Get ready, get set, go… on an emotional roller coaster for the next few weeks while the Boston Horror is sorted out. Americans aren’t good at Terror. We were spared it for a good long while, as we heard about it in Lebanon and Ireland, and all those places that fall under the category ‘Other’. It’s trickling in here, now. We like to think that we’re a big glossy target that “lesser people” and “backward countries” hate, and that might be the case this time. But everything else is the case, too. Homegrown loonies, halfwitted inbreds, ego-driven creeds, counterculture crackpots, feverish revolutionaries and well-spoken demagogues are all “out there”- meaning “in here”. Some terror you can try to prepare for and some you can’t. That’s why it terrorizes us- it’s the Not Knowing. We don’t know where it’s coming from, nor why, nor from whom, nor when, nor especially what will happen next. That largely depends on who demands what happens next and whether they get what they demand… and the people making the most impassioned demands aren’t always using their forebrains and trying to outwit the terrorists, past or future. No, the most impassioned, demanding victims can be as irrational and impassioned and demanding as the terrorists themselves, and the terrorists like it that way. They’re calm right now, hiding and waiting to see what we’ll do. “They” (the culprits this time and the culprits previously and the wannabes) hope that we’ll do something stupid and hamstring ourselves. And we might. I hope not. We’ll see.
Posts Tagged run
Everything in the world is on the web now, including the world itself. I get all kinds of RSS feed and links to cool, fun sites and blogs and catalogs and all. One of the best is THE ADVENTURE BLOG. I get an email every day with links to their latest fun stuff, and if there’s time, I troll around there and check it out.
They have this on there now:
So. Wanna keep up with the outdoors while you’re indoors? Or while you have your smartphone out? I know it seems a little daffy to geek out on the outdoors digitally, but hey… good content is good content.
This is one of the early Because It’s There cartoons that I haven’t updated and colored. That’s because the dynamic of the relationship between Hubris and Kara changed as I was writing. Hubris is no longer the sort of character who’d balk at the idea of actually, physically climbing the highest mountain for Kara. More likely, he’d insist on it while she said they didn’t have time to do it, so pick something else to do this weekend, like a movie or… another trail run, I think.
What do you think? Should Hubris be less reckless and more romantic-minded? Feel free to share. There’s a comment section, and there’s always the ‘contact’ and ’email’ buttons.
And as always, thanks for reading. The nostalgia trip will be over soon enough and we’ll be looking at fatter lines and colors.
For anyone who has stumbled across Hubris lately (feel free to do the StumbleUpon thing there to the right of your screen) I wanted to point out that Hubris usually isn’t Black & White. We’re doing nostalgia time just now. The color returns soon. Just like in The Wizard Of Oz or something.
Early on, y’see, around the ancient year 2000, I was told that at least one syndicate was looking for an outdoor sports comic strip. I was told this because a syndicated cartoonist saw my suburban covered in stickers and filled with bicycles and skateboards, and with kayaks strapped atop.
Turns out he was only partially informed. ‘Outdoor sports’ to many people means huntin’ and fishin’ and that’s what the syndicate apparently had in mind. Oops.
Anyhow, I poured a lot of time and attention into ‘Because It’s There’ and got, as has been stated before, onto Tribune Media’s ‘Here’s the New Guys-whattaya think’ website, and got some little editorial attention from one syndicate. Amy Lago, bless her, gave me a lot of advice about it. I eventually had to put more of my time into earning my living (advertising cartoons and the art for a syndicated strip called The Buckets, y’see) that I had to shelve ‘Because It’s There’.
With the advent and subsequent boom of Webcomics, I thought I might try Hubris out online. Then I put that off for years.
Now we’ve been here for a year, and you’re reading this. Pretty cool. Thanks very much for being here!
Now, if it suits you- please slip over to the right hand side of the screen to VoteHubris, do all that Google+ and twitter to your followers about Hubris and any other social media stuff you can think of.
And if you think it’s time for me to print Hubris Helmet stickers or anything, let me know. There’s comment sections under every article, and there’s an email button and a Contact button somewhere.
Hell, just troll around the site and see what you like. Bound to be something.
Maybe it’s just me. Maybe it’s that I often wear running shoes when I’m not running. I just want a running shoe that doesn’t look like it’s been designed by a movie special effects wizard. Right now I’m wearing a pair of Sauconys that looks least bizarre with a pair of jeans that I could find.
Wanna shop some lurid running shoes? Here’s some trail runners to peruse. Click on ’em.
I’m fat. Y’know what makes me feel better about that fact? Not much.
Did you know that if you ask people on the street what ‘Obesity’ is, most people consider it to be “anything fatter than me”? They proved that by going out in public and asking people on the street. Eek.
So anyhow, one time my friends and I were out at the park (you know the one with the miles of bike trails? That one.) finishing up a ride when we realized just how lucky we were to be winding up when we did. There was a Triathlon starting up. By gum, THAT explains all the new tape and signs on the trail. It was a minor miracle we were able to get on and ride, all things considered. (We used to ride early. That’s a tip. Start riding at daybreak. More spiderwebs in the trail. Fewer everything else.)
So, why WOULDN’T you stop, take a drink of water, cool down, and watch a bunch of people swim across a lake, charge up a hill, grab their bikes and ride off, all trying to go faster than one another? You would. We did. And so did this other guy.
Nice guy. Little round across the midsection. Little talkative. So far, I might as well be describing me, but here’s the difference: He’s eating an energy bar. I was about to go home and pound down the calories, don’t get me wrong. It’s just that this guy is mildly munching away on a ‘meal replacement’ energy bar while watching other people exercise.
Very fit people are rushing past us and clambering onto expensive bikes and rushing away, burning calories like a coal stove. My friends and I had just had a leisurely weekend ride by comparison, and we were sweaty and burned down. And this pleasant talkative guy munched and told us alllll about how he competes in this kind of thing all the time. He was in such-and-such a town two weekends ago and rode in some race or other, and he doesn’t have his bike with him today because he’s doing another race next weekend and doesn’t want to burn out, and while he unwraps a second energy bar, he continues to talk about what kind of bike he has and how he and his friends love to race.
You caught the part about the second energy bar, right? This guy, who looks like he’s in no better shape than me or Hubris, is nattering on and on, and in the course of watching the hotshots of the triathlon come in from their first loop around the trails, the guy finishes the second energy bar and opens a third.
We tried to be polite. We tried gently ignoring him. We tried having our own conversations in low tones. The guy had a message, though. His message was “I’m an athlete. I do these kinds of races, too. Just not today.” We got it. Point made. Go on, now.
But he had to put the finishing touch. “You’d think,” he eventually said, starting into his FIFTH energy bar, which he had also mentioned that he buys by the box, “…that I’d be skinnier, what with all the racing and stuff, but I just can’t lose the weight.”
Five energy bars while standing around watching other people exercise. And he doesn’t know where the weight comes from. Amazing.
Having gotten this off his chest, he finally waved, told us he’d be seeing us around since he does this kind of thing all the time, and wandered off. Probably going to make sure that other people in the crowd knew that he wasn’t just a fat spectator, but that he, too, did this kind of thing. All the time. Just like those guys who were just now riding in off their second lap and starting to leap off their bikes to run for miles.
What’s the takeaway from this kind of story? It’s okay to be incognito? A stealth athlete hiding behind a screen of no bike and an extra twenty five pounds? Yeah. Okay. I’ma go home and eat a chicken.






















