Thursday, June 21, 2007

A Wish For A Peaceful Day.


Just a quick wish for a peaceful day. Took this pic on ALC near Carpenteria. Who knew it was near Chiang Mai?

Started running last Saturday. It kicked my ass. Entirely different muscles & cardio level from cycling. I was beating myself up for feeling slow and fat, but when I finished my three mile time trial, I found out I ran at exactly the same pace as five years ago, when I was running all the time. I'm a Switzer again!

Fugee saw me putting on my heartrate monitor for my maintenance run and flipped out--he, as my friend Michelle put it best, leapt through the air like Rudolph in the "She thinks I'm cuuuuuttttttttteeee......" episode. I wondered about taking him on a 4 mile run, as he just turned 11. I figured if it killed, him, he'd die ecstatic. He left me in the dust.

Gotta run-

Craig

https://www.sfaf.org/give/marathon.cfm?e=FL07&f=Craig&l=Hermes&n=5053

AIDS Marathon Florence 2007 Runner #5053, ALC Rider #4147, SFAF Client, HIV+ over 12 years, a pain in the ass for far longer

Wednesday, June 13, 2007

Being Alive.


"To leave the world a bit better, whether by a healthy child, a garden patch or a redeemed social condition;
To know even one life has breathed easier because you have lived.

This is to have succeeded." ~Ralph Waldo Emerson, b. May 25, 1803



"Training? What the hell's training?" ~Craig Hermes, b. May 25, 1962



Friends, family, my ever-patient supporters, and generous of heart and spirit companions-

The above quote by Ralph Waldo Emerson was found inside a plastic Easter egg attached to my bike seat on Day 7 by the Chicken Lady, who has been doing the AIDS rides since 1994. She spent hours personally assembling and attaching these eggs to the over 2,333 bikes which were part of AIDS/LifeCycle 6. I've always loved the quote and attach particular poignance to it since Emerson and I share a birthday. Thank you, Chicken Lady, for your 13 years of joy, inspiration, dedication and heart in fighting the pandemic. You've kept us smiling and pedaling, when legs have said 'No more," and asses have said, "You gotta be kidding..." I dedicate a portion of this ride to you and look forward to riding with you again.

So, how was it?

In a word, extraordinary. Difficult, joyous, exhausting, exhilarting, somber, hilarious, sorrowful and hopeful. Often all these within the course of one good hill. The thing I find so impactful about these rides is that they don't allow you the luxury of not caring. The ride is life raw, unfiltered. I found myself frustrated to the point of tears, regretting the fact I was having difficulties, questioning my vitality and ability to stay the course. Then, as life/the universe/the path would have it, at my lowest point, pow--just the message I need to keep going. At lunch on Day 1, a sweet text message from my old roomie Susan telling me my spirit would carry me through. Tears, a chicken sandwich and a Gatorade, I got back on the bike and rode "Just one more pit stop..." At the next pit, feeling done for the day and maybe the event, a message from my friend Sabrina saying, "Bit by bit, bite by bite," and again I mustered the oomph to sit my untrained saddle sore butt on a seat for just a bit more, and before I knew it, Santa Cruz.

Well, maybe not before I knew it. I got in the camp 90 minutes later than the year before. Lifelong patterns of celebrating the disappointment and deflecting the accomplishment tried to trick me into feeling a failure. I took a breath, gave myself an attitude enema, and purged that caca out of my thinking. I finished! As my Aussie friend Simone would say, "Good on me!"

On Day 2, a century plus, I stopped for artichokes in honor of my friend Cathy and shared a great nosh with Diane, my Vaccine ride cohort and friend, her sister Nita, and a few hundred others. Back on the bike and rolled into camp at 7:00 as the route was closing, after almost 13 hours of cycling. As great good fortune would have it, Diane was right beside me. We looked at one another, and I said "I've never been this far back in the pack...and I LOVE it..." She agreed wholeheartedly, particularly enjoying the shorter lines at lunch and pits. I was quite a breakthrough for me. Always forced to the brink of defeat and despair by a cruel and relentless ego bent on perfection, I actually was buying the "Do your best" tenet I always aspired to.

