Guest Article: The Longest Road

Let us thank @The Oracle for contributing this guest article. We haven’t been putting up many guest articles so it’s good to have something substantial to begin with again. I don’t think cyclists are any more or any less addictive or OCD than anyone else. We are just humans who love to ride the bike. We don’t like to bring our personal baggage with us on the bike, hell we can’t even bring an EPMS, but sometimes we can’t ride away from it. .

VLVV, Gianni

I wasn’t an alcoholic when I left college, but I was on that path. I’d imbibed more than my fair share as a hard-drinking undergraduate at UW-Madison. Through the following years, my drinking was what I would have described at the time as occasionally heavy, but not problematic. Of course, I look back now on my 20’s and early 30’s in a new light. Now I see a pattern of worsening addiction. From a few beers a week and only occasionally getting drunk with friends, to several beers on Friday and Saturday nights sitting alone at home in front of the TV, to occasionally taking nips from the hard liquor in the evening during the week, etc. etc. At the same time, I was distancing myself from my wife and my young kids, and foundering professionally. I was becoming an alcoholic, but I didn’t yet see myself as such.

In my mid-thirties, I finally decided to stop just staring wistfully at my old Cannondale m300 mountain bike from college, and to actually do something with it. I started riding, and it was like finding a long-lost friend. A new mountain bike soon followed and then, due to the lack of trails in proximity to my house, road bikes. I joined local clubs, did indoor training in the winter, did my first centuries during the summer. I lost 20 pounds and was getting the most out of life. I found Velominati.com during that time, and began steeping myself in the traditions of cycling.

But I kept drinking. I did a lot of kilometers hungover during the latter half of my 30’s. Worse yet, I’d been known to ride immediately after having (more than) a few. God only knows how I survived those rides. I’d get home from a long ride and have a few beers (even if it was only 11 a.m.), and justify them as recovery drinks. I posted often on this site, and used the frequent talk of drinking here as a misguided rationalization for continuing to drink heavily even while riding harder and farther than I had ever done in my life.

Even with the growing evidence to the contrary, I still was in denial about my addiction. How could I be in the best shape of my life if I were an alcoholic? The alcoholic mind bends everything to its own use in justifying the all-consuming desire for more drink. I loved cycling.  It was quickly becoming my defining passion. I loved drinking, and (at least through the distorted lens in my mind) it went hand in hand with my cycling—a tradition as old as the two-wheeled machine itself.

It’s a powerful testament to the subversive effect that alcohol has on one’s mind. As my love for cycling grew, so also did my addiction worsen—these two great passions of my life were inextricably intertwined with one another. My alcoholic lifestyle and my cycling lifestyle were ingrained into one another. Alcohol twisted my passion for cycling into a reason to drink more and more. I was poisoning myself to death, slowly but surely. When I look back at it now, I was riding my bike faster and faster to escape the truth: I was an alcoholic.

Of course, one can only try to leave his demons behind for so long. A few years ago, I changed jobs and we moved to a different part of the state. At the same time as the move, my drinking became demonstrably worse. I’d have a beer or two in the evening, but only to cover the fact that I was drinking massive amounts of vodka, tequila or rum straight from the bottle. I’d binge all weekend long—blackout on Friday night; come to on Saturday and have vodka with my morning coffee, and drink straight through to Sunday. I engaged in dangerous behavior, putting both myself and my loved ones at risk. I still shudder at some of the horrible things I did. Somehow, though, I was never stopped for a DUI, I never broke any bones, and I was able to keep the full extent of my drinking hidden for the most part. I guess you might call it lucky, although I’d hesitate to even put that positive of a spin on it. I was nearing the bottom. I risked everything I had every time I picked up the bottle. I knew that in the back of my mind, but again that alcoholic voice was there to convince me that it really wasn’t that bad.

Needless to say, my cycling suffered. It’s impossible to do long weekend rides when you’re in bed with the shakes and sweats all morning, of if you’ve started drinking rum at 6 a.m. to ward off the DT’s. I didn’t seek out any clubs, didn’t look for any cycling companions. I told myself it was because of my schedule or because I preferred to ride alone. Really, though, it’s because I didn’t want anyone to wonder why I never showed up for rides, or why I looked like hell when I did. Impossibly, though, my alcoholic mind continued to use cycling against me, even as I was nearing rock bottom. I was a weekend binger. Drink hard all weekend, sober up on Monday and Tuesday, and then feel decent until Friday rolled around again. I did a lot of short rides on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday. My alcoholism seized on this as proof that I was really okay, that I didn’t really have a problem.

