The U.S. Supreme Court struck down DOMA today. We are still waiting to hear the ruling on Prop 8. I included a link to the ruling in this blog: SCOTUS Ruling on #DOMA It should be read - even if not entirely (It's 77 pages long, although only the first 4 pages contain a summary of the ruling by the court, the rest is the description of the suit and the full ruling and dissenting opinions.). This may be the most compelling part that I have read though:
"2. DOMA is unconstitutional as a deprivation of the equal liberty of persons that is protected by the Fifth Amendment. Pp. 13–26."
Wednesday, June 26, 2013
Wednesday, June 5, 2013
First Trail Half Marathon in the bag - Now marathon training begins
In March 2013, I ran my first trail half marathon on Racoon Mountain in East TN at the Rock/Creek Scenic City Trail Marathon & Half Marathon (http://www.rockcreek.com/trailmarathon.rco). It was my second trail race (my first was the Rock/Creek River Gorge Trail Race 10.2 miler: http://www.rockcreek.com/rivergorge.rco.) and my second half marathon (first: 4 Bridges Half Marathon: http://www.7bridgesmarathon.com/). I managed to PR on this trail half with a time of 2:11 (7 minutes faster than the flat road half I completed 6 months earlier), despite the 1100+ ft of elevation gain, which made me happy. I still haven't reached my target time of <2:00 a="" but="" eventually="" font="" get="" half="" i="" in="" nbsp="" there.="" will="">2:00>
I was prepared for this race despite the fact that I had missed several training runs leading up to the event. I started out around the middle of the pack and just ran my race the whole way. Other than a few steep hills near the end, I managed to run the whole thing which was a first for me on a distance that long.
I now have my sights set on my first full marathon in December at the St. Jude Memphis Marathon where I hope to raise $1000 for the hospital's research and cancer treatment. You can find my personal fundraising page here: http://heroes.stjude.org/Stephen-wren if you wish to help me raise money. You can also read a number of factoids on the hospital, the research they do, and the children and families they help.
I have a hard week of training ahead of me with 14 miles between now and Friday and then 18 miles on Saturday and another 8 on Sunday (40 total). I have never run that far before (for a weekly total or a daily total), but I know I will get there. I may have to stage some water along the way though just so I can stay hydrated throughout. I will post more updates as I feel they are warranted.
BTW: Happy Runners Day. Go out and log some miles. See you on the roads/trails.
I was prepared for this race despite the fact that I had missed several training runs leading up to the event. I started out around the middle of the pack and just ran my race the whole way. Other than a few steep hills near the end, I managed to run the whole thing which was a first for me on a distance that long.
I now have my sights set on my first full marathon in December at the St. Jude Memphis Marathon where I hope to raise $1000 for the hospital's research and cancer treatment. You can find my personal fundraising page here: http://heroes.stjude.org/Stephen-wren if you wish to help me raise money. You can also read a number of factoids on the hospital, the research they do, and the children and families they help.
I have a hard week of training ahead of me with 14 miles between now and Friday and then 18 miles on Saturday and another 8 on Sunday (40 total). I have never run that far before (for a weekly total or a daily total), but I know I will get there. I may have to stage some water along the way though just so I can stay hydrated throughout. I will post more updates as I feel they are warranted.
BTW: Happy Runners Day. Go out and log some miles. See you on the roads/trails.
One Year Anniversary with Current Company
I recently celebrated one year with my current company!
I am happy to report that last month, I completed my first full year with my current company. I have had some incredible opportunities this past year; I have traveled to several customer job sites, met with numerous client representatives, participated in a number of highly visible projects, and built several important professional networks in the engineering consulting industry.
If you had asked me a couple of years ago what I wanted to do with my career, I would have described my current role with to a "T." I just never thought I would find a company that was so tailor suited to my professional goals. - I get to travel to numerous customer locations, work on a diverse project portfolio, and learn more about fossil, nuclear, hydro, solar, and wind power generation. I even have the ability to only work four days a week so I can have more time at home with my family. I just don't know too many people who get those opportunities in their line of work. The only downside to my job that I have seen is that I work in a cubicle about 40% of the time, but the other 60% is spent in client meetings, at job sites, and educating myself on the customers and power plants they operate.
I know there are a lot of jobs that pay better, but I would be willing to bet that the stress levels are much higher and the personal rewards for a job well-done are not as significant. I know, because I have had some of those jobs, although most of them paid less and were less rewarding and more stressful. (Active Duty military - enlisted: low pay, high stress; In-home sales: moderate pay, high stress; University Research Assistant: low pay, moderate stress; Military Civilian Engineer: moderate pay, high stress)
If anyone else is considering a career in engineering, I would highly recommend you learn more about it, do a little research (talk to professors, professional engineers, engineering students, etc) and see if engineering is a job that would be a rewarding career for you. Feel free to email me if you are interested in learning more about what an engineer does and where we work. I would be glad to help you learn more about it.
I am happy to report that last month, I completed my first full year with my current company. I have had some incredible opportunities this past year; I have traveled to several customer job sites, met with numerous client representatives, participated in a number of highly visible projects, and built several important professional networks in the engineering consulting industry.
If you had asked me a couple of years ago what I wanted to do with my career, I would have described my current role with
I know there are a lot of jobs that pay better, but I would be willing to bet that the stress levels are much higher and the personal rewards for a job well-done are not as significant. I know, because I have had some of those jobs, although most of them paid less and were less rewarding and more stressful. (Active Duty military - enlisted: low pay, high stress; In-home sales: moderate pay, high stress; University Research Assistant: low pay, moderate stress; Military Civilian Engineer: moderate pay, high stress)
If anyone else is considering a career in engineering, I would highly recommend you learn more about it, do a little research (talk to professors, professional engineers, engineering students, etc) and see if engineering is a job that would be a rewarding career for you. Feel free to email me if you are interested in learning more about what an engineer does and where we work. I would be glad to help you learn more about it.
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