With my shift, a new energy, drive, joy spurred me on. I woke up unnaturally happy at 4:15 am as Mariano stuck his finger in my ear and nose and rattled mylar. Ahhh, friends! Thank God for friends.

By Day three, I was the 1,048th person into lunch, now back in the thick of the event, riding beside Gutterbunnies, former AIDSRide friends and coworkers, and familiar friendly faces I had been cycling beside for over 13 years. Fast forward to Day 7, and I was the 102nd person into lunch. How on earth did that happen?

Drive, determination, and the ability to transcend discomfort. The shift in mindset of "Ugh, 545 miles with some significant hills," to, "Hey, only 15 miles to the next pit..."

Bit by bit, bite by bite.

As Martin Luther King, Jr. said, "Take the first step in faith. You don't have to see the whole staircase. Just take the first step."

As I rode in to closing cermonies, I was tired but satisfied, glad to have had the chance to bask in the amazing community of determined, compassionate, diverse, beautiful souls who unite once a year to do something very difficult, just because it needs to be done. I let the intense, tangible feeling of love eminating from this group of extraordinary individuals wash over me--and I openly sobbed. Sometimes life is too beautiful.

So what did we create? AIDS/LifeCycle 6 had 2,333 cyclists, almost 500 roadies and volunteers, raised over $11 million and was seen by over 10 million Californians. You opened your hearts and wallets and you have made a significant impact in the commitment to ending the pandemic and human suffering caused by HIV. A world without stigma, supporting our brothers and sisters, challenging assumptions about what it means to live with HIV, and challenging assumptions about what we can personally accomplish if we align heart, spirit, determination and, well, love. I rode behind a minister who had a sign on his bike which read, "Jesus would do the ride." Yeah I think he definitely would have.

In an ironic twist of fate, I returned home to a letter from my COBRA plan administrator saying there had been an error between my former employer, my insurer and the administrator. Even though they had been billing me at $210 a month and I had been paying it, they realized that my coverage had been incorectly assigned, and I should have been being billed $529 a month and I now owed $2,100, due by July 1st or my coverage would be terminated effective last February. And I would need to repay any benefits, prescriptions costs, or office visits between those dates. Oh, about $10,000 or so. And if I lose coverage, I am uninsurable for the rest of my life. Welcome to the wonderful world of living with HIV.

So I return to the San Francisco AIDS Foundation, again as a client, humbled, bike helmet in hand, and will work with a case worker and ADAP to ensure I can at least get my meds covered. This is why these events are necessary. They keep people alive. People like me. I don't particularly care if you identify as Republican, Libertarian, Green Party, Democrat or Independent--hell, you can even be a Whig if you like. All I ask is that as we head into an election year, place your vote with a candidate who is an advocate for health care reform. It's ludicrous that our profit driven system would rather allow people to fall into financial ruin or die due to lack of access to treatment. We are our brother's keeper. That which affects the least of us affects all of us. We all have HIV if one of us does.

Okay, off the soapbox.

This weekend, I start the AIDS Marathon training program for the Florence marathon. I must ensure services that have been there for me are there for others. I would love to have you be a part of my team for Florence. The link under my signature will allow you to donate securely. They even allow donations over time so a significant donation is a little less painful. I thank you for your consideration. You've saved my life more than once.

I also extend the offer I did last year. Please also consider participating as a cyclist or roadie in next year's AIDS/LifeCyle. I would love to form a Team Hermes. I will be your first donor and will support you on every step of your adventure. It will transform you, alchemical in its power.

Thank you, LAGLC and San Francisco AIDS Foundation, AIDS/LifeCycle community, my friends, family, donors and well-wishers. I am alive because of you all.

