Saturday, May 31, 2014

The Last Night



And so it begins. 

I arrived in San Francisco Tuesday night with my dad, and am currently in the final night of a pre-trip orientation in San Rafael. We push off from the south side of the Golden Gate Bridge tomorrow.

More on that in a moment.

Tuesday morning was somewhat of a whirlwind - in true "Scott" fashion, I saved the bulk of my packing for the few hours before the flight, including the packing of my bike. Helplessly scrambling for a box, I drove to the local bike shop and jumped out back for a little dumpster diving. As I tossed through boxes and debris, I happened upon a few newer ones. I collected my cardboard prize and drove home to disassemble my Felt. If you've ever shipped a bike, you can sympathize when I say that packing a bike is about the closest you can get to Tetris in our physical world. Frustrating doesn't capture the intensity of emotion you feel when you try for the fifth time to fit an entire bike into a box that obviously should be designed three inches wider.

After a final lunch with my Dad, Mom, and my brother Ryan, I finished the last of my packing and jumped in the car with Ryan and my dad to DIA. Recalling an earlier conversation with a woman from the airline, she had specifically asked that I be there an hour before in order to ensure my bike made it on the plane. Sadly, with an hour and a half before flight time, and with a slew of rush-hour traffic up I-225, that deadline was simply impossible. Making that realization, much of the car ride was spent in frantic anticipation. After the hour deadline came and passed, the last 15 minutes to the airport were pretty jovial and upbeat - optimism is really all you have left to fall back on at that point. When we finally made it to the airport and the kiosk decided to fit my bike on the plane anyway, Ryan took the liberty of claiming himself the most important driver in the Martin family, and is now considering a new profession in professional transporting.

We made it to San Fran that evening and took a taxi to my Aunt and Uncle's house in Millbrae, just south of the city. The timing was perfect. My cousin Todd and his girlfriend were still in town, in from NYC for the long weekend, along with his cousins Ross and Kent, who I hadn't seen in years. It was one of those times when family members you don't see as often are a little taken aback by how old you are, and therefore, vicariously, realize how old they are. Once we got over that it was good to finally talk some post-college, big people things - like why I'm biking across the nation for the next three months instead of getting a job. Really big people things.

Once the family left I sat down to assemble my bike with my dad. I found that my back disc had been bent during shipment and made arrangements to get it fixed the following day.

The following day I took the BART early into the city with my bike (sans rear brake) and biked around the city before I made my way to the bike shop. One ambition of mine was to actually touch the Pacific Ocean - in order to truly call the ride a coast to coast. I rode from the Embarcadero to Lands End Lookout, where - hopping a fence - I made my way down to the water below. Wetting my shoes I made my way back to meet my Dad at Fort Point - the southern entrance to the Golden Gate Bridge. From there we made our way together back through Fisherman's Wharf to his office down near Pier 1. We quickly loaded the bikes and headed out to San Rafael to meet the team for the start of orientation.

These last few days have been a whirlwind of information - names, safety procedures, practice rides, photos, and crisis management protocols. A practice ride earlier today around San Rafael and China Camp gave us riders some good time on the bike and gave the crew a trial run of the management operation. As I said above, tomorrow morning is the designated day. After a slew of early mornings (6 AM wake up), we wake up an hour earlier at 5 AM PST, pack up our bags, buckle our shoes, and head to the Golden Gate.

While I'll certainly jump into this in more detail, I'll give a first pass at this now, just to introduce the team. Our group is comprised of 25 cyclists and 10 crew members, which include a project manager, a logistics coordinator, and a crew chief. The crew's job (most generally) is to keep us safe and ensure that we make the stops and meetings we plan for. Beyond the work that was done in the months leading up to the ride to secure locations for meals, lodging, and routes, the crew have been an incredible support these last few days in introducing us to the well oiled machine that is now the Journey of Hope. It has to. We will be making 60 visits in 65 days of riding - most days making two volunteer stops in order to fit them in. More on that later. 

Looking at the whole group of 35, I am proud. I have been happy to hear their intentions and motivations, and have been humbled by their compassion, optimism, and friendliness. Their diversity is one of the strongest aspects - men from Cal State Long Beach, TCU, NJIT, Indiana, Missouri State, USF, ASU, Ohio State, CU Boulder, Colorado State, Bowling Green, Toledo, VA Tech, and several more I can't begin to remember. Rather than dwell on the particulars, I'll just say generally that I couldn't ask for a better group. 

Additionally, we were lucky enough to have our first friendship visit (volunteering visit) to the Janet Pomeroy Center in San Francisco where we scrimmaged the members in a few games of pick-up basketball. You can find more about the center at their website, here. I'll add more on this later.

