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The Book: My Ultimate Marathon
This weekend I completed TREES AND NUMBERS at last! I started it on February 1, 2003. I now humbly present a book manuscript that is 263 pages long, divided into 10 chapters and an Epilogue. Sprinkled throughout the
MS are 75 contributions from acquaintances in life on every continent over those 5+ years. This is my own personal finish line for something that has been my passion during a comeback from the tech bubble that quaked my world, and to some extent it doesn't matter whether it is a worldwide bestseller translated into many languages or it sells one book. But anyone who knows me knows that I am determined to dance across the finish line and not just cross it. Now I am working on the book proposal and next step is to find the best agent on my contact list who believes completely in me and my own marketability as a regular voice on one of the Internet's biggest websites. I am ready to take the next step just as a runner does, and I don't care how many hills I face. A famous author once told me to "make sure your best book is your first" -- and I never have forgotten that and hope a major publishing house will see it that way. I appreciate every one of my friends and family who have believed in me along the way, and now it is time to honor those original streets in my boyhood town curiously named for 12 indigenous tree species on one direction and the numbers 1-10 in the crossing direction. Everything in life from Baseball to Running to Chocolate to Digital to Parenting to Book Readership and Business Leadership starts with Trees and Numbers, and the story can be told. Hopefully it will be as interesting to other people of today -- and to readers of the future -- as it has been for me to research and to write it. This is my own magnum opus and for better or worse it is what I have to say.Where this book took me:
- To the Giant Sequoias to research their secrets of immortality;
- To the Hillerich & Bradsby/Louisville Slugger Museum in KY;
- To the Joshua Tree forest just like U2
- To the finish line of the New York City Marathon;
- To the Hershey Chocolate World factory tour;
- To Route 66 and the history of the greatest teamwork lesson ever
- To Fenway Park and New England's fabulous fall color show
- To native lore and love at little Tucumcari, New Mexico
- To Miami's Fifth Street Gym and an amazing phone call from Muhammad Ali
- To Central Park and its 26,000 glorious trees in every season
- To the shores of Lake Erie skipping stones
- To the original streets of Evansville, Indiana, and its libraries/museum
- To countless leadership books and on a philosophical journey
- And, thanks to my special contributors, places all around the globe
During the course of this work, I had to change a sentence about the
cost of a postage stamp not once, but twice. It was 37 cents when I
first entered the sentence in 2004, then 39, and now 41. Less than one
hour into my 2/1/03 drive West that began everything, I heard on the
radio as the Space Shuttle Columbia broke apart during re-entry; by the
end of the work, I was honored to be friends with a NASA astronaut who
spent a long time on the International Space Station. During the course
of this work, I went from overweight smoker to whom things happened to
a marathoner making things happen.
Stay
tuned! Nothing is handed to you. If you believe in yourself and follow
your passion, I believe good things will happen. Maybe this will be a
seminal work in literary history! Maybe it will be my great white
elephant and I have just wasted half a decade! That is the thrill in it
all. Just have a goal, enter the race, make things happen, and live it.
I have some more work to do now!
Comments
Hey Mark!
I just wrote a long comment, and then Vox made me sign in - and now it seems it's lost. So if this is a duplicate of sorts, my aplogies.
I found you via an older comment you made at my blog - http://supergoddessgirl.blogspot.com
It was a post that was about all those fun and wacky 70s television shows. I dont' get emails when a person posts so I don't know how long ago you posted it, but I found it today and thought I'd come say hi.
Since I am a baseball enthusiast - and a runner myself, I'm tremendously impressed with your efforts in running a marathon. I'm running my first (don't laugh) 10K this October. But I was at the Boston Marathon this year and was so impressed with what great shape everyone was in at the end. You could tell the conditioning that goes into the training.
Anyway, I thought I'd say hello. Glad you liked the blog, though I don't know if you still read it. :)