“Japanese Walking”

From my “save this for later when you can’t think of a blog post” archive comes an Outside Magazine piece* on “Japanese walking,” or Interval Walking Training, developed in 2007 at Shinsu University.

IWT itself sounds interesting–“walk fast, then slow, three minutes each, five times per walking session, at least four days each week.”–but what got me is that the modern guideline of 10,000 steps a day is pretty much made up?

Ten thousand steps didn’t come from science. It came from a pedometer ad.

In mid-1960s Japan, amid a national fitness push ahead of the 1964 Tokyo Summer Olympics, exercise physiologist Yoshiro Hatano estimated that doubling the average person’s daily steps—from about 4,000 to 10,000—“would result in an increased energy expenditure of about 300 kcal/day.” There were no clinical trials. No test subjects. Just back-of-the-envelope energy math.

Around the same time, Yamasa, the company known for its delicious soy sauces, released a pedometer called the manpo-kei (万歩計)—which literally translates to “10,000 steps meter.” The number wasn’t precise. But it was motivational, and so it stuck.

 

(*Reading through the article again, I’m getting all kinds of red flags that the author used AI. It’s got that cadence: Not this, not that. Just this. A statement–with something that sounds deep added to it. A string of phrases, and a weirdly emotional verb. Blech! So take all of this with a grain of salt, I guess.)

Tuesday Project Roundup: Everybody Is Cornholio

We’ve been seeing more sun hoodies on the trail lately and I asked Doc if he wanted one. He said, “You mean a Cornholio hoody?”
A man in a white hooed sun shirt and tan pants stands on a trail

A man in a sun shirt facing away from the camera

I did end up using the LearnMYOG guy’s pattern I was rolling my eyes at back when I made my sun shirt in 2024. His patterns have gotten better in the last 5 years but the order of operations on this still made me mad. But he has the only men’s/straight fit sun hoodie out there right now and I didn’t want to draft something, so ¯\_(ツ)_/¯. The thumbholes for this are literally just a hole in the sleeve seam (EYE ROLL) so I added two inches to the sleeve length (and an inch to the body; Doc is 6’4″) and they work without pulling.

I used “SunScreen50 Activewear Poly/Spandex” from Rockywoods for this. I’ve sewn a lot of activewear knits over the years but this felt really high quality–I kind of want a version for me in it now, too.

Doc reports it wasn’t too hot to wear. He also immediately said, “Are you threatening me?!” when he tried it on for the first time.

Flowers

I noticed some bookended purple flowers at the care center where Doc’s mom is getting better…
Purple freesias on a nightstand in a medical room.

…and on the trail in Millcreek.Purple violets on the forest floor

The first flush of green is still in the mountains but it’s already starting to dry out–good thing the violets got a chance to bloom.
A grassy meadow in front of towering pine trees

Friday Links

1. You want to click through to Train Jazz, a data visualization that sets NYC subway trains to music: “Every dot is a real subway train. Eight hundred of them, give or take, form a small jazz combo (walking bass, piano, sax, vibes, brushes) that has been playing without pause for over a hundred years.”

2. Speaking of jazz, now that I’m an ⋆˙⟡ audiophile.✦ ݁˖ , I’m Howard breaking into scat at any given moment.

@jazzmemesofficial 😏 Do you fear jazz? 😏 Tag a friend that doesn’t like jazz or hasn’t given it a chance 👉🏼😂 How many people say they “hate jazz” when they’ve never even listened to more than a couple minutes of it? 🤔 Comment why you think people fear jazz or have a bad impression of it before they even give it a real chance! 🧐 We are almost at 200 Members in our online jazz guitar academy @chasesguitaracademy ! 🙌 Get the best jazz guitar education, learn from the modern guitar greats, and access over 100 lessons on improvisation, harmony, theory, solo guitar, and more! Check the link in bio to sign up 👍 #themightyboosh #drums #piano #saxophone #drummer #singer #vocals #vocalist #jazz #vibe #musician #college #jazzdrums #jazzmaster #jazz #igers #bass ♬ original sound – Jazz Memes

 

3. I can’t stop laughing at this. Maybe because of that first comment–“i think the issue is maybe you dont feel good”

 

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A post shared by Brody Landry (@fattraccbrody)

Thursday Poem

In “honor” of the Bezos Met Gala this week, here’s a poem (found in the Ordinary Plots newsletter) about working in a warehouse. Poems! They apply to everything!

