Reflections on The Siding Spring, Two Years In

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I’ve been bad about updating this blog lately but have started to up the ante with my freelance writing by approaching magazines with stories. Here is my first article, scheduled to be published in the November issue of Austin Fit Magazine:

 

Until I wrote this article, I’d never thought to ask my dad how he’d found out he had Parkinson’s disease. Turns out he didn’t know long before the family did. In late 2011, his left foot developed a persistent tap and then his left arm developed a tremor. An MRI ruled out all other explanations.

At the time, it didn’t interfere with his work or playing guitar in church, but walking soon became problematic. He couldn’t walk without dragging his left foot. Still, he didn’t require medication and his condition seemed stable. Two years later, he went on medication and family members noticed a definite improvement.

For all of 2016, he’s been going to a boxing class specifically designed to help people who have Parkinson’s manage their physical symptoms. I know that having a place to exercise and mingle with other people who share his condition has been enormously beneficial for him.

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The motto on the entrance to North Austin’s Ultimate MMA Fitness gym asks all who enter to “fight to be fit.” However, it’s quickly apparent that the people who arrive on Monday morning for the Rock Steady Boxing classes aren’t fighting for a sleekly muscled physique. They’re fighting to maintain the freedom of movement that most of us take for granted.

They have Parkinson’s Disease, which is a neurologically degenerative process that slowly robs a person of their cognitive and physical abilities. The depletion of dopamine in their brains make even routine movements require a Herculean effort. Although the disease tends to set in later in life, the defining symptoms have been seen in every age group. The youngest Rock Steady fighter is 46, the oldest is 85.

Along with proper medical management with help from trained professionals, forced anaerobic exercise has shown to be an effective therapy for Parkinson’s treatment. Robert Izor, M.D., the Medical Director at Neurology Solutions Consultants, says that because the standard drug treatment has its own constellation of undesirable side-effects, he tries to keep his patients off medication as long as possible. “The disease not only affects dopamine, but also other neurotransmitters. Your motivation, your interest in doing things, suffers. Trying to get Parkinson’s patients to do vigorous exercise is a challenge, and I think that’s where Rock Steady has some advantages—because it has that group feeling, and a coach that pushes you,” Izor says.

Rock Steady boxer Dave Streilein described the disease as “a personal process where the individual disappears,” and that without having a program that pushes him to extend his physical abilities and relate with other patients in an active, focused environment, he’d feel left to fend for himself. The disease can have an isolating effect on those afflicted since their diagnosis doesn’t extend to their co-workers, friends and spouses. More than just a workout, the Rock Steady classes provide a place where fellow Parkinson’s sufferers can go to find support in a community of people going through similar physical deterioration.

This is the first and only program of its kind. The nonprofit organization was founded in 2006 by a former Indianapolis District Attorney who found a high-intensity boxing regimen to dramatically improve the symptoms of his Parkinson’s. The program has since spread to 5 countries and 43 states and has increased membership in Austin from 3 to 90 people since opening in November 2015. There are three locations in Austin, one in Georgetown, and one opening in Lakeway on Nov. 1 of this year.

Owner and head coach Kristi Richards came to Rock Steady by way of senior fitness, a demographic she fell in love with while taking the classes during a pregnancy. She was drawn to this group because of their penchant for wisdom and humor. After the birth of her third child, she taught a senior fitness program called Silver Sneakers for five years before finding out about the Rock Steady program from a client. The video she saw of two tenacious Parkinson’s sufferers sparring with each other delighted her with its absurdity. “The idea of Parkinson’s patients hitting each other was just crazy to me. I mean, isn’t that what causes Parkinson’s?” was her initial reaction. Muhammad Ali was undoubtedly not far from her mind.

In the 1,276 square-foot training room, Kristi first leads the group through a series of stretches. While they’re seated she walks around the room asking them questions about their opinions and personal lives.

“What has changed most in your lifetime?” is the question of the day. The most obvious answer is technology. Another man muses that getting old is the biggest change he’s experienced. The observation that is felt most disheartening to the group is the animosity and lack of cooperation in politics these days. In all, their thoughts are humorous and honest—there’s a serene wisdom you can feel while standing in a room full of people asked to examine the quirks of their era.

After an obstacle course to practice walking and balancing, the fighters partner up and switch off at intervals at stations for exercises that work on balance, core strength, boxing, and jump rope. After 45 minutes, everyone is sweaty and energized.

Camaraderie and friendly competition in a high non-contact intensity group workout is healthy for anyone, at any age. The success of Rock Steady Boxing can serve as a reminder that exercise has a neuroprotective benefit. At the end of each class, the fighters get into a group huddle and encourage each other to “Rock Steady!” as in, go out and face the world without succumbing to the debilitating symptoms of Parkinson’s.