Looking back, I've been lucky to have my family out here for the last few days. Tonight they attended the kick-off dinner with the team. Chad Coltrane, the CEO of Push America was there to send us off, and will be at the kick-off tomorrow morning. He is a powerful speaker, so powerful his voice even brings some tears to his eyes. The passion and care for this ride is so evident, and a sentiment like that is contagious. He had a few words that stuck.

One I remember in whole, a simple statement: "Everything worth doing in life is hard." This reminded me of a quote I had in the last post - there are no shortcuts to anything worth going to. I feel this one is easy to grasp, but difficult to abide by. Too often the easy route sets itself as the most attractive and the most enticing. But easy decisions come with a price. Rarely do we learn anything from people who veer from their true battles, who never tested their limits, who turned from their passions. We are intrigued by stories of courage and fortitude because trials and tribulations motivate us to confront our own challenges. "Hard" things bring us down to our essence and force us to see life in terms that are less objective in a societal view but are more pure and congruent with the ideas that make us happy as independent, sentient beings. Maybe this is in defending our homeland - Rome maybe? Or maybe this is just taking a difficult class because the subject itself is what makes one happy. Hard things force us to set goals that are tangible and tractable to ourselves, and force us to find happiness in the small victories. Victories that, when accumulated, can ultimately define our lives.

The other is only a word: regret.

Easily one of the most perplexing and powerful emotion a human can experience. I still remember the days I regret, and I will likely carry most of them till the day I die. But regret can lie in two camps. On one hand it can be gnawing, pervasive, and stifling. It can soak up your happiness and leave you bewildered and depressed.

On the other it can be an incredible motivator. It can make you finish those miles, no matter how hard your legs are aching. It can make you ask those questions you had always wanted to ask, or compel you to say something you always wanted to have said. Most importantly, in the times you let the fear of regret motivate you to act, you give yourself the chance to change someone's life. To live impulsively is to live without barriers, to be free of regret, and to be satisfied with being uncool.  

Chad's challenge was simple. Compel yourself to live a summer without regret. Take each day as the most important day of your life. Ride across the Golden Gate tomorrow and soak in every minute of it. Not merely because it is the beginning. But because you'll never get to do it like that again.

I can't wait to get started.

Scott





Monday, May 26, 2014

The First Post

Friends, Family, Brothers, Donors, Fellow Bikers, Professors, and Volunteers,

First - thank you all for stopping by. This blog will be the home of my ride this summer with the Journey of Hope, a transcontinental bike tour supporting people across the United States with disabilities.

To give a little background: the Journey of Hope, started in 1987, is an annual ride sponsored by Push America and Pi Kappa Phi in support of people across the United States with disabilities. Cycling with a group of 30 Pi Kappa Phi brothers from chapters across the nation, we will be stopping at over 50 locations between our start in San Francisco on May 28th and our end in Washington D.C. on August 2nd. Over the course of the trip we will volunteer our time at Special Olympics events, camps, centers for the disabled, and other adaptive entities aiding efforts, raising awareness for the cause, and most importantly, improving the lives of those with disabilities.

For the Dukies and Coloradans out there, the ride has a special connection. The founder is originally from Colorado (now living in Evergreen), and was a Duke Law graduate. His daughter is now a rising sophomore at Duke. For the North Carolinians, Push America was started at our Kappa chapter at the other school (UNC Chapel Hill).

My impetus for postponing post-graduate plans for the ride is both personal and altruistic. In volunteering in both Colorado and North Carolina, I have always been inspired by the drive and fervor I’ve experienced from those with whom I’ve worked. Most importantly, I think of my friends: those who I admire for the hope they bring to others, by working each day to live lives that we too often take for granted. In so doing, they continually redefine what is possible - not only for those with disabilities - but for anyone. For examples, I look to Pikapp brother Jay Ruckelshaus and his organization The Ramp Less Traveled, or a close family friend who will be returning as a teacher to Cherry Creek High School despite a recent accident.

The trip has three separate routes, each comprising between 30-35 brothers, bringing the total reach of the ride to over 40 million people. I will be riding on the North route. See the map below and the links to the right for more information on the ride, Push America, our itinerary, and my fundraising page and video. Every year each brother participating raises funds to contribute to our $650,000 goal which are allocated in grants along the way to the organizations with whom we work. All donations are fully tax-deductible. I have pledged to contribute at least $8,000 to this goal and could still use help. If you have not already, please see my fundraising website found here. Please also watch my fundraising video found here.



For a snapshot of which organizations we will be working with along the way, please see the list at the end of this post, broken down by city. Though not complete, it does give a majority of the confirmed stops, many of which have been linked to the Journey for quite a long time.

Secondly, let me thank all of you for your incredible support, generosity, and advice. Specifically to those who have donated - I feel so lucky to have your help. It does not go unnoticed. I assure you that it will make a great difference in the countless lives we will reach this summer. For those who have taken time to simply spread the word, thank you as well. I'd also like to specially thank Durham Cycles on 9th Street for their help and advice for the summer, and Mike Osorio, Mu Chapter's most recent JOH rider, for his motivational words. Additionally, I'd like to particularly thank Adaptive Adventures, Bridge II Sports, and Ronald McDonald House Durham for the eye opening experiences their programs have provided (along with countless others).