The spiral continued until one devastating night this spring, where I was a hair’s breadth away from losing everything due to drinking  The details of that night aren’t important; the point is that it forced me to finally come to grips with my addiction. I realized that alcohol ruled my life, and was destroying my life.  That was Day 1. I went through two weeks of paralyzing physical withdrawal, and months of anxiety (all part of getting cleaned up). My body was a wasteland—thin, dehydrated, out of shape, and suffering from overwhelming fatigue.  My brain was a mess as well–diminished cognitive function, short term memory, abstract thinking skills. I avoided the bike all summer; it had become a trigger, and I knew now that I could not have one drink, ever, for the rest of my life. I came to see the bike as a danger to my sobriety, and avoided it for months.  My love for the poison had destroyed my passion for the bike. Although I was clean, my alcoholic voice still whispered in my ear:  “don’t bother riding, because you can’t enjoy that ice cold beer afterwards!” I had no enthusiasm for riding anymore.

As I write this, I am on Day 100. A cause for celebration. I’ve come a long way since day one, and while I still have a long way to go, there are positive changes everywhere in my life. A little over a month ago, I started jogging regularly again. It’s amazing what a body can recover from.  The fatigue lessened, and I started putting some muscle back on my bones and color in my skin.  One day, with little thought about it, I pulled the bike down off its rack and hopped aboard.  Thirty kilometers later, my ass was killing me, I couldn’t breathe, my legs were jelly, and I had little hope that I’d ever get to the level I once was.

That ride was nothing special at the time, but when I started thinking about it later, I didn’t remember the pain of my first ride in weeks. Instead I remembered the little things about it:  the whisper of the tires on the pavement; the wind through the trees at the roadside; the smells of the late summer in the Midwest; my regular breathing and concentration on the effort; the sensation of freedom; the thrill of bombing down a slope at 65 kph; the quiet and peace of riding through a warm meadow with no one around for miles. None of this was groundbreaking, and yet each was profound in its own way. I’d found new reasons to ride that weren’t connected to drinking, and I’m in the process of rediscovering my relationship with cycling.

I still only ride a few days a week, but with each ride I discover a new benefit that was hidden from me before. I’m happy to have this part of my life back, and I can’t wait to see what is in store in the future. It is a victory over that alcoholic voice and, although perhaps not my most important victory in this lifelong battle against this disease, it is one that I will cherish.

Oracle

Holy crap, It's been five years since I first posted here. Well, a lot has happened since then, but I'm still riding. Most of the Velominati sticker pack has long since peeled off my bike, but "Obey the Rules" remains. VLVV!

View Comments

  • @universo

    @ChrisO

    your personal views are not gold

    Are you implying that only personal views that ARE gold may be stated on this site? If so, I'd appreciate a sort of opinion scale, so before I offer my personal view on anything from caps to potential TdF winners I can make sure I'm at the golden end of the scale.

    Thanks.

  • Never feel the need to post but this one hit home.

    Seeing a friend in terminal decline due to his alcohol addiction makes you realise how damn awful the stuff is for the wrong people, and how it can sneak up on even the stongest.

    I know it's a daily battle, but it is one that is always worth fighting.

     

  • this is an interesting thread for me.  i have lived and worked in the French Quarter in New Orleans for twenty years.  an alcoholic's Disney World if there ever was one, this neighborhood puts you right up against it every day, in every way you can imagine, and in many ways you can't imagine unless you, too, live and work here.

    over the last twenty years, if i've learned one thing for sure, it's this:  alcoholism and addictive disorders are really a bell curve.  there are those few (like an ex of mine that could buy a pack of cigarettes one weekend and two weeks later the half full pack would still be on her dashboard) who will never be addicted to anything, just like there are those few on the opposite end of the curve that will be a mess no matter their circumstances or environment.  the rest of us, a VAST majority, fall somewhere in the middle of the curve.  for us, how slippery the slope gets and how far we slide down are in no small part influenced by our current circumstances and environment.  i've known a hundred or more folks that are completely capable of living a normal, functional life outside of my neighborhood, that can't help but turn into a raving maniac boozehound inside it.

    we never really know what someone else is going through, and i'm a very lucky man to have been able to live and earn a good living here for as long as i have, given my generally delinquent disposition and worldview.

    one thing that keeps me sane is to always consider, every time i see or hear of someone in difficulty, that there, but for the grace of God, go I, and be very, very grateful for who i am and what i have.  for most of us, life is a marathon, not a sprint, and none of us know what lies around the next turn.

    every so often, an instructive bit like this piece will turn up in an unexpected place.  gifts, for those of us savvy enough to grok.  thanks a million, The Oracle.