I leave you with a link to Raul Esparza singing 'Being Alive' from the Tony Awards. Please afford yourself the chance to truly hear it. It's a good metaphor for the ride and for life. Let the words seep into you, unfiltered. Allow yourself to feel, regain and celebrate your humanity. This is life, raw. Alive.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j8kYfPoHyos



"Somebody, hold me too close,

Somebody, hurt me too deep,

Somebody, sit in my chair
And ruin my sleep
And make me aware
Of being alive,
Being alive.

Somebody, need me too much,
Somebody, know me too well,
Somebody, pull me up short
And put me through hell
And give me support
For being alive,
Make me alive.

Make me confused,
Mock me with praise,
Let me be used,
Vary my days.
But alone is alone, not alive.

Somebody, crowd me with love,
Somebody, force me to care,
Somebody, make me come through,
I'll always be there,
As frightened as you,
To help us survive
Being alive,
Being alive,
Being alive!"

Namaste

I Honor the God in You.

Craig

https://www.sfaf.org/give/marathon.cfm?e=FL07&f=Craig&l=Hermes&n=5053

AIDS Marathon Florence 2007 Runner #5053, ALC Rider #4147, SFAF Client, HIV+ over 12 years, a pain in the ass for far longer

Tuesday, June 12, 2007

Slices In Time From An Extraordinary Week.


Enjoy seven days as the world ought to be.

www.flickr.com/gp/74673855@N00/KrJ41a


Namaste/Peace.

I Honor the God in You.

Craig

www.sfaf.org/give/marathon.cfm

AIDS Marathon Florence 2007 Runner #5053, ALC Rider #4147, SFAF
Client, HIV+ over 12 years, a pain in the ass for far longer

Saturday, June 02, 2007

It's Late, I'm Exhausted...hey lets ride 600 miles!


Hey Friends, family!

It's 11:08 and I'll be getting up at 4:00AM to do AIDS/LifeCycle 6. Each year is a completely different experience. This year, as I head into the event, I'm tired, undertrained and have been really sick prior to the event. I'll adhere to my Don Miguel Ruiz tenet and do my best. It's the most you can do and there is no regret then.

I know my emails are usually a bit more inspired, but I'm trusting in the event to reset my barometer and rekindle my spirit--it always does. Life on the event is life raw, without a filter. Happiness, sorrow, inspiration, anxiety, kindness, endurance--all there, all in their utmost intensity. It's beautiful.

Thank you so much for your kind words, donations, your love and presence in my life-you are among my life's greatest riches.

As a side note, as of yesterday, we had already raised over $10 million. Extraordinary. As a sobering adjunct, for each hour of the event, 558 more people will become HIV posiive. Necessary.

Well, I really need to sleep. If you'd like to follow our journey down the coast, check out
http://experience.aidslifecycle.org/
It's like a daily vitamin for your soul--seven days as the world ought to be.

I will report more when I can. Be well.

Namaste

I Honor The God In You.

Namaste

I Honor the God in You.

Craig

https://www.sfaf.org/give/marathon.cfm?e=FL07&f=Craig&l=Hermes&n=5053

AIDS Marathon Florence 2007 Runner #5053, ALC Rider #4147, SFAF Client, HIV+ over 12 years, a pain in the ass for far longer

Friday, May 25, 2007

Natividad!



Happy Birthday to me! 45. Wow. I remember when my parents turned 40--and they were old, well, uh, parents... And I remember Mom's 50th--I put a foam core sign up in front of our house saying "Honk! Carol's 50!!" She was a mortified great sport about it--even posed for a pic hold roses and giving the queen's wave to the honking cars passing our house on Hopmeadow. My Mom. 50. Scott's age. When exactly was the time when days became weeks became months, then years...

I remember asking my 85 year old grandmother when it was she noticed she was old. Loved her response.

"I never did. I look at the world the same way, but I look in the mirror and see an old lady looking back at me." All point of view, I guess.

Thought I'd look up the "If today's your birthday..." sites. So funny, in a dark way. Here it is:

Birthday Horoscope for 05/25

The May 25th person lives their life suffering in some way or another. This is accredited to the planet Neptune. Illusions that seem to offer some form of transcendence is another trait of this planet. The person born on this day has excellent skills and are usually great thinkers in the work place, but can spend some time warding off objectors. As a mate, the May 25th person is unique and captivating. The ideal mate of this person would offer a atmosphere of stability.

