Stretching Thin, Tying in

Once again, I’ve managed to neglect my own writing for over two months. I could easily say that I’ve been busy with multiple things but who isn’t right? No one’s interested in excuses so I’ll just write.

Pensive Me and R2D2

I give myself a hard time about not being focused. I just love so many things. Don’t I gentlemen?  Seriously, I adore my friends and their music and continually support them in anyway I can (check out www.paperthickwallls.com); film and theatre remain my absolute passions without question, and dance but that’s too much work. I still try to keep up my piano and trumpet skills on occasion; my sketch group Awesomonster still meets every week for our comedy podcast not to mention I work every day at either Robot City or the International Academy for Performing Arts as an instructor for singing, acting and, randomly, robot building. Plus, I’m a sucker for enjoying my leisure with dorky video games, oh, and I love my books; that’s enough semicolons.

This is starting to sound whiny. “Oh my life is such hard work, woe is me,” I promise that’s not it. I just want to do too many things. The footage I’ve recorded from the last year alone is enough to keep my busy for the next two. And I keep hearing, “What’s holding you back?” and “Get an agent already.” Alas, here I am blogging, entertaining the idea that someday I might pair my words together in such a way that I might achieve the beginnings of a comparison to a future Sedaris or Augusten Burroughs (my life has equally compelling stories, they’re just a little more Harry Potter in nature). So, while I fancy being a better writer I understand my volume isn’t high enough to have gained the experience points I need to reach such a level. However, what about all that I other stuff I do?

Some way, my feeling stretched thin this long is going to pay off in end. Perhaps, everything will tie in together during my next big push to revolutionize global thought. Wait… but when was my first big push? Another life I guess.

Just for sake of writing and because I miss doing it, I’m bringing back Nick’s Picks. However in the world that relates to all this other stuff I’m doing, I don’t know but people have told me they miss it and I like giving people what they want… most of the time. Maybe I should fix that and become a hedonist… but what about my favorite quote:

If there is no struggle there is no progress. -Fredrick Douglass

My life is like a robot. There’s a lot of little parts and eventually I’ll see how they all go together to make this monstrous, awesome, musical, beautifully creative thing (yes, my robot would play music).

Friends and strangers everywhere, raise a glass with me over time and space. Here’s to the struggle. Cheers to progress.

Earth (the book) A Visitor’s Guide to the Human Race

originally posted on Uptown UpdateSometimes you just gotta laugh so you won’t cry and if The Onion makes you laugh till you cry then I recommend you sit on the toilet with this book for $h*t$ and giggles.

Jon Stewart’s Earth (the book) A Visitor’s Guide to the Human Race is an excellent choice of hilarity. Over 240 pages means one can easily find over 240 reasons to chuckle and snort or insert your laugh of choice. Due to its nice size (not to mention contents), it makes an excellent wrapped package to exchange. “Buy two,” copies and share the funny (available at your local…well, if things aren’t as local anymore you can still get it online. I mean, we all know by now that one chain filed for chapter 11 and closed over half of their stores and the other mainly survived due to it’s early grab of the e-book revolution but how long can a dark, parenthetical, pointing at the fall of our economy joke last).
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A Visitor's Guide to the Human Race

Click here to buy Earth (the book)

I first read (and sold) this book back when I worked at one of the above mentioned corporations. However, seeing Larry King on The Daily Show of late made me recall an image that has been forever seared into my retinas. That said, folks, for those of you who enjoy witty delivery on basically every worthy subject imaginable paramount to the evolution and survival of our divine species, well, like that famous sauce, it’s in [here]. But more importantly for those of you who (and I am talking to the vast American majority here) who do not like to read, this is the book for you. Earth (the book) is choked full of over 256 pages of eye pleasing pictures, complete with illustrations, photos, charts, graphs and many other visual aids. For those less inclined to fool your friends by staring end upon end at never ending letters from the English alphabet while never truly taking a word from the page, this book will for sure allow you to impress your peers by how quickly it leaves you, the less-likely reader, turning pages.

Crossing from commerce to culture while spanning through government, society and science and highlighted with a two page spread featuring half a Larry King, Earth (the book) A Visitor’s Guide  to the Human Race plays hysterical notes across our great globe.

The Fighter’s Mind, Inside the Mental Game

If any reader has ever thought “fighting” to be some barbaric competitive outlet that has no bearing outside of brawn a read of The Fighter’s Mind, Inside the Mental Game will offer enlightening insight.

Author Sam Sheridan shares the universality in the simple line, “that everyone is fighting something,” and in this book addresses what some consider to be a cliche tag, ‘”Fighting is fifty percent mental”‘ (preface). Throughout Sam’s travels he interviews great fighters from various backgrounds and styles setting out to answer many questions from many minds. Among those there is one mind familiar to many in an unrecognized way.

Josh Waitzkin proves to be a mountain of mental development within the ring. Searching for Bobby Fischer is a film adapted from “a book that Josh’s ‘Pop’ had written about Josh’s early chess career” (pg. 184). As an early chess master both his mind and his reputation were no strangers to fame. As an author himself, Josh has written both Attacking Chess and The Art of Learning (both of which are available directly from the author’s website, here) the later of which received praise from numerous inspirational writers including Deepak Chopra. It is within this chapter that Sheridan truly taps the undeniable truth of the psychological traps and pitfalls to which the contenders are subject.

Queries stretch along lines of heroes, unmatched rivals and personal inspirations. What it takes to be one of those heroes is answered in part by esteemed trainers such as Freddie Roach and Greg Jackson.

How these men reach heightened planes of performance is unveiled through their own given circumstance. These men accomplish amazing physical feats such as is with the case of “Captain America” Randy Couture whose body has become more of a championed machine. During strenuous activity our bodies produce higher levels of lactic acid resulting in what we experience as fatigue. After years of vigorous conditioning Randy’s body does not.

The Fighter's Mind, Inside the Mental Game

Click image to buy The Fighter's Mind

Where the fight takes place stretches over continents and transcends both the mind and body. Later in the book, we see a list from Applied Sport Psychology containing qualities of “peak performance” (pg. 255):

  • Loss of fear–no fear of failure
  • No thinking of performance
  • Total immersion in activity
  • Narrow focus of attention
  • Effortless performance–not forcing it
  • Feeling of being in complete control
  • Time/Space disorientation (usually showed down)
  • Universe perceived to be integrated and unified
  • Unique, temporary, involuntary experience
Sam relates these bullets to the Zen of martial arts.

The who contained within the book includes well-known names of accomplished fighters including Rory Markham, Mark DellaGrotte,  Frank Shamrock, Andre Ward, Dan Gable and Renzo Gracie.

However many questions are answered inside of this text the why is the sought after reason which remains most elusive. During an interview with Jon Stewart, The Daily Show, Sam is asked why he crossed the boundary and traveled to Thailand to fight and replies with a less than articulate response (which he acknowledges nearing the close of the book) and follows with a comment about fighting being an “art,” to which Jon lays his exquisite wit.

There is much to be said about the passion driving performance across the board, going beyond fighting, beyond running, beyond theater. Dually personal and widely relative this read, while not providing the backing to qualify fighting as an art, does allow answers for the who, what, when, where and how of the mind’s journey while faced with the life and death bouts that extend far beyond the category of sport.

In summation, to quote a friend, the message anyone can find resonate here is that, “To be really really good at anything takes dedication and a lot of hard work.”

Sam Sheridan is also the author of A Fighter’s Heart.