  • @ davidhill  @all

    @universo

    @davidlhill@all

    sharing one thought is all

    Fair enough – apologies.

    I spent the better part of my morning yesterday trying to keep alive a young man who had overdosed on heroin amongst other things who I knew would most likely die (which he did in the afternoon). In my work I see people who have both acute presentations and who have reached the point of end organ disease through their life choices. One of the things that I have learned is that I do not always know what burdens they carry but I do know the burden carried by their families as a result of these events. Sometimes they share them with you as @Oracle has. Sometimes they keep on carrying them.

    This site is a welcome reprieve. Though it is not filled with the gallows humor which can be greatly needed at times, the banter within posts or a well time fart joke can do quite a lot to lessen some of the smaller burdens we carry.

    So I second @Oli's motion to steady on.

  • @ChrisO

    Oh for Merckx' sake Chris! Stop, just stop. I did NOT accuse you of anything other than poor taste and judgement for posting a link to a story about sex toys that had nothing to do with Oracle's post. And you know nothing of my journey other than my illustration that "when everything else in your life sucks, you still have the bike, and if misery loves company the suffering will set you free."

  • @Cary

    this is an interesting thread for me. i have lived and worked in the French Quarter in New Orleans for twenty years. an alcoholic’s Disney World if there ever was one, this neighborhood puts you right up against it every day, in every way you can imagine, and in many ways you can’t imagine unless you, too, live and work here.

    over the last twenty years, if i’ve learned one thing for sure, it’s this: alcoholism and addictive disorders are really a bell curve. there are those few (like an ex of mine that could buy a pack of cigarettes one weekend and two weeks later the half full pack would still be on her dashboard) who will never be addicted to anything, just like there are those few on the opposite end of the curve that will be a mess no matter their circumstances or environment. the rest of us, a VAST majority, fall somewhere in the middle of the curve. for us, how slippery the slope gets and how far we slide down are in no small part influenced by our current circumstances and environment. i’ve known a hundred or more folks that are completely capable of living a normal, functional life outside of my neighborhood, that can’t help but turn into a raving maniac boozehound inside it.

    we never really know what someone else is going through, and i’m a very lucky man to have been able to live and earn a good living here for as long as i have, given my generally delinquent disposition and worldview.

    one thing that keeps me sane is to always consider, every time i see or hear of someone in difficulty, that there, but for the grace of God, go I, and be very, very grateful for who i am and what i have. for most of us, life is a marathon, not a sprint, and none of us know what lies around the next turn.

    every so often, an instructive bit like this piece will turn up in an unexpected place. gifts, for those of us savvy enough to grok. thanks a million, The Oracle.

    Have you read the New Yorker article on Hurricane Katrina and the upsides of displacement? It was either earlier this year or last year. To summarize: research has shown that a major event that displaces people is one of the few things that can truly allow people to break out of a cycle of poverty, crime, low education, bad choices, etc.

    From a privileged view you can stand and wonder why people in tough places make bad choices and can't break out. What researchers have found is that the devastation of the hurricane really forced people to up and leave and get completely away from their former lives, with some positive outcomes for certain folks. Very interesting stuff, in my opinion. Really flies in the face of the naive "Well, it wouldn't be a ghetto if they'd stop the drugs and violence" mentality.

Share
Published by
Oracle

Recent Posts

Anatomy of a Photo: Sock & Shoe Game

I know as well as any of you that I've been checked out lately, kind…

7 years ago

Velominati Super Prestige: Men’s World Championship Road Race 2017

Peter Sagan has undergone quite the transformation over the years; starting as a brash and…

7 years ago

Velominati Super Prestige: Women’s World Championship Road Race 2017

The Women's road race has to be my favorite one-day road race after Paris-Roubaix and…

7 years ago

Velominati Super Prestige: Vuelta a España 2017

Holy fuckballs. I've never been this late ever on a VSP. I mean, I've missed…

7 years ago

Velominati Super Prestige: Clasica Ciclista San Sebastian 2017

This week we are currently in is the most boring week of the year. After…

7 years ago

Route Finding

I have memories of my life before Cycling, but as the years wear slowly on…

7 years ago