Famous Birthdays; Mike Myers, Tom T. Hall, Frank Oz, Leslie Uggams, Paul Weller (The Jam), Klaus Meine (The Scorpions), Miles Davis.

How rosy! Happy birthday, sufferer! I did have someone ask me if I was aware of the archetype of Chyron, the wounded healer. He took on the suffering and illness of the world in order to heal others. I kind of like that myth. But I prefer option B, heal others AND yourself. That's my track.

Well, off to sing karaoke with Mike, Maurino, James at the Triple R in Guernville. Mellow birthday, good friends, nice.

My birthday intention? To be more present.

A nice present, no?

Peace.

Wednesday, May 16, 2007

Jump.


“How could you reach the pearl by only looking at the sea?
If you seek the pearl, be a diver: the diver needs several
qualities: he must trust his rope and his life to the Friend's
hand, he must stop breathing, and he must jump.”
~Mowlana Jalaluddin Rumi, Fihi ma Fihi

Monday, May 14, 2007

Heat Wave! Burning in My Heart!


First time under 102 in almost a week.
Yahooooooooo!
Should I run Bay to Breakers this weekend as a celebration?

Rigggghhhhhhhht.

The Healer Watches.


Funny how concerned Fugee was with my being really, REALLY sick this week. Had a fever of 102.5 for five days, not strep, not pneumonia, not sure what it was. Maybe just an ideal way to do some endurance training three weeks before ALC.

Spent most of the time sleeping, Fugee pressed into me with his head on my chest, occassionaly looking up and giving me a worried glance and a lick. When friends came by to walk him, he had to be coerced to go out and leave me.

What a good friend.

Shadow Facts.


"The task of midlife is not to look into the light, but to bring light into the
darkness. The latter procedure, however, is disagreeable and therefore not popular."
Carl Jung : Alchemical Studies

Friday, May 04, 2007

What an Einstein.


"There are two ways to live your life. One is as though nothing is a miracle. The other is as though everything is a miracle."
~Albert Einstein

Have a miracluous day.

Thursday, April 26, 2007

Still Necessary.


Friends, Family-
I am truly testing your good nature, I know this, but please hear me out. It's important.
The great news? 
Craig's Team of Family & Friends for ALC 2007 has already raised over $3,200 for my participation in the 575-mile journey this June.  Thank you SO MUCH for believing in me, for caring, for choosing action over complacency, for being the change we wish to see in the world.
So, why the email? 
I again humbly ask for your good humor and patience and ask that you read this email and consider its message.
In November, I will be participating in the AIDS Marathon in Florence, Italy, raising vital funds for the San Francisco AIDS Foundation. I have committed to raising at least $4,200 dollars and I'd like to exceed $5,000+.  Hopefully, I can hit the mark.  Last year, we raised over $10,000 with AIDS/LifeCycle, so I'm confident we can do this.
My friends and family are engaged and active participants in creating positive social change.  I am just acting as a reminder or vehicle for action.  I hope that you will once again join me.
I run, I bike, I must.  This will be my second season of the AIDS Marathon.  Can't believe it was five years ago I ran in celebration of my 40th year and fifth year of being positive.
Five years later, still here, as is AIDS.  Not an easy five years, much life transition, money issues and recently some minor pesky immune issues.
I run to raise funds for people who so vitally need the services that were there for me.
I run to regain my power, my sense of hope and joy.
I run to create a world where assumptions about living with HIV are challenged.  A world that does not stigmatize a disease.  A world safer, more knowledgable for my niece & nephew.
And yes, I run to carve some blubber of my love handles.  Actually, that's just a nifty perk.  But those other reasons?
That's why I run.
It is our obligation to share our great good fortune. Please consider joining me in this next life-affirming adventure.  No Body Glide, DryWick or Band Aids on your nipples required.  I'll take care of those...
Below, a portion of my ALC letter, as well, to further explain my double participation in such a short period of time:
This paragraph is where I should say poignant things and make you feel the need for the event.  But, with this being my 12th year of participation, I've kind of said it all before.  What can I say except that it's still so vitally necessary, that people need to ride bikes extraordinary distances just to keep friends and family alive.  Kind people.  Many of these people not normally active.  It's not easy, it is commitment, drive, compassion.  Your family, friends, neighbors--all connected, we are all our brother's keepers.  I decided to challenge myself in a new way this year, by becoming a recurring donor at Keep a Child Alive.  For $30 bucks a month, the price of just one of my 60 antiviral pills I take in a month, I am providing a month's supply of antivirals for someone in Africa.  I can't give up two weeks of Biggie Diet Cokes so that a child can live?  Of course I can!  The extraordinary, prohibitive costs of health insurance  and antiviral regimens here in the US makes this journey necessary.

