Anonymous wrote:Maybe that's how they can tell what race you are?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unless a guy tells me he runs a 7.5 minute mile, or a woman divulges tennis ranking with me, I would have no idea if they're truly "athletic."
And wearing Patagonia and Mountain Hardware head to toe isn't actually a good way to gauge who is truly "athletic" and who is fronting. I've seen this time and again during school camping trips and family sporty-type activities -- Lululemon doesn't make mom good at sports, it turns out.
So I want to know too: how do you know a "family" is "athletic"?
U nless a guy tells me he runs a 7.5 minute mile "????? A 7:30 mile sucks.I would certainly hope that each and every one of us could run a mile in 7 1/2 minutes. If you can't you are either morbidly obese or in seriously poor cardiovascular health. 7:30 /mile is the average pace of a "just ok" female marathon runner. As in she runs all 26 miles at 7 min or so a mile. That may be just good enough to qualify to run Boston. The women who win run 5 minute miles for 26 miles.
Anonymous wrote:Unless a guy tells me he runs a 7.5 minute mile, or a woman divulges tennis ranking with me, I would have no idea if they're truly "athletic."
And wearing Patagonia and Mountain Hardware head to toe isn't actually a good way to gauge who is truly "athletic" and who is fronting. I've seen this time and again during school camping trips and family sporty-type activities -- Lululemon doesn't make mom good at sports, it turns out.
So I want to know too: how do you know a "family" is "athletic"?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know.
But I can tell you that after we toured St. Albans School, we deliberatly did not apply because I did not want my son to be surrounded by those preppy, cookie-cutter, mop headed, blazer wearing STA boys.
Proving that many people do judge a book by its cover, as the title of this thread would indicate. Too bad your tour gave you a superficial view of the place, because there are many intelligent, conscientious kids there (I don't have a kid there, FWIW). But maybe you're just superficial....
You are a useful object lesson for the subject of this thread.