I’ve lost a lot of things that were, at some point or another, dear to me. At times, I’ve even cast them away deliberately, either because of a nurtured indifference or an irrational or impulsive dislike. Regret is an easy emotion to find in reflection, it lays right at the surface and provides us with a quick answer without requiring further introspection. I prefer to recognize that every choice I’ve made was an opportunity and that even the failed opportunities make up part of the foundation that lays beneath me and helps support me as I grow. Life is about learning from your mistakes, looking ahead, and seeking beauty in every approaching moment; to embrace the opportunity to make the best choice we can based on our experience and our goals.
We walk along an intertwined web of choices and possible futures. Every choice is a crossroads where the direction we choose sends us hurtling towards a new destination. Some crossroads have paths that ultimately lead towards the same end, but all of them represent a different journey. We cannot see the path, so we are left to decide what to make of the journey. We always have a choice, even if the choice is simply to reject an option. But even rejection leads to a new choice, and that to another. Choice gives us freedom. To be deprived of choice is to be enslaved.
My season’s objectives lie at my back and before me stretches a long period of time as I work towards my next milestone, which is Keepers Tour 2015. Between here and there lies the Cyclocross Season in which I will sporadically race, and also a possible trip up Haleakala, but with my season just having ended, I will face them without any special preparation or training. My rides during the Fall are deliberately without objective, I ride as my fancy dictates. My objective is simply to ride and to rediscover the basic sensations that fuel my love for Cycling.
With this deliberate lack of structure, I explore once again the mysteries of The V. On some days, I come home from work and as I pedal away my muscles twitch as they hunger for the deep burning that only a session in the Five and Dime can do. Yet on other days I am drained and wish only to feel my legs spin and surrender to the hum of my tires as my senses fill with the cool damp smells of Autumn. The mystery lies in the fact that nothing between my days at the office will have been fundamentally different; I do not know the state of my body and mind until I climb aboard the bicycle.
Riding a bicycle may have nothing to do with the elemental existence of humankind, but it does have something to do with the elemental existence of us as individuals. The bicycle is freedom, to be sure, but it is also a mystery unto itself while paradoxically helping unravel the mystery how I respond and interact with my surroundings. Therein lies the enigma: the bicycle knows me better than I know myself.
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@Ccos
Yeah, even in the last two weeks I've seen my form drop off significantly, but at the same time I'm having a lot of fun on the bike. Cogal today, CX race at Magnuson park tomorrow where I'll experience Surround Bollocking.
@ped
WTF?? Where was that?
@girl
And I envy you being on the other side as well; we'll always look at the other side of the cycle with some nostalgia, won't we? Feeling that sharpness in your muscles, the ease of movement that comes with it - even the feeling of power when you walk up some steps and smile quietly to yourself.
And when I'm there, I'll be similarly nostalgic for the freedom that comes with not having a plan anymore...
@ChrissyOne
Woot woot!
@rfreese888
Very well put! This are indeed times for discovery.
@antihero
I imagine if you use a power meter how liberating it must be to get rid of it. I used to take my heart rate monitor off when I was a slave to it and it felt like the relief you feel after putting down a heavy load.
@unversio
I forgot you made that block! That's a proper gear ratio you've got there, all around.
Lovely read. Thanks Frahnk. And love that photo. For me, that's home, and always will be.
@VeloSix
This is a very good goal.
@chuckp
Welcome back; take it day by day my friend.
@Barracuda
...I suppose that's right! Hadn't thought of it like that.
This is my biggest beef with Strave; I love the social aspect and the training log side, not to mention the detail provided by the segments, but its the pressure and how it pulls you out of your plan that keeps me from using it regularly.
@therealpeel
Fantastic observation. I love this. Especially the line:
@frank
The 206mi idea is out of my system now. Although the ride stopped at 100mi I am calling it a "successful test" and have the route registered to memory. The one tooth differential was the best decision that I've ever made with the drivetrain. Best decision of the day was to enjoy the idea of "stopping" with my family. They had endured 6 hours to the 3rd checkpoint with smiles on their faces and I then decided not to ruin that by pushing them for 6 hours more. The day was perfect.
My notion of building up a Coefficient of Difficulty to endure the 206 mile route went in the ditch at mile 100. The adventure was a good one though. And I while I originally thought that I would want to describe my deep internal nature that I refer to as the Coefficient of Difficulty, I don't need to. I rode alone and the miles are behind me now. And all the moments are left on the road.
There is one remarkable eye opener though that came within the first 10 minutes of riding at dawn.
I had the bike up to speed (the road was giving it to me) and maintaining the early stage of the Coefficient. Dead silent morning; dead silent bike; eerie strobing front light; rustling and crashing in the trees; light enough to see a whitetail bobbing along; one deer running up to speed in the tree line; I accelerate and shout "Heeahh!"; that next 100th of a second the deer clips my right butt cheek with its snout; crosses over my rear wheel without touching; still riding and the deer was gone. I momentarily rode as if it did not happen, and shortly thereafter found myself riding with a greater awareness for the rest of the day.
@unversio Strong work! Thanks for sharing the story and photos. The last photo leaves no doubt that it was indeed a perfect day.
Oh, and I love the lead photo. Reminds me a bit of...the photo I have next to my name. Mine is from one of my favorite road loops near where I grew up. Heads either from NY into PA or the other way, depending on which direction you ride the loop.
Hmm, maybe I can manage to ride it when I'm visiting the Olds for Thanksgiving in a few weeks...