Still Necessary.
Namaste
I Honor the God in You.
Craig
AIDS Marathon Florence 2007 Runner #5053, ALC Rider #4147, SFAF Client, HIV+ over 12 years, a pain in the ass for far longer
P.S. Please forward this page to your friends and family; they can just click or cut-n-paste this link and make a secure, online donation: https://www.sfaf.org/give/marathon.cfm?e=FL07&f=Craig&l=Hermes&n=5053

Think pro-karma spam! Delicious.

Signs Point Toward No.


some prayers are better left unanswered...

Saturday, March 17, 2007

A Message Inspired By Saint Patrick of The Catholic Church, Famous For Proselytizing, On This March 17th.


St Patrick loved him some proselytizing. What is proselytizing, you don't ask?

According to our friends at Wikipedia:

"Proselytism is the practice of attempting to convert people to another opinion, usually another religion. The word proselytism is derived ultimately from the Greek language prefix 'pros' (towards) and the verb 'erchomai' (to come). Historically in the New Testament, the word proselyte denoted a person who had converted to the Jewish religion. Though the word proselytism was originally tied to Christianity, it is also used to refer to other religions' attempts to convert people to their beliefs or even any attempt to convert people to another point of view, religious or not. Today, the connotations of the word proselytism are often negative but this article will use the word neutrally to refer to any attempts to convert a person or people to another faith."

Big words give me a brain ache.

As you know, I am not one to usually proseltyze about things. I think people should like what they like and keep it to themselves. It's just no one's business what you like. Case closed.

Wow.

No house fell on me after that crock of crap.

I proselytize about pretty much everything--my favorite toothpaste, dog, music, carrot, charity, color, taste, texture, event, friend, movie country and underwear. Yes, I am passionate about toothpaste and underwear. Not toothpaste in the underwear, mind you.

So what is this proselytizing?

It's sharing your passion. Sometimes being a maven. Letting others know about stuff you love just so they can love it, too.

In honour of that crazy-go-nuts charismatic snake driving charmer, I offer three things I want you to love like I love.

Amy Winehouse, "Rehab". Billie Holiday, Phil Spector, the voice of a 300 lb Soul diva, Chrissie Hynde's hair and eyes and a quart of whiskey in a blender. Utter joy.
click here : http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LD5sahXoj0U

Sarah Silverman, Jesus is Magic. A sexy, funny, talented equal opportunity offender, everytime I watch her I laugh til I hurt.
"When God gives you AIDS, and he does... make lemonAIDS".
click here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=40qTXlNJj9s

And of course, AIDS/LifeCycle. That's here.
click here: http://www.aidslifecycle.org/4147

Now, how about you?

What are you passionate about? Lighten up, laugh. Share your Self with the world.

Extend outward, connect.

Happy Saint Patty's Day.

Sunday, March 11, 2007

"We are not amused..."



Fugee, upon hearing that Helen Mirren won best actress for The Queen, sniffed his nose and sighed. I think living in a Victorian has given him a Queen Victoria complex.

Royalty. So temperamental.

Sunday, March 04, 2007