Scientists in Boston found that drinking one or more regular or diet colas every day doubles your risk of metabolic syndrome—a cluster of conditions, including high blood pressure, elevated insulin levels, and excess fat around the waist, that increase your chance of heart disease and diabetes.


One culprit could be the additive that gives soda its caramel color, which upped the risk of metabolic syndrome in animal studies. Scientists also speculate that soda drinkers regularly expose their taste buds to natural or artificial sweeteners, conditioning themselves to prefer and crave sweeter foods, which may lead to weight gain, says Vasan S. Ramachandran, M.D., a professor of medicine at Boston University School of Medicine and the study's lead researcher.











Better choices: Switch to tea if you need a caffeine hit. If it's fizz you're after, try sparkling water with a splash of juice. By controlling blood pressure and cholesterol levels, preventing diabetes, and not smoking, you can add 6 to 9 1/2 healthy years to your life.

5. You Have Strong Legs


Lower-body strength translates into good balance, flexibility, and endurance. As you get older, those attributes are key to reducing your risk of falls and injuries—particularly hip fractures, which often quickly lead to declining health. Up to 20 percent of hip-fracture patients die within one year because of complications from the trauma. "Having weak thigh muscles is the number-one predictor of frailty in old age," says Robert Butler, M.D., president of the International Longevity Center–USA in New York City. To strengthen them, target your quads with the "phantom chair" move, says Joan Price, author of The Anytime, Anywhere Exercise Book (Adams, 2007).



Here's how: Stand with back against wall. Slowly walk feet out and slide back down until you're in a seated position, ensuring knees aren't beyond toes and lower back is pressed against wall. Hold until your thighs tell you, 'Enough!' Do this daily, increasing your hold by a few seconds each time.

6. You Eat Purple Food


Concord grapes, blueberries, red wine: They all get that deep, rich color from polyphenols—compounds that reduce heart disease risk and may also protect against Alzheimer's disease, according to the new research. Polyphenols help keep blood vessels and arteries flexible and healthy. "What's good for your coronary arteries is also good for your brain's blood vessels," says Robert Krikorian, Ph.D., director of the Cognitive Disorders Center at the University of Cincinnati. Preliminary animal studies suggest that adding dark grapes to your diet may improve brain function. What's more, in a recent human study, researchers found that eating one or more cups of blueberries every day may improve communication between brain cells, enhancing your memory.

7. You Were a Healthy-Weight Teen
A study in the Journal of Pediatrics that followed 137 African Americans from birth to age 28 found that being overweight at age 14 increases your risk of developing type 2 diabetes in adulthood. Adults with diabetes are two to four times more likely to develop heart disease than those without the condition, according to the American Heart Association.

8. You Don't Like Burgers
A few palm-size servings (about 2 1/2 ounces) of beef, pork, or lamb now and then is no big deal, but eating more than 18 ounces of red meat per week ups your risk of colorectal cancer—the third most common type, according to a major report by the American Institute for Cancer Research. Colorectal cancer risk also rises by 42 percent with every 3 1/2-ounce serving of processed meat (such as hot dogs, bacon, and deli meats) eaten per day, the report determined.



Experts aren't sure why red and processed meats are so harmful, but one of their suspects is the carcinogens that can form when meat is grilled, smoked, or cured—or when preservatives, such as nitrates, are added. "You can have an occasional hot dog at a baseball game, but just don't make it a habit," says Karen Collins, R.D., a nutrition advisor at AICR. And when you do grill red meat, marinate it first, keep pieces small (kebab-size), and flip them often—all of which can help prevent carcinogens from forming. If you're baking or roasting it, keep the oven temp under 400°F.

9. You've Been a College Freshman


A recent Harvard Medical School study found that people with more than 12 years of formal education (even if it's only one year of college) live 18 months longer than those with fewer years of schooling. Why? The more education you have, the less likely you are to smoke. In fact, only about 10 percent of adults with an undergraduate degree smoke, compared with 35 percent of those with a high school education or less, according to the CDC.

10. You Really Like Your Friends …


"Good interpersonal relationships act as a buffer against stress," says Micah Sadigh, Ph.D., an associate professor of psychology at Cedar Crest College. Knowing you have people who support you keeps you healthy, mentally and physically: Chronic stress weakens the immune system and ages cells faster, ultimately shortening life span by 4 to 8 years, according to one study. Not just any person will do, however. "You need friends you can talk to without being judged or criticized," says Sadigh.