One of my favorite parts of preparing for the trip has been learning about the amazing things others have done to devote their time to make their communities (or even the world) a better place. While I couldn't possibly list them all here and now, I am motivated knowing that those sacrifices are worthwhile, and that the vast majority truly do make a difference.

And that said, I arrive at the most important goal of this summer. I hold that one of the most critical stimulants for change is awareness itself. I look back on a recent trip to Ecuador with my brother. As an engineer, I have sadly forgotten much of my prior abilities in Spanish. That trip made me newly aware of what I was missing out on - the billions of people across the world with whom I can't communicate, along with the art, culture, and ideas I neglect, not out of malice, but out of naivety.

From all of you as you follow my journey, I ask but one thing - embrace the differences around you for the new perspectives they bring. Learn from others so that we may make the future a more accepting, more empathetic, and more happy place. Embrace challenge with open arms, for both the benefits of hard experience and for the awareness it brings to yourself and others.

This summer, we will continue to redefine the way people view people with disabilities and fraternities.

With the departure only a few days away, I am excited. I board a flight from DIA to San Francisco International tomorrow afternoon. I'm finishing up my packing and unpacking tonight, some final family time, along with some last minute training, some of which I've been lucky enough to do with Gordon Dolven, a close friend from high school who will be riding on JOH this summer. For training, along with all of the rides this summer, you can follow my Strava page, which feeds on the right. For the blog, I will write as often as possible (along with a possible video blog...) so consider following the page through email (also on the right) so you can get notifications as they come in.

Additionally - as an open offer - if you want a postcard from anywhere along the route, send me an email with your name, address, and the desired stop on our itinerary. I'll do my best to find something memorable! For those along the route, feel free to get in touch - I'd love to see you.

Finally - what's with the name? With Every Push - not only is it a reflection of the actions of this summer (biking and pushing) as well as the organization (Push America), "with every push" becomes a motivation. With each push will come many things, many of which I've expressed already. With every push we hope to bring change, hope, happiness, and camaraderie. Certainly there are many I haven't even thought of or are even in the mindset to consider. Uncovering these are what the summer is for. With every push.

Thank you all, and until next time,

Scott Martin

Go Duke!



VOLUNTEERING STOPS:

  1. SF- Pomeroy Recreation and Rehabilitation Center
  2. Napa- California Special Olympics
  3. Sacramento- Southside Arts Center
  4. Jackson- The arc of Amador and Calaveras Counties. Community Compass
  5. Carson City- Children’s Museum of Northern Nevada, Boys and Girls Club of Western Nevada, People First- Nevada Chapter
  6. Fallon- Homboldt Shredders
  7. Salt Lake City- Camp Kostopulos Dream Foundation, TRAILS, Children’s Tumor Foundation- Utah Chapter
  8. Park City- National Ability Center
  9. Craig- Horizons, Boys and Girls Club of Craig
  10. Steamboat Springs- Horizons
  11. Empire- Easter Seals Colorado- Rocky Mountain Village
  12. Denver- Pedal for Pennies
  13. Fort Morgan- Fort Morgan Elks Club, Fort Morgan Public Library
  14. Wray- Wray Recreation and Activity Center
  15. Grand Island- The Arc of Central Nebraska
  16. Lincoln- The Arc of Lincoln
  17. Omaha- Nebraska Spina Bfida, The Ollie Webb Center
  18. Marshalltown- The Arc of Marshall County
  19. Cedar Rapids- The Arc of East Central Iowa
  20. Iowa City- Arc of Southeast Iowa
  21. Davenport- City of Davenport Parks and Recreation
  22. Rockford- Rockford Recreation Indoor Sports Center
  23. Milwaukee- Girls First, Independence First, Moms of Hope, Spina Bfida Wisconsin, Gaennslen School, Milwaukee Center for Independence, Petit National Center, Nicolet High School
  24. Northbrook- GLASA (Great Lakes Adaptive Sports Association), North Suburban YMCA
  25. Chicago- Victor C. Neumann Center, Envision
  26. South Bend- Chasing Dreams
  27. Kalamazoo- Community Advocate at the Arc of Kalamazoo
  28. Ann Arbor- Eisenhower Center, PEAC (Pedaling to Educate All Cyclists)
  29. Toledo- Sunshine Foundation
  30. Sandusky- Ability Works
  31. Cleveland- Cleveland Children’s Clinic
  32. Niles- Fairhaven Foundation
  33. Pittsburgh- Three Rivers Rowing Association, Woodlands Foundation, CLASS (Community Living and Support Services)
  34. Bethesda- Potomac Center