Comforting Habits

I was chatting with a friend recently about routines and some of the helpful or silly things we do. I mentioned that when I played adult baseball, we often had Sunday morning games and a routine of mine was to drive to town, stop at a 7-11, and get a large cup of coffee and an apple fritter. It was a comforting habit that I still have today, often stopping when I have a morning flight to do the same thing in the way to the airport.

Only in Denver though, not when I’m flying out of other cities and returning home.

At another job, I rode my bike to work. However, I’d drive Monday morning and leave my car at work, taking it home Friday afternoon. In between I’d commute on a bicycle 10-12 miles each way. On Monday, I’d buy a half dozen bagels for the week, which I’d leave in my office. After riding in and showering, I’d toast a bagel and have that with my coffee. It was a nice way to start the day while I scanned email or had a morning meeting.

Apparently, many of my routines revolve around food.

I have other habits, like waking up and checking my email before doing anything else. Not always, but most days I’ll stir, give up on trying to sleep, and scan email from bed to see what is in store for the day. I don’t always get up and go to work, but I can mentally prepare myself for how the workday will go. I’ve often found this helps me ease the way into the day, and I’m less stressed when I’ve broken the question of the day or had some other issue. I am prepared for what I’ll face in the next hour after relaxing with my wife for a bit longer.

Routines not only bring us comfort, but they ground us in the chaos of the real world. Even if we have lost control of our work, with others pressuring us to meet deadlines or fix a broken system, a routine helps us to react calmly and not panic.

Even during security or failure incidents, which can be very stressful, I’d start the issue with a blank notebook page, writing a few known facts down on paper and starting to think forward as to how I’d manage staff. Often this exercise had me making initial decisions about who would work now and who would go home to come back later and relieve people. This was before I knew the scope or details of the problem. Even though I often had to change my plan, having a plan to change gave me comfort.

Think about the repetitive things you do on a daily or weekly basis. Think about the things you do in response to periodic events. What comforting habits do you have that help you get through the day or just bring a smile to your face.

Steve Jones

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My 2024 in Data: Music

This is my last week of the year working (I guess I come back on the 30th for a minute), so I decided to do some analysis of my year. I like data and numbers, so I’m looking at a few aspects of life this year with data I’ve compiled from previous years.

This is the end of the week and I’m looking at music, which is a big part of my life.

Spotify Wrapped

I listen a lot on Spotify. On my phone, in the car, even at my desk. I do some YouTube at times, and I have my local library from days past loaded into the Spotify app, but mostly I’m streaming.

  • Minutes: 36916 (25.6 days)
  • Songs: 3,598
  • Biggest day: 657 minutes (10 hours, flying DEN-LAX-SYD)
  • Ghost in my Guitar most played, 62 times this year
  • Artists: 1536, Zach Bryan being the top one for me (almost 10% of my minutes)
    • #2 – Beatles
    • #3 – Kanye
    • #4 – John Mayer
    • #5 – Linkin Park

When I look back, this is slightly less than last year. About 40 minutes less streaming, about 100 less artists, about 200 less songs. More repeats.

Interesting that my top artists were similar. John Mayer, Zach Bryan, The Beatles. This year Kanye and Linkin Park replaced U2 and Chris Stapleton. Previous years had Jay-Z, Tupac, and Kenny Chesney in there.

I like to think I explore different music, but not a lot (apparently). I tend to listen to familiar things and keep some playlists around for a long time.

Guitar

Another part of my music is that I play guitar to relax. I keep an acoustic Sweetwater guitar by my bed and will play many nights for a bit to unwind. I love Redgate has a few in our Cambridge lobby, though they are very cheap, not comfortable ones, but they work.

This year I also bought a Lava Me Play smart guitar in the summer, which I’ve taken on some vacations. It sits by my desk and I’ll take a break and strum something during the way. I haven’t done much with the “smart” features, which helped me learn I really just wanted a second, smaller acoustic.

