We have arrived at the Pacific.
We have gone from the Pacific to the
Atlantic to the Gulf of Mexico and now we are back to the Pacific again. Even though this is nothing like the Pacific
Ocean back home it feels good to be back.
The water here is warmer, bluer and has more surfers than back home but it
is still the same ocean. As we were
driving from Anaheim we came over a hill and there it was – it had two aircraft
carriers floating on it which took away some of the warm and fuzzy feeling -
but it was still our ocean.
We are now ensconced at a city
called Solana Beach that is just north of San Diego. We are staying in a little cottage just a couple
of blocks from the beach and about a twenty-minute walk to Telen’s
conference. The cottage is in a neighborhood
so we get to see a little of how the people of Solana Beach live. This area is like Broadmead on steroids! No one cuts their own grass or washes their
own cars. The average household income
is over one hundred thousand dollars and I don’t think they are double income households. When I walk back from escorting Telen to her
conference in the morning the streets are alive with women on their way to the
gym, to yoga, to the beach with surfboards, or out running. Husbands are at work, kids are in school –
time to play!
It feels really good to get back to
the west-coast attitude. There are
people cycling, running and surfing all the time. We are starting to see more Prius’s and even
some Chevy Volts. The grocery stores
carry organic products and a thing called “vegetables”. I have yet to see a buffet or anything
deep-fried and I think I have only seen one person of the magnitude I saw
everywhere in the south and east of the US.
The other thing that tells me I am back on the west coast is the
periodic pungent, “burning-leaves” smell wafting out of alleys and up from the
beach. Dude!
Remember when I said that, as we
were coming through the American south, that I felt slim and athletic? Well, here I feel like Fat Albert. This city is the birthplace of Triathlon and
I have never seen so many fit cyclists in my life. All the main roads have cycling lanes and all
the drivers drive like they are cyclists in their real lives. Everyone has high-end bikes. I feel like the poor relative with my
Roubaix.
On the beach |
Yesterday I went for a ride. It has been sunny and warm here since we
arrived. Except yesterday. I was not alone on the road by any means! A woman rode up beside me, looked at me and
said “Yuck!” I am used to that, to a
certain extent, but it seemed gratuitously mean. It was a conversation starter, that’s for
sure. What she was referring to was the
weather (she said) since it was raining “heavily” (what we, at home, would call
“misty”). I was able to ride with a
number of different groups all of whom seemed very capable on their bikes. They were all ages from young lightning bolts
to old thunderers with a million kilometers in their legs. And there I was – yucky old Fat Albert on my
cheapo bike struggling to keep up.
A humbling experience, indeed.
My bike and the ocean without the yucky Fat Albert person |
After my ride I stopped at a coffee shop
to have some refreshment. Apparently that’s
where local cycling community hangs out.
So many cyclists, so many nice bikes! Trek, Orbea, Pinarello, Cervelo,
Scott, etc. I was looking at the cars parked on the street in front of the
coffee shop: Mercedes, Porsche, Cadillac, BMW, and, ok, one Prius. I think this
is an affluent community. Money talks!
I have been to the beach a number of
times. It is really beautiful – white
sand stretching away into the distance. The
water is not as warm as the Gulf of Mexico but certainly warmer than Victoria. When you put your toes into the water here
you don’t instantly develop hypothermia.
It is a surfer’s paradise with everyone toting surfboards around. I have
yet to see any large waves but everyone seems pretty happy with the gentle ones
I have seen. Or, maybe no one actually
surfs. Maybe the surfboard is, like, an
accessory…
As I was walking along the beach I
saw a sea lion playing in the surf and a seal swimming close to shore. There are the usual sea birds like pelicans,
seagulls, and sandpipers around.
Apparently, though, there are more sinister things out there. Two years ago a man was attacked and killed
by a Great White Shark just offshore. We
see military helicopter gun-ships flying along the beach and there are those
aircraft carriers we saw earlier.
All is not well in paradise
Pacific sunset |
Dogs! Everyone seems to have them
and no one cleans up after them. In an
affluent neighborhood like this you have to watch where you step? There are signs on the entrance to the beach
that say “No Dogs Allowed at any time” yet you see people running their dogs on
the beach.
I guess rules don’t apply if you
have the cash.
I volunteered at Telen’s acupuncture
conference as a patient. I sat in a
chair in front of a room with twenty-five physicians of all disciplines staring
at me. Kind of like a doctor’s waiting
room in reverse. After asking me all
kinds of penetrating questions about my life history, my relationships, my
physical health and my mental state they all agreed that they could not treat
Neanderthals and I should probably go see a veterinarian…
When asked what I wanted treated I
said that my fear of heights was at the forefront of my mind and could they do
anything about that? The main suggestion
was to take me to a high cliff and push me off in the same spirit as throwing
someone in the deep water to teach him to swim.
I think it was meant humorously but I could see Telen looking
contemplative.
Telen writes:
This suburb of San Diego is indeed
picturesque: palm trees, warm sunshine, lovely beaches and sun tanned lean
bodies everywhere. Spas, cosmetic
surgery clinics, fitness centers, pet grooming centers and cafes are everywhere.
I just finished 4 days of acupuncture
workshop here in Solana Beach and now am looking forward to sleep in tomorrow
morning. I really did not like the sound
of the alarm clock at 6:30 am. Rand is
such a good sport to volunteer as a patient.
There were 24 participants in class, all MDs. We all tried our best to figure Rand out but
with great difficulties (Just kidding!).
Anyways, we came up with an acupuncture treatment plan for him to help
relieve his fear of heights and I gave him the first treatment in class
yesterday. The treatment involved
burning moxa on 2 points on his chest followed by needling over 4 points in his
feet. Rand certainly was not thrilled to
hear about the needles in his feet, which are very sensitive. We all tried to reassure him. He coped very well until he saw smoke rising
off his hairy chest from the burning moxa!
I will continue to give him treatments over the next few weeks. Then, he should challenge himself near a
cliff…
Telen and the sunset - relieved at finishing her course! |
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