11. … and They're Healthy

If your closest friends gain weight, your chance of doing the same could increase by 57 percent, according to a study in the New England of Journal of Medicine. "To maintain a healthy lifestyle, it's important to associate with people who have similar goals," says Nicholas A. Christakis, M.D., Ph.D., the study's lead researcher. Join a weight loss group, or train with a pal for a charity walk.

12. You Don't Have a Housekeeper
Just by vacuuming, mopping floors, or washing windows for a little more than an hour, the average person can burn about 285 calories, lowering risk of death by 30 percent, according to a study of 302 adults in their 70s and 80s.

13. You're a Flourisher


About 17 percent of Americans are flourishers, says a study in American Psychologist. They have a positive outlook on life, a sense of purpose and community, and are healthier than "languishers"—about 10 percent of adults who don't feel good about themselves. Most of us fall somewhere in between. "We should strive to flourish, to find meaning in our lives," says Corey Keyes, Ph.D., a professor of sociology at Emory University. "In Sardinia and Okinawa, where people live the longest, hard work is important, but not more so than spending time with family, nurturing spirituality, and doing for others."
A few of you want to know what I eat and what my diet is like, and if I have any tips...lol...are you sure?
So the latter part of today's post is for you.


Road Trip Eating Is So Bad--It's Gooood!


I had a good time in Chicago last week, but that Chicago food will get you. I managed to work out but spent my days eating BADLY.
Uno Pizza, Harold's Chicken, Garretts Popcorn...you name the fat filled indulgence and I probably partook.


I am a strong believer that if you are gonna do the crime--DO THE CRIME.
Eat the donut and love it, pick the crumbs off your tee, sloop the glaze off the wax wrapping and lick your lips like its the last donut in the world. Do it.



You won't see me eating something sinful and simultaneously lamenting over this diet destroying deed. I embrace the sugar. Why would I eat something I shouldn't and feel guilty at the same time? Relish in the high, don't stunt it.

Fragile Little Mind
I have had my share of sweet indulgences this past year. Any excuse to drink grease, I took. "I'm not competing" was my justification, every time someone commented about my food choice not complementing my line of work.

So fragile was this state that I went to Krispy Kreme one day and bought a dozen donuts. It was going to be a surprise for a family gathering. On the seven minute drive back home, I picked up the box and only three donuts were left.

To this day, I still don't know where those nine donuts went.

My Diet Focus
My naturopathic doctor had been helping me restore balance to my body, and heal properly from injury. My body she said was in a "toxic, acid" state. Ya no kidding.

So, this week marks my return to function, back to the ways of eating like an elite. I'm not saying I won't have sugar, but just in moderation.

All About Anti-Oxidants
1.My focus when it comes to meal and snack selection is food rich in anti-oxidants. Strawberries, blueberries, green, yellow and purple food.












Avoiding pro-Inflammatory foods
2. I am abstaining from foods in the night shade class, like potatoes and peppers for a few weeks. They have a naturally occurring toxin, glycoalkaloid that can promote inflammation in the body. There are different schools of thought on this, but I'm going to try and see if I notice a difference in how I feel after training.



O 3, 6, 9
3. I am loading up on Omegas 3,6 and 9. By sticking to wild, organic fish, like salmon and halibut and avoiding fatty red meats. (Fish that is farm bred tend to have lower amounts of Omega and undesired additives).

I sprinkle ground flax seeds on everything I eat, literally. (The body won't digest whole flax, so make sure you grind it up). As well I lightly drizzle my fish, veggies, salad with Extra virgin olive oil, which is a great source for essential fatty acids.

Introduce one new thing per week
OK so hope you can use some of that, I am implementing more changes, but we are going to introduce one or two changes a week. It is easier to adapt.

Close Call
It's been two days and last night I nearly suffered a relapse. I finished my salmon and salad and the taste for sweet hit me hard.



I paced around the kitchen till I found a small expensive box of chocolate all the way in the back of the fridge. It had been there since my birthday, the hotel I stayed at gave it to me as a gift, and I totally forgot it was there.

I opened it, there were twelve perfectly shaped chocolates looking at me. Dark, white, milk, my mouth watered as the one filled with hazelnut whispered: "Take me".






I didn't.

Instead I licked it. Then quickly put the lid back on and placed the box back in the fridge.

Phew.

Which reminds me I should probably tell people to avoid a certain square shaped chocolate...

That's all for now, I'll be sure to share more diet tips and my battle with sugar as things progress.