Top songs I’ve worked on this year (in no order):

  • Mechanical Bull – Zach Bryan
  • 28 – Zach Bryan
  • With or without you – U2
  • 3×5 – John Mayer
  • Jersey Giant – Tyler Childers
  • You’ve Got To Hide Your Live – The Beatles
  • Hallelujah – Jeff Buckley
  • If I Ain’t Got You – Alicia Keys

I’ve done a few more lighlty, but these are some I’ve played a lot, a few I’m still trying to get to sound vaguely like something you recognize.

2024 was a fun year of music for me, and I’m looking forward to 2025.

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A New Word: Suente

suente– n. the state of being so familiar with someone that you can be in a room with them without thinking, without holding anything back, or without having to say a word – to the extent that you have to remind yourself that they’re a different being entirely, that brushing hair away from their eyes won’t help you see any better.

This makes me think of the familiarity I have with my wife or kids or a few close friends. We don’t need to talk, and we know what the others are thinking based on the situation or body language. We can sit in a room reading, relaxing, watching something, listening to music, and we feel both comfortable and close.

I love the suente and I’m glad it’s with few people.

From the Dictionary of Obscure Sorrows

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My 2024 in Data: Health and Workouts

This is my last week of the year working (I guess I come back on the 30th for a minute), so I decided to do some analysis of my year. I like data and numbers, so I’m looking at a few aspects of life this year with data I’ve compiled from previous years.

Today we look at my health (somewhat) and exercise. That’s a big part of my life and I dedicate a lot of time to taking care of myself.

Health

I don’t want to disclose too much, but I feel fairly healthy. I have some age-related things that are annoying, but in general, I can live my life. This year (2024) was the first time since ankle surgery (2022), that I felt my balance was really good on the surgical ankle. That was nice to have it feel over the summer that it was back to full strength.

I don’t have history (that I know of) of heart issues, but I like tracking my heart. I use a Garmin Forerunner 645, which seems to be accurate the few times I’m also hooked up to a doctor’s machine.

My yearlong resting heart rate is: 52bpm. Sightly high, as I’d like it at 50 or below, but I’ve had some stressful travel stretches, and I think that’s made things slightly worse.

My avg. high is 128, which is mostly from exercise, though I don’t know what to think about that number as an average.

My one year sleep average is 8h35m a night. Pretty good, though I think the watch sometime catches me at night or in the morning as lightly sleeping when I’m reading. Still, it’s good I’m in bed for a nice stretch most nights.

I struggle with weight as I travel. I was trying to stay 220-225, which I did well with in 2023. This year, with some really long trips, I’ve struggled. I get up around 230 on trips, and then struggle to get below 226-227. This was my year, and the upward trend started with the UK and then AUS trips.

2024-12_0148

Slowly doing better as I’ve been home since Nov 22. I hope to close out the year at 225 or lower.

I should track BP, but I don’t. The closest I get it stress, which for me is from my watch. The scale is 1-100, and I show an average for the year of 23. My lowest reading was 17, and the highest was 30. I remember it being above 25 and I know why.

In general, I am fairly low stress most of the time, and when I feel stressed, I can see it in the readings.

Exercise

I try to log all workouts on my watch. If I miss one, or it’s not charged, I try to add a manual one. I don’t always log walks, especially days when I’m just walking a lot without dedicated exercise time. Like in a convention center.

In any case, here are the workout stats.

  • Indoor Cycling    102
  • Yoga    56
  • Strength Training    54
  • Elliptical    15
  • Pool Swim    8
  • Walking    6
  • Resort Snowboarding    3
  • Indoor Rowing    1
  • Other    1

That’s a pretty good count overall. I had 246 workouts. Since I often cycle and lift, those can be the same day, but I do a lot of cycling on the road as a quick workout.

The disappointing bits. Being gone a lot this summer only had me with 8 swims, which was sad. Only 1 of those was over a mile Sad smile

I also only had 3 days snowboarding, which was also sad, but that was a busy life.

Still, I think I worked out about 160 days this year by my best guess. We’re still a few weeks short, but that’s about 40-some% of the days that I specifically dedicate to workouts. Less a variety of things, as last year I had 10 types of workouts. Also less yoga, which is something I need to get better at on the road.

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