Categories: The Rules

Beyond The Rules

East Maui Pavé

Rules! Hear me fools: The Rules mark the beginning of the path to enlightenment, not the end. There are higher planes, expanding dimensions. Beyond the color of your bar tape exists a man, a mountain, and a bike. This is where the world begins.

Keeper Jim wrote this, reporting on his utilitarian climb of Mount Ventoux. He posts less than the rest of us, so he has less chances to sound foolish, so we consider him the wise one. He is. And he probably took a semester of philosophy as an undergraduate and reads real non-cycling books.

Jim’s words have been ringing in my ears. For better or for worse, Velominati is known for The Rules. A book publisher didn’t offer us a book contract on the collective wit of our far ranging, foul mouthed, unmoderated discussions of posts, no, it was The Rules, thanks. What started as an effort to whip a bit of discipline into the unruly hoards, is now heading toward 100 Rules. That’s a lot of Rules.

Thankfully, to alleviate some of the pressure for full compliance, some genius introduced the masturbation principle: if you are going to do it (breaking a Rule) no need to go online with the information and really, don’t send a selfie to your riding buddies either. These photos certainly don’t need to end up in your parents AOL account.

My late night stoned philosophical discussions earned me zero college credits. I know nothing about philosophy but in the great Velominati tradition, that shall not deter me from lecturing others about it.

Enlightenment, if you are open to it, can be found on the bike. It’s not found online, not even on Velominati. The word enlightenment has 1001 personal definitions. I believe if you can put your enlightenment into words, you are not enlightened. A word is a clumsy cudgel for such things. It is like real music, it’s power is so abstract, so deeply visceral, attempts to describe music in words only detract.

Get on a bike and ride, without ear-buds, without worry. Immerse in the physical work of climbing, descending, cornering, rolling across the landscape. Somehow, as Jim says, there can enlightenment there. Free your mind. One’s eyes can take in the beauty on this earth, breathe the air, smell it, hear it. Feel the sun, hear the insects, already, too many words. Climb Ventoux or ride your usual loop. For me, if that does not put me on the path to enlightenment, I don’t want it. Rebirth, heaven, hell, I can’t use them; they do not exist for me. A bike ride that gets me out of my skin, where my oxygenated brain takes in the world unfiltered, and leaves me changed, if only for a few moments, that I can use.

If The Rules get you on a bike more, then The Rules are useful. It’s all about the Ride, not The Rules.

 

Gianni

Gianni has left the building.

View Comments

  • Nailed it, @Gianni.

    For the last couple of months as I've bashed my way down singletrack on the 29er I hand-built.  After living on road bikes for the past 30 years, this new path of sliding over rocks and roots has been an interesting experience.  I look forward to using those skills to descend even more quickly down the mountain roads this year.

    I keep the rules in mind as I put on my kit, only to have it covered by baggies and (gasp) hydration packs.  But the rules always apply to the bike - maintained, clean, silent.  But none more important than Rule 55.

  • How did I not notice until now that there is a fuckin' rainbow in the picture?  Must be that PotBrownie Clifbar I had for dessert.

  • The main photo killed... I drove it last week stuck in car with my family wishing all the while I had my bike. The total roundabout ride is not just taking in the infamous "Road to Hana," where you can overnight, but then follow with this incredible pave section that winds through jungle then along the waterfront  the howling wind and green remind of Scotland beneath a rising volcano on undulating roads with balmy 75 degree weather. After the pave was a surprise of new pavement, smooth as silk. I've ridden Haleakala, and to Hana, but am anxious to go back and ride the pave all the way to up country. Maui, who knew?

  • Spot on @Gianni, great article. Rule compliance is meaningless unless you're out there whether your pushing yourself further into the cave or just basking in the joy of being out on your bike. @withoutanyhills, totally agree about Rule 6, for me it's the most important of all rules.

  • @The Pressure

    @Gianni And just what criterion do you use to arrive at looking 'fantastic'? "We follow rules or people die!"

    I'm not saying don't follow the Rules, just don't let them become the limiting factor for your riding. I only violate two Rules, and I don't care, at all.

  • @xyxax

    Preach brother. The Buddha, and apparently Bruce Lee, said something like words are " just the finger pointing at the moon." Don't mistake the finger for the moon.

    This would be better if I were high.

    A lot of things were better when we were high. That's good, either Bruce Lee or The Buddha said that, awesome either way.  God stop me from posting the video of Bruce Lee lighting matches with his nunchucks. OK, I won't, but how about ping-pong?

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