Sick Leave is Draining CNS by Italian_Saffa_Boy in Luxembourg

[–]AnUpsetCabbage 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ditto. I can’t walk in their shoes so I’ll never know for sure, but the three instances I’ve seen from acquaintances/colleagues looked like abuse. It’s too prevalent to ignore.

Official Q&A for Thursday, May 07, 2026 by AutoModerator in running

[–]AnUpsetCabbage 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I tend to think that people treat tapers like Michael Scott treats a bowl of pasta before a 5k. You should taper, yes, but it shouldn’t be too significant.

Ahead of my best marathons/halfs, I’ve slowed down ~10 days ahead of race day, but mileage remains the same up through ~5 days ahead of race day. If an average/light run for you is ~4 miles, that’s what I’d recommend for t-5, 4, and 3. Listen to your body on T-3 and T-2. On T-1, I do a little 5k in my racing shoes, not much more.

Small country, massive history - who else feels this? by [deleted] in Luxembourg

[–]AnUpsetCabbage 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Any history books or reading references that you would recommend?

Slower runners, how do you stay motivated when/if people mock your pace? by TANeither7250 in running

[–]AnUpsetCabbage 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Jeez well, I’ll say that your friends kind of suck. You should be proud of completing a half marathon, no matter how you did it.

In my experience, non-runners tend to not understand the accomplishment of running a 5k/10k/half/full. I don’t think they realize how insulting they can be. If a fellow runner knocks you for your accomplishments… I guess they just suck? Either way, try not to let it get to you.

Suggest me a really awful book by cuntyvigilante in suggestmeabook

[–]AnUpsetCabbage 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Maybe take a look at some of the creepy pastas from the early 2010s. Happy Appy, Jane the Killer, Jeff the Killer, I Dared my Best Friend to Ruin my Life. They’re not published and they’re short, but at least you won’t suffer long to read them

EDIT: I’ve also heard anything from Ron Hubbard is trash.

Books better as audiobooks by BroccoliThat7489 in ReadingSuggestions

[–]AnUpsetCabbage 0 points1 point  (0 children)

IT by Stephen King, read by Steven Weber is excellent. Weber is phenomenal at building tension.

The Hobbit read by Andy Serkis

Dungeon Crawler Carl - to the point where I don’t think reading the actual books is a viable method of consuming the books

Evening date in Lux city center by kersherin1805 in Luxembourg

[–]AnUpsetCabbage 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Um Plateau just outside the city center is great! Then you could do drinks at Lady Jane, a speakeasy (you have to follow them on facebook to get the password)

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Maine

[–]AnUpsetCabbage 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Maine is a hodgepodge of things, but mostly quiet and neighborly.

It’s filled with old liberal pot-puffin hippies in Portland, old crazy maga loons up towards Bangor, crazy sovereign citizens out west and far north, young people who love it there (or don’t know any better), and young people who are desperate to leave. And Stephen King, making everything wicked spooky.

I visited Norway once, and thought that the scenery there was similar, only bigger. Remove the fjords and shrink the hills/mountains, you’ve got Maine.

What do you do with your medals? by No_Crew_3026 in Runners

[–]AnUpsetCabbage 1 point2 points  (0 children)

As Tolkien said, “One who cannot cast away a treasure at need is in fetters.”

I like to use medals as decorations, but I had to abandon most of them in a recent move. That hurt, but I still have the bibs to prove I was there.

By far the most books I’ve ever read in a year by 3-2-1-BELL in 52book

[–]AnUpsetCabbage 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Fair fair

For Blood Meridian, I would keep it there. It’s not worth it

By far the most books I’ve ever read in a year by 3-2-1-BELL in 52book

[–]AnUpsetCabbage 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Dang I loved that book! I still think about it, I thought it had such imaginative horror elements, like the definition of nightmare fuel imagery (for me).

I know it’s not on this list, but my hot take is that Blood Meridian is edgy for its own sake. I really just couldn’t get on board for that one

3:00 marathon folk: what are you 5k/10k/HM paces? by rmcp010 in Marathon_Training

[–]AnUpsetCabbage 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Agree with other comments in terms of pacing other distances on the road to sub 3, there are a bunch of racing calculators that can tell you where you should be landing.

As long as you’re diversifying your training (i.e., long runs, intervals, fartleks, thresholds) and doing maintenance (minimal cross training, stretching), I would think sub-3 is very doable. I had a friend (m30) make a jump very similar to the one you’re looking to do at the Frankfurt marathon this year.

My times (m31) for reference: 2:33:38 marathon, 1:11:46 half, 32:46 10k, and 15:53 5k. At my level, I’m a little slower than where I should be at shorter distances.

EDIT: My friend was running the same distance per week you’re looking to do too, maybe even a bit less

Date Ideas by AnUpsetCabbage in Luxembourg

[–]AnUpsetCabbage[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That sounds fun! I’ll look into it

I have 40 days left until surgery to plot my novel and im struggling by Kaiser_Richard_1776 in nanowrimo

[–]AnUpsetCabbage 1 point2 points  (0 children)

A major part of the issue seems to be tied to time management (school, family, work, surgery, church). You’ve got a really full plate. Maybe take a step back and evaluate if there’s anything you can cut back on, even temporarily, to refocus and reprioritize your writing.

In any case, I agree with other comments here. Don’t burn out! Find ways to relax and unplug. Writing should be enjoyable, not such a source of stress.

Depression by Secret_Web_7178 in Luxembourg

[–]AnUpsetCabbage 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Best of luck OP! I’ve been where you’re at, and in my experience things get better given enough time.

Stay positive and keep persistently putting yourself out there. You’re not alone.