SB wrote:
This is precisely why I normally don't bother posting on this site, and get impatient by the time I get 3 or 4 posts into any thread. "Aging", if you're going to try to be provocative for its own sake, at least make an effort to be funny and/or original. Or, perhaps you WERE making an effort and this was the best you could muster...
Why would anyone entertain assumptions one way or another about the quality of a person's parenting based on their performances in master's running? If we're going to say the being really good at something as a middle aged person necessarily puts one's parenting into question, why stop at running performances? If we were discussing literature, would anyone say "Yeah, you won the Nobel Prize, but at what cost to your kids?" Or, is there a double standard that says its permissible to take time away from your family if you're doing it to make money, but not if you're doing it to pursue other goals? I'm actually tempted to agree with the other poster and suggest that some of you (fellow masters) would, in the face of a performance like Pete's 5k, like to salve your wounded egos by convincing yourselves that people like Pete or Tony Young must be fanatics who put their running above their family responsibilities; and that, if you weren't the paragon of conscientious parenting that you are,you would be just as fast. I apologize for the disappointment you're bound to feel when you discover that fast masters are generally no better or worse as parents than anyone else.
SB, you're absolutely right that there's no way to tell from someone's Masters times what kind of parent they are. That's ridiculous.
However, I think it is fair to say that for any Master to run 100mpw and perform at a relatively high level he or she has to make running a very high priority in their lives. No 45 year old man is going to rip off a 14:30 5K with an approach to training that involves nothing more than "I get a run/workout in when I can fit it into my day." No, I'd say those folks have a job and lifestyle that allows them to maintain a very regimented training program. That means they have to work extra hard to balance the other aspects of their lives (profession and family), which can be done but not without some inevitable conflicts and some tension. It just can't possibly be any other way. There is a big difference between a grown family keeping fit and a grown family man running 100mpw and traveling to meets.
The comparison to writing fiction is a bad one. No matter how fast someone is as a Master, it is still nothing more than a hobby. Writing fiction really well is a vocation. And, most accomplished writers' personal lives are complete train wrecks. Hemingway was on his 4th wife by the time he won the Nobel Prize. Not a good example for domestic harmony.