Turns out I already have another progress report on my single-minded pursuit of learning to skate as well as my body can cope with. Yay!

Miraculously, we were able to make all the schedules line up twice this weekend to get to an ice rink vaguely in our area. I was so excited to try out these blades, and particularly to find out what it’s like ice skating in my inline boots. I learned that yes, these boots are just as comfortable on the ice as on pavement. Which I had predicted, but it’s nice to experience the reality of it. It took about 2.5 hours of continuous skating for my feet to start noticing they had stuff strapped to them and maybe not liking it so much. But the last half hour of that session was only somewhat uncomfy, not enough for me to decide to give up the last bit of what I expected to be the only ice time I’d get for a while.

I’m a beginner ice skater, so I don’t know how to compare the experience of these blades to ‘normal’ ice skates. They are sharper than the other blades I’ve skated on, I can tell you that, and it was very helpful having real grip and real edges to work with.

I did notice a ‘wobbly feeling’ at the front when gliding, like the blades were trying to steer my toes side to side. I found that I was able to cope with/overcome it, but I’m not sure what was causing it. My (lack of) balance? The position of the blades relative to my feet? The profile of the blade rocker? The novel experience of having blades that actually grip the ice? Unclear. It happened both before and after some blade adjustments to try to get the optimal positioning, and more experimentation will be needed.

Overall, it was awesome. I was finally able to get my one foot glides going. I’m proud of myself for getting to the point where I get to decide when to put my free leg down, rather than inevitably losing my balance and having to put it down whether I want to or not. I was also able to add backwards wiggles to my repertoire of backwards lemons and C-cuts. That sounds so simple when I type it out, but required an entire 1.5 hours of practice in reality. 😆 My body just took that long to get itself organized to generate momentum and find the line between Grippy Blade and Slippy Blade in that movement.

That added up to 4.5 hours on the ice, between two sessions separated by a full rest day. That was a lot of movement for me, and although I am still very tired I don’t seem to have injured anything. I made sure to rehydrate and eat, tape my back to keep it from going haywire, and spent a lot of time lying down resting afterward. There was also a hot shower in the middle there, and some gentle movement during the rest days to make sure I didn’t just get frozen into a sore pretzel. And it worked.

Astounding. I only had a minor headache for a few hours after each session, which faded without becoming a 24 hour misery, too.

We’ll see whether my next session is on ice or sidewalks. Hard to know, with the spring weather being the way it is. I’m looking forward to finding out how this practice soaked into my brain next time, either way.

#skating #inlineskating #iceskating #figureskating #learntoskate #icerink #powerslide #adultplay #recoveryprogress #burnout #recovery

Week Notes – Feb 12 to Mar 15 2026

  • Has it been almost a month since the last week notes? What is time, anyway?
  • ☃️ There was a sequence of above freezing temperature days, so it started to look like Spring is knocking at our door. The Rideau Canal Skating rink closed, most of the urban ski trails also closed for the season already.
  • 🎿 But, the last weeks of February were still very snowy, so I did complete a Level 2 Classic Ski Class and a Classic Ski Workshop “Help with Hills”. I am not that afraid of going down a slope anymore. And I got a bit better with my gliding and pole coordination. And right when I started to understand the ski mechanics better, the snow was gone and the season was over. Well, I will be ready for the next winter.
  • ⛸️ I completed my Level 3 Ice Skating class as well. I got better at using both edges in 1-foot glides and around a circle. Also, backwards skating felt less impossible, but I still haven’t got to the point where I could do backwards cross-overs. And that’s fine, I’m happy with what I can do so far, which is light-years away from when I started ice skating in 2019. I’m so glad I didn’t give up and kept coming back to ice skating every winter, regardless of how challenging it was.
  • 🎭 I’ve had varying degrees of energy levels since the beginning of the year. Some days I feel tired overall, and all I can do is go to work, keep up with the bare minimum of house/life chores and maybe read a bit before sleeping. And that low energy state goes on for a week or so, and then suddenly there is a week when my energy is back to more normal levels. I blame it on perimenopause, because I keep doing all the good things: meditation, yoga, exercise, balanced diet.
  • We finally got an opening to see a Family Doctor! We used to have one but when the pandemic started, the doctor went back to his home country, and me and my husband had to navigate the health system here using the walk-in clinics when needed. That helped me get in contact with some specialists, but now I have the chance again to do a full check-up, and it makes contacting the specialists easier.
  • 📖 These past weeks I focused more on reading books rather than reading online articles.
  • 📕 I finished reading “Babel-17” by Samuel Delaney for my local book club. Classic sci-fi written in the 60s, truly ahead of its time, with a strong female protagonist, queer normative, seeds of cyberpunk with psychedelic vibes. Very weird!
  • 🌳 We were gifted with a bonsai! [...]

https://noisydeadlines.net/week-notes-feb-12-to-mar-15-2026

Seven years of autistic burnout and the loss of the athletic capacity I used to enjoy, and my body has finally rested enough that I can sometimes exercise without getting a migraine/collapsing in exhaustion for several days afterward. I have been rewarded with the revival of a special interest from childhood that I now have the adult agency to pursue: skating!

I have done some ice skating each winter for the past three(? or so?), which my joints liked but my sad muscles could barely hold me upright for. This year, my muscles decided to adapt to the exercise instead of punishing me for it, but the ice wasn’t reliable enough to skate as much as I wanted. Thus, the acquisition of wheels.

I am hooked. This is my new Thing. I study this Thing every day, and do the Thing as often as my body and the weather allow. Do you do this Thing? Do you do it on ice, or wheels, or both? Do you want to be friends?

#skating #InlineSkates #rollerblading #IceSkating #FigureSkating #slalom #RollerSkating #autism #SpecialInterest #recovery #adulting

Somehow, I never experienced this energy this past winter season...maybe next time, right? Maybe we all can have it; after all, the ice rink in such a place as this is big enough for a whole party. A "Party on the Ice". 🙂

Painting by Wilhelm Gause.

#art #traditionalart #painting #oilpainting #beautifulwoman #beautifulgirl #winter #ice #iceskating

Alexei Morita ice skating RAW FREESTYLE

YouTube

For reference
All 24 of the official #iceSkating Jumps.

https://www.youtube.com/shorts/reW5oaMejw8

All 24 FS Elements by Ilia MALININ ❤️‍🔥⛸️ #figureskating #viral #iliamalinin #olympics #fyp #fs

YouTube

From the Cornell Lab of Ornithology: a Wood Duck does a solo dance program on the ice for the Avian Olympics. 🦆 🧊 😁

#Birds #BirdsOfMastodon #Ducks #WoodDucks #IceSkating #WinterOlympics #BirdVideos

WebXR experimentation Norrviken WebXR 2026 02-22-2026 15:03

https://video.benetou.fr/videos/watch/477b73c4-5f75-49d9-a960-a1f7b90f5033

WebXR experimentation Norrviken WebXR 2026 02-22-2026 15:03

PeerTube

WebXR experimentation Norrviken WebXR 2026 02-22-2026 14:59

https://video.benetou.fr/videos/watch/1a6b8c79-911e-4e7f-b240-b3dd6194f357

WebXR experimentation Norrviken WebXR 2026 02-22-2026 14:59

PeerTube