Cheerio! (sugar frosted, of course)
Perdita

Tuesday, October 14

Let's Vote!

I hope everyone is ready to vote this Tuesday! Of course a big issue for moi is sport in Canada. I have weighed all the major party's platforms when it comes to that issue, below is an article that gets some athlete views on the topic.
Cheers,
Perdita

Source: www.thestar.com
By line: Randy Starkman
Date: Oct 12, 2008
Athletes look to Ottawa for support
Full cabinet minister's position, more money at the top of wish list

Canada's athletes, coaches and officials have a message for those who will form the new government: show us the minister.

And some more money wouldn't hurt, either.

"The biggest point is we need leadership in sport in Canada," said former world champion hurdler Perdita Felicien.

"We need someone who is part of government who has the power to enact change. We don't have that. And that's why there's so many things gone awry with our sporting system."

Felicien made her comments after a recent debate on sport issues in the campaign between candidates from the Conservative, Liberal, NDP and Green parties during an Athletes CAN meeting.

The athletes seemed to come away unimpressed in general by the politicians, which included Secretary of State for Sport Helena Guergis, who seemed most impassioned when her support of women's ski jumping was questioned.

Guergis was a lot more lukewarm on the issue most important for the Canadian amateur sports community heading toward the 2010 Vancouver Olympics – getting a full-time sports minister instead of being represented by someone in a junior portfolio with no clout.

Guergis said the Conservatives would have to look at the cost of such a move, while the Liberals have said they're in favour of it.

Ian Bird, senior leader of the advocacy group Sport Matters, said they would probably be best served by a minority government, given that none of the parties is offering the entire package they want.

Bird said Canada needs to set up something like the Australian Sport Commission, which oversees everything from playground to podium. The current setup is splintered.

"What better legacy coming out of 2010 than to say, `Now, we've got the right pieces to the system that we think we need,'" said Bird.

Along with a full cabinet minister's position, the sports community is also looking for increased federal investment in sport to a minimum of $500 million a year, equal to 1 per cent of health care spending.

The Conservatives made that promise during the last election, but they're only up to an estimated $335 million, including the Children's Tax Credit.

The NDP and Liberals have made similar pledges, while the Greens have said they'd spend an additional $500 million over five years.

Infrastructure is another big issue, particularly in Toronto where a bid for the 2015 Pan Am Games is underway. Canadian Parks and Recreation Association pegged the infrastructure deficit at $15 billion.

The Liberals have focused their sport and physical activity plan on infrastructure, promising $3 billion toward new projects. None of the other parties offered specific plans.

"You do have to take it with a grain of salt, because there's always a disparity between what they say and what they're actually willing to do," said Rachael Gardner, a modern pentathlete.

One important issue that barely got addressed was the development of innovative tax measures to encourage greater participation in sport and new sources of funding for amateur sport.

"A lot of big words, a lot of promises, but I was a little disappointed in how they did avoid a really important question and a question that hits home with all of us, a question about corporate Canada and what should be happening to get more involvement from them," said Olympic rhythmic gymnast Alexandra Orlando, a political science major at U of T.

"I didn't get any answers whatsoever."

Sunday, October 12

Happy Thanksgiving Day (Canada Edition)

HAPPY TURKEY DAY!!

I have been budgeting calories for this day all year :)

Hope you have lots to be thankful for, I know I do.
Perdita

Friday, October 10

London 2012 Article

Here is an article I read today about the next Olympics written by Sebastian Coe, who is Chairman of London 2012. Some of my family and friends have already started saving, I think that is sweet of them, especially considering the economic climate we are in.

I am keen on seeing how London will compare to Beijing, based on the fact that I got to see the Olympics in a totally different way. Beijing was my third trip to one, and in the previous two, as a competitor I was so zoned in on my mission, there was little time to study anything else.

Game operations, architectural design, security, cultural relevance, etc. of an Olympics are not really on the radar screen, until much later. But with the new perspective from this past summer, I am following the lead up to London carefully and using Beijing, Athens and Sydney as my bench marks.

Ciao,
Perdita


Source: www.telegraph.co.uk
By Line: Sebastian Coe (Chairman of London 2012)
Date: 1.9.08

One of the proudest moments of my sporting life came last Friday when I stood outside London's City Hall and watched the Olympic and Paralympic flags being raised high into the sky.

