It's been a year since I mentioned how the Scott and Robyn Parry family is doing, so I figured it's a good time to think and update. Hmmm, highlights since last year:
Scott: In October, Scott took me to London, then did some work operating in both Paris and Zurich. Awesome and beautiful. We enjoyed high adventure activities, but Scott was riding a horse which spooked and threw him (separated shoulder and broken ribs). In November he took the boys pheasant hunting in South Dakota, and they all loved it. In February, we went with his gigantic family (10 kids and spouses) on a cruise celebrating his parents' 50th Anniversary. In March, he was called as Bishop of our ward, which made an already BUSY person even BUSIER, but it's been good. In fact, he's seen more of our boys than ever on scout camps and such :) In June, he took a group of young men fishing in Alaska, and in August, he did his biggest hunt ever and killed an elephant in Botswana (tusks 62 pounds each, where will they go?).
Robyn: I ran my 10th St. George Marathon in October, then hobbled for a few days on the London trip but loved seeing Shakespeare on the Thames, The British Museum, and such. We had our smallest Christmas yet with only three kids at home but enjoyed Disney World (did the Half Marathon with my sister) with the family and my parents. I teach Relief Society, do our Relief Society book club, and was Young Women's Camp Director this year. I still don't like camping, and we got two days of solid rain, but it was more fun than I would have guessed. Mostly I drive kids around, clean and do laundry, watch football and rugby games, and enjoy morning workouts to get away for a bit.
Ashley: Started graduate school in January. She'll be a Physician's Assistant soon, wa hoo! She and her husband live in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Luckily, she comes to see us and play whenever she's on break.
Cody: is now a missionary for our church in Costa Rica. He's been in three small villages with no English speakers around, so it's been a great language and cultural experience. Once they discovered a six-foot long iguana in their apartment. He maintains his humor with quotes from Run, Fatboy, Run (a family favorite movie) in all of his emails.
Connor: now a high school senior. Big time! His successes have been on the rugby pitch. His team took 2nd in State, and he represented Utah in Rugby 7s in Las Vegas, Nevada; Seattle, Washington, and Vancouver, B.C. Now he's playing running back on our football team, and scored the first touchdown of the year. He's an all-around good guy who is grateful and kind. And he landed a backflip wakeboarding!
Dylan (15): went from football to wrestling to rugby in the school year, and is an aggressive dynamo in each. Hasn't grown taller yet, but his small stature probably helps in wrestling and definitely helps in snowboarding and wakeboarding. He's a flyer. He's also deceptively smart, and his Jedi braid is still going strong.
Wyatt (13): up to Middle School. He's charismatic and can out talk most everyone. He ran the St. George Marathon in October and finished with a string of 7-minute miles. He can also slip through a football or rugby line and tackles people twice his size, which scares his mom. He earned his Hunter Safety license this year, and he and Dylan got to enjoy the Alaska trip with their dad.
The Life and Thoughts of Robyn
Wednesday, August 28, 2013
Crossfit Challenge--Halfway Point
Thoughts and conclusions halfway through the 45-day paleo challenge:
1. No hospitalizations for sugar withdrawal
2. Weight is down 5 pounds and clothes are loose
3. No sugar highs (seem kind of draggy)
4. In Crossfit workouts, maybe a little bit stronger
5. In running workouts, not faster (which surprises the me without the Oreo milkshakes)
6. Arms and stomach more toned
7. Self-discipline is working ("just saying no" not as bad as feared)
8. It's harder to get sleep points than the other points, but I'm counting hours such as the one last night trying to get back to sleep after the hospital called my husband :)
9. I sure eat a lot (or am hungry often)
10. I'm eating things I would have thought would turn to fat, like peanut butter and nuts, but haven't gotten fatter.
Well, another 22 days to go, so it will be interesting to see continued differences.
Points: 5
Sleep: 7
Exercise: Crossfit, overhead squat, built to 80#, then 15 minutes of Cindy (5 pullups, 10 pushups, 15 squats), 22 2/3 rounds, baby. That's a workout made for gymnasts. Also water ran for 60 minutes, saving the Achilles' for the 20-miler later this week.
Food:
breakfast: apple and peanut butter
snack: raw cashews
lunch: chicken, corn, watermelon
later: more watermelon and corn, and more nuts
green salad with chicken
1. No hospitalizations for sugar withdrawal
2. Weight is down 5 pounds and clothes are loose
3. No sugar highs (seem kind of draggy)
4. In Crossfit workouts, maybe a little bit stronger
5. In running workouts, not faster (which surprises the me without the Oreo milkshakes)
6. Arms and stomach more toned
7. Self-discipline is working ("just saying no" not as bad as feared)
8. It's harder to get sleep points than the other points, but I'm counting hours such as the one last night trying to get back to sleep after the hospital called my husband :)
9. I sure eat a lot (or am hungry often)
10. I'm eating things I would have thought would turn to fat, like peanut butter and nuts, but haven't gotten fatter.
Well, another 22 days to go, so it will be interesting to see continued differences.
