There are few pleasures in life as great as to achieve a goal, to accomplish something that doesn’t come easily. Great lessons are taught through this activity; we learn that it is our determination and not our doubt that defines our limits. We learn that through studied discipline we can cultivate the skills required to work incrementally towards becoming what we want to be.
This is true for our personal, social and professional lives – and any other aspect that I may have left off. But to achieve our goals is usually a rather complicated mess; it requires introspection, it often requires reliance upon others to do their part or at least not interfere with you doing yours, and it is usually rife with hard choices of long-lasting and difficult to understand consequences.
In its most basic form, Cycling provides us a path to discovery in a less complicated model than do our actual lives. We train our bodies, we become more healthy. We become more healthy, we train more. We become stronger, we go faster. We derive more pleasure from our efforts. We experience reward for sacrifice. We associate progress with the pain of an effort. We enjoy Cycling more. We ride more. We become healthier still. We become stronger still. We go even faster. We suffer more. We associate more pain with a greater sense of achievement. And though it all, we discover it that unlike every other walk of life, in Sport we are islands: what we find here is only what we have brought with us.
Eventually, exercising will become training. The activity becomes richer with the application of the discipline that comes with this rebadging. Exercise is something you do regularly but without structure. With training comes a study of your body and how it responds to stimulus. Long rides have a different effect on the body than do short ones. Successive hard efforts have another effect, as do longer and shorter periods off the bike.
Training Properly requires discipline and patience. It means you don’t just throw your leg over your machine and pedal off to ride along tree-lined boulevards. Training Properly means having a plan for each day. It means heading for the hills one day, and the plains another. It means controlling yourself and not trying to set your best time up the local climb because you feel good that day. Training Properly means restraining yourself on a group ride and not joining in on the town line sprints if your plan doesn’t call for it. Training Properly means leaving for a ride despite the rain falling from the heavens and the loved ones whom you leave at home.
Training Properly comes down you and you alone; much can be learned from books and coaches, but the path is yours to walk. The discovery is yours to experience and to shape into what you are seeking. There are, however, some basics to keep in mind. Also keep in mind I’m not a “Sports Doctor”, “Physiotherapist”, or “Smart”. And never take medical or sporting advice from Some Guy On the Internet.
Be patient. Have discipline. Train Properly. Vive la Vie Velominatus.
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I started riding seriously about six years ago. Every year I've gotten faster and every year has brought a little more focus on training properly. For Christmas I got six months of training with a coach that is pro on a UCI Continental Pro team. I'm gonna hurt some people.
Beautifully said Frank
I absolutely agree
It permeates our culture today, that we can get something for nothing. This is a most untrue falsehood that is out there. If I get something for nothing...thats a gift. But if I pursue something as you well say, my passion, it then follows that anything worthy, anything worth doing is worth doing right and it will require something of me in order to reap the reward.
And the fact is as you spell out, the rewards for us Cognoscenti are so numerous, its going to hurt. The rewards are worth every painful stroke.
But do you play one on TV?
@Cyclops
In a similar vein, did he stay at a Holiday Inn Express last night?
Chapeau on a well written article, Frank! I especially liked the explanation of the difference between exercise and training.
Rejoice in thy suffering... then go again !!
I wish I had enough time to train properly. But my work life is already organized and planned, causing a lot of stress, so I don't want to ruin my precious leisure time by making plans and setting stretched goals. I ride my bikes whenever I find the time, and I like to ride them fast! Your rule_#3 is my number 1 since many, many years. It helped me to improve my performance while investing less time each year in training. But your rule_#5 only applies to cyclists that regularly take part in races. Since I don't, I try to make the training with my companions as competitive as I can.
I am only in my fourth year of riding and my second of training. I am much faster but squandered some of my hard earned fitness by not obeying #5 above and laying down too much V in group rides. This year I am saving everything for race day.
I like it and as always admire the writing but I think it misses an important factor to Training Properly and that's Eating Properly. Broken down muscles can't repair without the necessary materials to do it.
Maybe that's Part 2, already written and in the queue for publication next week.
@snoov
Excellent point. I think Cyclops wrote something about nutrition that generated a lot of great discussion about year ago? Worth searching for that thread. But, I agree, nutrition HAS to be part of "training" and I think that Fronk most likely implies nutrition when he uses the term "training", but I might be mistaken.