I walk away from social gatherings with an acute sense of accomplishment whenever I haven’t offended anyone and when my friends all stayed awake. I view myself as a bottle of wine that keeps getting better with age, but I’m slowly coming to grips with the notion that I am actually a bottle that may be corked. The great irony of life is that as we become more comfortable with who we are, we become more annoying to be around.
Fortunately, I enjoy being alone. I haven’t always felt that way, but my natural charm means I have had to cultivate a taste for it. That isn’t to say I don’t like being around others – quite the opposite – but being alone allows me the opportunity to reconnect with who I am. This is especially true when riding my bicycle. Riding alone, there is nothing to do but focus on the sensations of the ride: the wind in my face, the smells in the air, the sound of my tires as we hum along together, rider and bicycle.
Doing a long ride alone is an exercise of discipline. The little voices in your head may start quietly, but they build to crescendo inside your skull after a few hours of solitary suffering. The doors and patios on the cafés at the roadside start looking larger and more welcoming with every kilometer that passes under your tires. A point comes, on these long rides, at which Rule #5 becomes a matter of continuing on with the task; a determination to finish what you have begun.
We learn fundamental things about ourselves when we are alone in the Pain Cave, after we’ve dropped the flashlight and watched helplessly as it rolled off the shelf and into the void. Questions come knocking, and they won’t go away until you’ve dealt with them. This is when we grow, when we build confidence in the face of doubt.
We are lucky to find ourselves at crossroads where every direction leads to more suffering, where the direction we choose is irrelevant. The choice is simply to suffer or to go home. In a world where we have made a science of luxury, we Cyclists choose to suffer.
Vive la Vie Velominatus.
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@Barracuda
I'm not an introvert, but I am naturally stupid and that lends itself to offense. Dinner with great friends last night (Keeper Jim and crew) and I was wicked stoked that I never cursed in front of their 4-year-old. That's a low bar, but I psyched to clear it.
@wiscot
I took a month off after Heck of the North. Partly due to the 1/4 cup of slurry I had in my chammy from the roads, and partly because I know I had over-trained.
I am back and feeling great; lost some of the punch and the lungs complain a bit, but aside from that feel much fresher and more like my old self.
@Gianni
I wish we could give Keepers the +1 badge.
@wiscot
Some cyclist do plan a break from the bike each year with the idea that they return with a higher sense of normalcy. 2009 I rode happily up to Dec 31. 2010 Thursday Jan 28 could not be resisted and I went for the return ride. I did feel like Superman and kept trying to tone the ride down. I felt like Superman working out a 24 average. Then I smacked head long into a car. The Pinarello Montello and myself were a mess. I felt like Superman just before trying to push a car out of the way.
@le chuck
Haha yes the candy lady sells it year round from what I understand. I am almost positive that show is all we are known for these days.
@xyxax
I am in the Albuquerque area. About 45min south of Santa Fe.
@le chuck
WTF is up with that front brake cable? Are gloves Rule #21 or Goldilocks? I'm so confused.
Group rides and training are not generally compatible, unless they are specific training groups such as a chaingang paceline. I used to meet up with a few guys for interval sessions once a week, and that was good because I hate them (the intervals, not the guys) but the fact that there is a group doing them makes me turn up and do them, all of them.
This is the first year where I've done a lot of training with someone else, now that I have a cycling flatmate, and it generally works out pretty well. Based on this I suggest the essentials are:
If any one of those is not in synch then you're better off on you're own.
I've been pissing people off for decades, and can't see any reason to change... it weeds out the weak and I've got a good group of friends because of it, not despite it.
The solo ride is a wonderful thing, something I need to do more of as every 'easy' ride I go on with the likes of @Denti, @rigid, @Kah and now @piwaka always seem to turn into smashfests and hunting and killing any poor bastard who happens to be riding along minding their own business, on their own solo gig.
@frank
Disappointing.