The flags will remain there, fluttering above the capital, until the Games in 2012. As experiences go it was right up there with the moment I walked into an Olympic stadium wearing a British vest for the very first time.
Now that we are the next host city of the summer Olympic and Paralympic Games, there are five areas we want to focus on in the weeks and months ahead.


One: Put the athletes first. This hasn't changed since the day we submitted the bid and, if anything, my commitment has strengthened after visiting Beijing this summer. Put simply, there are no Games without the athletes, no breathtaking moments of sporting brilliance, no spine-tingling magic that lives in the memory long after the Games are over.
By the time you will have celebrated these extraordinary feats, the athletes will have dedicated half their young lives to achieving them. Putting athletes centre stage is not just about building world-class venues. It is about creating an environment where they have everything they need to perform to their limits.


Two: Give everyone a chance to be part of London 2012. We have to make sure the spectator experience lives longer than the events themselves and is available to all. Last week we released new details about venues within the Olympic Park and how they will be the most inclusive and accessible the UK has ever seen. We will set new standards for accessibility and sustainability.

We need ever-changing technology to enhance the way spectators receive information. We also want to bring the action to the whole of the UK, not just the spectators inside our stadiums. Our project of live screens around London and the UK is just the beginning.


Three: Construction. Exceptional progress has been made by the Olympic Delivery Authority on the venues in the Park and 2009 will see construction begin on the athletes' village and the media centre. The construction budget is £9.3 billion. This is not just a big budget to host the Games. It is an investment in the East End of London – 75p in every £1 of the £9.3 billion is committed to regeneration.
The Games will leave world-class sporting facilities, for use by elite athletes and participators alike, new parks and homes and, most of all, new opportunities.

The London Organising Committee of the Olympic and Paralympic Games will continue to raise funds from the private sector to stage the Games. Our money comes from sponsorship, broadcasting rights, selling merchandise and tickets.
So far we have seven major sponsors, more than any other organising committee at this point, which shows the level of shared enthusiasm and commitment in the commercial sector.


Four: Listen to the experts. The International Olympic Committee, International Paralympic Committee, international sporting federations and individual national governing bodies are experts in their fields. We need to heed their advice, and experience, especially as 80 per cent of the delivery of each Games is transferable from one four-year cycle to the next.
Five: A legacy we can all be proud of. Our Games will be the first in a new era where legacy is integral to Games planning. I want to ensure we leave London and the UK, at the end of 2012, in better shape than we found it. And that's a team effort. It means encouraging, inspiring and motivating young people to take up sport and enjoy a healthier, more focused lifestyle. That is what legacy is all about.

We want to feel just as proud, if not more so, in two years' time when our athletes compete in the Vancouver Winter Olympic and Paralympic Games, in the Youth Olympic Games and the Commonwealth Games; in four years' time when we host our own Games; and in the many years after those flags have finally come down.


Tuesday, October 7

"NOOOO"

Practice On The South Side
I arrived in Chicago yesterday and needed a place to train, my BF suggested a local community track that was nearby. Never having been there before, I drilled him about what this facility was like, a classic sign of a manic trackster:

"What color is it? I'll accept red, but we both know I subconsciously run faster on blue? Is it 400m? Are there kids running around on it? What year was it made? Is it mondo or asphalt? Can I wear just my sports bra? Is this an acceptable practice here?"

I deduced the track would suffice, but BF did not prepare me for one thing...

Some Kinda Nasty
We park the car and I see this track from a distance, it is a brilliant ruby red, with lanes perfectly marked in white. It is surrounded by lush trees and bushes and perfectly tucked into this urban oasis. On an adjacent field I see a H.S football practice, a mother in a park pushing her little one on a swing. This area is perfect, this track will be perfect, this is a dream, I say!

I didn't even wait for BF, I skip ahead excitedly in the direction of OZ. I walk through the park, breathe in the air and feel the butterflies in my tummy, happy to be at work. I get to the edge of the track and nothing can prepare me for what I am about to see.

I gasp.

In disbelief I drop my Nike duffel and walk a little closer, not believing my eyes. I look back at BF who is just approaching and I scream, "NOOO!!".

The surface is littered with geese doo doo, in every corner of the track, no gross exaggeration. To step on track is to step in poop. There is no escaping it.

I am not sure how to act or who to be mad at, the city for not cleaning up the mess, never knowing when a world class runner may need their facility. BF for bringing me to such a dung forsaken place, or the nasty, extremely regular, rogue geese!