Points: 5
Sleep: 7
Exercise: Crossfit, overhead squat, built to 80#, then 15 minutes of Cindy (5 pullups, 10 pushups, 15 squats), 22 2/3 rounds, baby. That's a workout made for gymnasts. Also water ran for 60 minutes, saving the Achilles' for the 20-miler later this week.
Food:
breakfast: apple and peanut butter
snack: raw cashews
lunch: chicken, corn, watermelon
later: more watermelon and corn, and more nuts
green salad with chicken
Monday, August 5, 2013
Crossfit Challenge--Day 1
I congratulate myself for successfully surviving Day 1 of the Challenge. Only once when I drove by Dutchman's Market did I feel like turning right and getting a massive sugar cookie. Mostly (and surprisingly), I didn't think much about food. Can't say I feel stronger or anything, because, well, it's Day 1.
Points: 5
Spin class and Crossfit (back squats, weighted pull-ups, power cleans, toes to bar, and run 800 meters)
7 hours sleep, the requirement that rocks.
Paleo Food Journal:
Breakfast: hard boiled egg, apple
Lunch: tri tip, green beans, watermelon
Snack: pine nuts
Dinner: turkey avocado salad
lots of water and ice chips
Talk about 100%.
Points: 5
Spin class and Crossfit (back squats, weighted pull-ups, power cleans, toes to bar, and run 800 meters)
7 hours sleep, the requirement that rocks.
Paleo Food Journal:
Breakfast: hard boiled egg, apple
Lunch: tri tip, green beans, watermelon
Snack: pine nuts
Dinner: turkey avocado salad
lots of water and ice chips
Talk about 100%.
Sunday, August 4, 2013
Paleo Challenge Food Journal
Paleo Challenge Food Journal, or, What Exactly Are the M&Ms Withdrawal Symptoms?
Crossfit Dixie is doing a 45-day Challenge, and I've heard about eating healthy for years but have rarely ventured into that territory. This time I decided to join the Challenge and just see if anything changes in my body, mood, running times, strength, or fitness. Hmmm, I'm glad I don't need to report the food intake from yesterday: my last Frazil for a while (after a 13-mile run, which was awesome, refreshing and mouth-staining for hours), then a baby shower filled with treats. Actually today was Fast Sunday (no breakfast or lunch, it's a church thing), so I didn't eat a single unhealthy thing until evening, when I loaded up on Double Stuff Oreos just to say good-bye. The real food journal starts tomorrow.
Here's how it goes: We're teamed up with a partner (Hi Mandy, you rock!). We got initial measurements, which is a little weird, but hey. I got leg 19", hip 30", and arm 10.25" (and totally would have pulled the measuring tape tighter, but hey again). We do a timed partner workout to begin and end the challenge, to see if there is improvement. We also have to take totally unflattering before and after pictures for comparison. And there is a point system based on 3 categories: Eating 100% Paleo (that's fruit, vegetables, raw nuts and seeds, meats, seafood and NOTHING ELSE, but at least no measuring or limiting portions. Seriously, who is going to OD on celery anyway?) with one cheat meal allowed per week, Sleeping 7+ hours a night (AWESOME, I look forward to it!), and Working Out. Each partner tracks the three categories and records a score for each day: 5 points for doing all 3, 3 points for 2 out of 3, 1 point for 1 out of 3, and 0 points for terrible days. Only the LOW score of the two partners counts for each day.
I imagine I'll get all the points for sleeping and working out, which I love to do anyway. The eating part is the challenge for me. So, I apologize to Mandy in advance (and already offered to refund her Challenge entry fee) if I totally suck on the food points, but I'm going to try. I dutifully went to Costco and bought raw almonds, veggies, hardboiled and peeled eggs, and other such culinary delights. It's about 9 pm on Sunday, so, au revoir until Day 1.
Crossfit Dixie is doing a 45-day Challenge, and I've heard about eating healthy for years but have rarely ventured into that territory. This time I decided to join the Challenge and just see if anything changes in my body, mood, running times, strength, or fitness. Hmmm, I'm glad I don't need to report the food intake from yesterday: my last Frazil for a while (after a 13-mile run, which was awesome, refreshing and mouth-staining for hours), then a baby shower filled with treats. Actually today was Fast Sunday (no breakfast or lunch, it's a church thing), so I didn't eat a single unhealthy thing until evening, when I loaded up on Double Stuff Oreos just to say good-bye. The real food journal starts tomorrow.
