I’m the reigning USATF Northwest Region Masters shot put champion in the 65-69 age group. My winning throw at last summer’s meet in West Seattle was 8.82 meters. No one else came close in my age group because no one else competed in the shot. After the meet, a friend looked at the gold hanging from my neck and said, “Nice participation medal.” Less impressive was finishing last out of six in the 100 meters, more than 2 seconds behind the fifth-place runner.
I can’t contend with elite masters athletes, but I love competing and am constantly amazed by what others can achieve. Daphne Scott, a math professor here at Western, set the world record in the decathlon for women ages 60-64 last summer. I wrote a story about her achievement for Geezer Jock, a website dedicated to, well, just what it says. I’ve included the link to my story in case you happened to miss that issue of Geezer Jock.
Another highlight of the past year was writing a story about the photography team of Darius and Tabitha Kinsey for the Seattle Times’ Pacific NW Magazine. I knew a bit about Darius Kinsey, and my interest in Tabitha was piqued while hiking with a journalism professor from Chile. She was researching museums and was introduced to the Kinseys at the Whatcom Museum of History. She related what she’d learned on our hike, and I decided to explore further. It turned into a magazine story.
Just as gratifying as those bylines was seeing a story by one of my 207 students in Cascadia Daily News. Lily Luna Cruz wrote about the BT Cowboy, a student who practiced his roping skills outside Buchanan Towers, attracting much attention. A student in Scott Terrell’s photo J class, Nico Murch, happened to photograph the cowboy for an assignment. The two students’ work made an excellent package in CDN.
I realized I wanted to pursue teaching full time when I was an adjunct professor and saw one of my student’s bylines. I was more excited seeing hers than my own. That still holds true for this geezer.