 

Logistics
by William Ward Butler

We were young sharks, boxcutters at our hips,
we worked overtime shifts, took ten-minute
nicotine breaks, quick hits, joked about buying

a guillotine for the boss as a Christmas present.
That winter was the worst for us, orders piling up,
a non-zero amount of blood allowed in the packages—

we all joked about dying young, DUIs among us
like a bouquet of orchids. Pablo would be in prison
in a year’s time. Most of us will have quit by then.

Back then, we were content to clock out and in,
rhythm and myth of what is called unskilled labor,
golden hours spent talking who else could do

what we’re doing, wondering if robots would take this
job too, not that we wanted to keep it, but we all had
rent to pay—some days, it didn’t feel like a bad gig.

I dreamed of sabotage (grabbing the PA, shouting
stop work now) but that was selfish;
I couldn’t keep myself from wanting a war

whenever the cause was just. I knew I had to leave
when I emerged from a sixty-hour week, saw all
the people outside, and thought, civilians.

It’s That Time Again

No, it’s not time to spin the Wheel of Morality… it’s time for “Me Made May But Make It Weird,” aka the outfit challenge month where you get dressed with unhinged prompts and stuff you’ve made.

There’s a whole blog post this year with the creator of the challenge (and the full list of prompts) but this will give you an idea:
Blue text on a white background. Text says, "May 10: Your cougar neighbour on her third fiancé who has, among other things, an electric unicycle @textals May 11: Your other neighbour who knows more than they should about that cougar next door... including the electric unicycle@textals May 12: Your podcast has 12 listeners and all of them are concerned about"

I’m having fun over on Instagram thinking up outfits. Probably the person who’s most entertained is myself, but why make all these clothes if you can’t have fun with them?

Tuesday Socks, Finally

I haven’t finished a pair of socks in a long time (too distracted by sweaters) but I was organizing my knitting bags and saw I only had a few more rows on the second sock of this pair, so I got it done. A pair of rainbow stripe socks on a fulffy white sheepskin

 

The yarn was from Harmony a couple years ago, “Laines du Nord Eclectic Sock.” The stripe repeat was so long and random I didn’t bother trying to make them match. But hooray, pretty socks! And hooray for knitting, which has never made me have a meltdown.

A Theme, Perhaps

A slightly burnt blueberry pie with colorful candles in it Two lengths of patterned fabric laid out on a rug pad Not shown in this weekend’s pictures: my meltdown over getting the pies my nephew requested too brown; my meltdown over not being able to actually fit the intended patterns on the fabric I laid out for cutting; my meltdown over making a grocery list so we can go to Trader Joe’s. HMMM…

At least today is a new day?

Friday Links

1. Happy May Day, comrades! Today’s fact: there are maybe 1,000 billionaires in the US; there are 174 million workers. A poster with two sections. The top section has a large fish pursuing many small scattered fish. The bottom section has the small fish formed into the shape of a larger fish and it is chasing the larger fish from the toip section. Text says, DO NOT PANIC. ORGANIZE.

 

2. Something to listen to as you participate in the GENERAL STRIKE today: A YouTube DJ spinning “Soviet & Socialistic Grooves from 60s-70s.”  The whole channel rocks, I’ve been listening to sets all week. (That same DJ has a set with 78s!)

 

3. Check out the Busy Beaver Button Museum, whose mission “is to share as much American history as possible through pin-back buttons.” It’s really easy to get sucked in to all the different categories and I love the format of just, “Look at all these buttons!”

an evenly spaced grid of different colorful pinback buttons with protest slogans

Happy Birthday, Skyler

Our nephew is FIFTEEN today! Here is in January (on the far left) looking like he’s walking off the Casablanca air field.

Two cadets march towards a hanger with lighted windows. The cadet on the left is taller.

That photo is from him receiving the Amelia Earhart Award (granted for “sustained excellence in all four areas of cadet life: leadership, aerospace, fitness, and character”) in Civil Air Patrol.

And “sustained excellence” is really a good way of summing up Skyler. He’s SUCH a good person: incredibly smart but not bratty about it, kind and empathetic, a deep thinker, and a problem solver (he wants to run for political office and I say good for him, let’s do it).

He may be essentially grown up and planning world domination, but I remember when he didn’t have any teeth and got the nickname “Bubbs” because he loved to blow bubbles with his spit–and was just as much of a delight to be an auntie to.
A baby looks over the edge of a couch and smiles

Happy birthday, Skyler! We love you. And be careful when you get your learner’s permit!!