Here's how it goes: We're teamed up with a partner (Hi Mandy, you rock!). We got initial measurements, which is a little weird, but hey. I got leg 19", hip 30", and arm 10.25" (and totally would have pulled the measuring tape tighter, but hey again). We do a timed partner workout to begin and end the challenge, to see if there is improvement. We also have to take totally unflattering before and after pictures for comparison. And there is a point system based on 3 categories: Eating 100% Paleo (that's fruit, vegetables, raw nuts and seeds, meats, seafood and NOTHING ELSE, but at least no measuring or limiting portions. Seriously, who is going to OD on celery anyway?) with one cheat meal allowed per week, Sleeping 7+ hours a night (AWESOME, I look forward to it!), and Working Out. Each partner tracks the three categories and records a score for each day: 5 points for doing all 3, 3 points for 2 out of 3, 1 point for 1 out of 3, and 0 points for terrible days. Only the LOW score of the two partners counts for each day.
I imagine I'll get all the points for sleeping and working out, which I love to do anyway. The eating part is the challenge for me. So, I apologize to Mandy in advance (and already offered to refund her Challenge entry fee) if I totally suck on the food points, but I'm going to try. I dutifully went to Costco and bought raw almonds, veggies, hardboiled and peeled eggs, and other such culinary delights. It's about 9 pm on Sunday, so, au revoir until Day 1.
Top 10 Memories with my Dad
Ok, so I've been totally inactive, but I wrote these for a father's day book our family put together. The post is better late than never . . . and it was fun to recall times with a true American hero. He served our country in Vietnam, served our family before and since, serves his neighbors and community, and has served generations of newcomers to skiing and snowboarding.
1. Learning how to ski. I remember feeling protected between his skis (age 3) and then going straight down the mountain from there.
2. Christmas mornings, 6:00 am. Dad would always go downstairs first and announce that Santa had missed our house so we should go back to bed. (Then he'd have the movie camera ready for the stampede.)
3. Annual trips to Lake Powell. Images include him spending hours underneath a car hood or working on a boat engine. "If you plan on something breaking down on every boat trip, you won't be disappointed."
4. Stopping at Circus Circus in Las Vegas and always "Fooling the Guesser." Top guesses: Dad was a mechanic (actually an anesthesiologist who had grease on his hands from fixing things) and I was five years younger than my actual age.
5. Disneyland and Disney World! The Matterhorn (only thrill ride when I was young)! Then Space Mountain! And now the Tower of Terror, Expedition Everest, and the Goofy Fun Runs!
6. Receiving a Father's Blessing the night before I was getting married.
7. Awesome family trips--Atlantis in the Bahamas, A Caribbean Cruise, and Thanksgiving in beautiful Kauai, Hawaii :)
8. Vietnam--working together (we built a school for a village there and had a medical clinic day), meeting his friends there from 40 years before, going to church in Saigon, and eating at PIZZA HUT (the rest of us about cried when we saw American food after unending rice, but dad enjoyed "pho." He learned to eat like the Vietnamese when he lived there and "had the best job in the war, stationed in a civilian hospital).
9. Watching together our kids/his grandkids play countless softball, soccer, baseball, football, basketball, and rugby, rugby, rugby games (snow, rain, wind, sun).
10. Sitting in dad's Gospel Doctrine class and hearing how his visit to the Christus on Temple Square strengthened his testimony of Christ and forgiveness.
1. Learning how to ski. I remember feeling protected between his skis (age 3) and then going straight down the mountain from there.
2. Christmas mornings, 6:00 am. Dad would always go downstairs first and announce that Santa had missed our house so we should go back to bed. (Then he'd have the movie camera ready for the stampede.)
3. Annual trips to Lake Powell. Images include him spending hours underneath a car hood or working on a boat engine. "If you plan on something breaking down on every boat trip, you won't be disappointed."
4. Stopping at Circus Circus in Las Vegas and always "Fooling the Guesser." Top guesses: Dad was a mechanic (actually an anesthesiologist who had grease on his hands from fixing things) and I was five years younger than my actual age.
5. Disneyland and Disney World! The Matterhorn (only thrill ride when I was young)! Then Space Mountain! And now the Tower of Terror, Expedition Everest, and the Goofy Fun Runs!
6. Receiving a Father's Blessing the night before I was getting married.
7. Awesome family trips--Atlantis in the Bahamas, A Caribbean Cruise, and Thanksgiving in beautiful Kauai, Hawaii :)
8. Vietnam--working together (we built a school for a village there and had a medical clinic day), meeting his friends there from 40 years before, going to church in Saigon, and eating at PIZZA HUT (the rest of us about cried when we saw American food after unending rice, but dad enjoyed "pho." He learned to eat like the Vietnamese when he lived there and "had the best job in the war, stationed in a civilian hospital).
9. Watching together our kids/his grandkids play countless softball, soccer, baseball, football, basketball, and rugby, rugby, rugby games (snow, rain, wind, sun).
10. Sitting in dad's Gospel Doctrine class and hearing how his visit to the Christus on Temple Square strengthened his testimony of Christ and forgiveness.
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