(If interested in finding out about volunteer opportunities or have Parkinson’s and would like to enroll, please e-mail Kristi Richards at fightback@rocksteadyatx.com)

“Becoming Steve Jobs” by Brent Schlender and Rick Tetzeli

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“What we are trying to achieve with this book is this: to provide a deeper understanding of Steve Jobs’s ever-evolving arsenal of entrepreneurial skills and capabilities, and the deepening of his almost messianic drive to have an impact on his world. We want to show how it was fueled to an unusual degree by his unique gift for being an autodidact, and by genuine idealism as well as his occasionally scary obsessions, his rigid and austere yet consistently well-thought-out aesthetic standards, his often pompous sense of mission. All along, he held a genuine compassion for the anxieties and needs of ordinary people who want to find new tools to empower and improve themselves in a world that grows more complex, cacophonous, and confounding every day.”

By any measure, the authors of this book accomplished their goals. Much has been written about Steve Jobs over the years but this biography feels the most complete. The authors are business journalists who both knew Jobs well, both personally and professionally. The question that fascinates them the most about Steve is how a brash young entrepreneur who was so arrogant that the company he founded fired him but manage to come back a decade later, having tempered his youthful recklessness with age and experience, and turn Apple around into the most successful companies of all time? 

As awestruck as they are by the man, the portrait they paint of him not always flattering. Even so, they knew him well enough to explain why he was the was he was. Steve Jobs has never seemed so human.  Continue reading

“The Psychopath Test” and “So You’ve Been Publicly Shamed” by Jon Ronson

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“Sociopaths love power. They love winning. If you take loving kindness out of the human brain, there’s not much left except the will to win.” —The Psychopath Test

“We have always had some influence over the justice system, but for the first time in 180 years—since the stocks and the pillory were outlawed—we have the power to determine the severity of some punishments. And so we have to think about what level of mercilessness we feel comfortable with.” —So You’ve been Publicly Shamed

Jon Ronson’s books are compulsively readable. He knows how to spin a good story and ingratiate himself with strange and interesting people. My highlights in his books are sparse. His narrative is so tightly woven to its profundity that it was tough to spot the concise nuggets.

In So You’ve Been Publicly Shamed, he documents people who have had their careers ruined by the Internet. He feels like the Internet has unleashed virtual lynch mobs through message boards and Twitter. An example that he doesn’t cover but that I couldn’t help but think about was Bill Cosby. Rape allegations had been made against him for a couple decades, but it wasn’t until Hannibal Burress made a stand-up joke about it that someone recorded and posted on YouTube that Cosby’s career was forever tarnished in the public mind.

The Psychopath Test explores what he calls the ‘madness industry.’ The thing that stuck out to me the most was the humble beginnings of the DSM (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders) which was haphazardly thrown together in 1952 by a roomful of psychiatrists shouting out symptoms to disorders they’d seen. The whole thing feels very mad, and that is why Jon Ronson is the perfect journalist to tell this story.

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“The Truth About Trump” by Michael D’Antonio

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“Trump begins each day with a sheaf of papers detailing where and how often his name has been mentioned in the global press. The reports are typically too numerous for him to actually read, but the weight of the pages gives his sensitive ego a measure of his importance on any given day. This need to be noticed, and his drive to satisfy it, has made him a singular figure worthy of close inspection.”

Say what you will about Donald Trump, his life has been fascinating. He’s been bumbling through American post-WWII history, as narcissistic as Forrest Gump was clueless, showing up at so many post-war events. I read the book to get a better feel for the man who could be president and came away shocked that he could go all the way to the Oval Office.

This book was originally published under the title Never Enough: Donald Trump and the Pursuit For Success in 2015, well before he was a serious presidential contender. D’Antonio’s reason for choosing to write about Donald Trump is a compelling one:

“But it is not Trump’s outrageousness that makes him worthy of interest. More important is that he has succeeded, like no one else, in converting celebrity into profit.(No matter how many billions he has, we are still talking about billions.) Somehow he has done this even as a substantial proportion of the population, arguably more than 50 percent, consider him a buffoon if not a menace. What does it say about Trump that he is so undeniably successful by the two measures that matter most to him—money and fame? And what, pray tell, does it say about us?”

In the end, the disturbing conclusion that D’Antionio draws is that Donald Trump is “a living expression of the values of our time.”

I wish this book was more widely read and this was the official narrative of who Donald Trump is, but every bookstore I walk into has Trump’s The Art of the Deal prominently on display, while this title is relegated to the back shelf.

Buy on Amazon

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