Why They Pay Me The Big Bucks, Right?
The workout called for running repeatedly around the track, but there was no way I was gonna step in ish with my Pegasus.

Oh Hell to the No.

So I concocted a plan with BF who runs my workouts with me. We would do the same volume of work but instead of running in circles of boo boo, we would use two straight lanes and go back and forth.

It pained me to even be there, but I kept the big picture in mind. I kept in mind this is what I get paid to do, train, get better, be better. I could leave on account of dung and who could blame me, but that would be cheating myself and my sponsors and all those that believe in me to do my best.

So bring on the guano!

Kick the Crap Out Of Crap
So yesterday at 6:16 PM central time, Perdita, was not to proud to walk up and down lanes three and four of a track on the south side of Chicago and scour the track for bird 'sheesh', and when I found it, take my shoe and hurl it out of my way into the opposite lanes.

So I am happy to report I got my work out in and ran in a caca free lane to boot!

Soaking my shoes in acid,
Perdites

Saturday, October 4

Hey now,
once again its been a busy week, hence the gap in posting.

Everyone loved my new training partner! Thanks for embracing him guys. In fact my coach emailed me this morning asking if he needs workouts! BAHAHA...jokes.

OK Updates!

Forum
The AthleteCan forum comes to a close this Sunday, where the athletes in attendance will vote for new board members. I have been to some of the sessions this week and was able to connect with fellow national team athletes.

There was an "All Party Sport Forum" today, where we were able to hear from the four major parties in Canada, Conservative, Liberal, NDP, Green, and hear their platform on sport in Canada. I was appreciative of their time, but need them to put their money where their mouth is, time will tell.

Yawn*

Road Trip
I am preparing for my road trip to Chicago/Champaign, IL. I am heading to the 'paign to check on my crib and honestly I need some warm work out apparel. I'm freezing out there with the same t-shirts I had in July.














I'll head back for good at the end of October, even though my training partners won't be back until November, good for me, as I will have my coach all to myself.















We Will Miss You Aunt E
Unfortunately my BF's great aunt died a few days ago, her funeral is in Chicago next week. We had planned this trip anyway, so I think being pre-organized at such a sad time lessens the stress on everyone. I'm also glad I am in a position to be there for him and his family, as I always strive to put my family and friends before my career and things.



Right To Play

Last night I had the pleasure going to dinner at Grano with Right to Play, as I am one of their Olympic athlete ambassadors. The evening was a celebration of the organization, its sponsors and the athletes who were in Beijing. I did not compete but was glad my role was still visible and appreciated, even though I was a member of the media.

Most of us played as kids and didn't think twice about going outside to the park or running around in the sprinkler. However for many kids around the world, play is not a staple of their young lives, it's replaced by war and poverty. R2P brings sport and play to kids around the world, ensuring every one of them has this childhood right of passage.

It was a fun night and it is wonderful to be a part of something big. As athletes we have such a great platform, but many of us don't know how to use it, especially in an individual sport like mine it seems self serving at times, so using my sport to give back is a pleasure.




That's all for now, I promise to bring you all the adventures on the road, since I don't go anywhere without my laptop...I could find Internet on the moon!

Until then let me pass on the power of this quote:

The greatest danger for most of us is not that our aim is too high and we miss it, but that it is too low and we reach it’- Michelangelo

Ciao Ciao,
Perdita

Wednesday, October 1

Introducing The Newest Member Of Team Perdita!

History
It's not unusual for me to tape my workouts, it's a valuable training tool. We can look at form, slow things down and compare old and new footage. If I am training alone I can forward the footage on for analysis, or take it with me to meets as a visual prompt.

The Current
On this particular day I needed to capture my lifting, to double check that I wasn't compensating on my right side versus my left. In the past months I was not being as explosive with both my legs.

I was going from station to station, but felt that something was a bit strange. It wasn't until I got home and watched the footage I saw exactly what I was sensing.

New Team Member Movie
Here is a small portion of that footage, the movie will introduce what seems to be the newest member of "Team P".



Enjoy,
Perdita

TSX Opening & BNN TV Clip

I had the cool oppurtunity to open up the Toronto Stock Exchange with a few of my fellow Olympians this morning.












It was a very early start for me, the event was the unofficial launch to the AthleteCan forum taking place all week.










Karen Cochburn, Trampoline and Canada's 2008 flag bearer at closing ceremonies and I were choosen to talk about how the current financial climate affects athletes in Canada.





Click here to see TV segment












More updates as the week progresses,
Perdi