I am thrilled to announce that for the first time in my life, my chest measurement is smaller than my hip measurement, an accomplishment I’m not sure many men around the world would be proud to admit. A Cyclist has no use for an upper body, we’re not going about lifting things with our arms; we are the sort of people who do all our lifting with our legs. We just need enough to hold the handlebars and pull from time to time while chewing the bar tape; beyond that, upper bodies are little more than extra weight and I’ve got more of that than I need already.

When I boasted about this tremendous feat to a few work colleagues, none of them showed any appreciation for my accomplishment whatsoever. Mostly they looked at me askance, not unlike how my dog looks at me when I’m talking to her in complete sentences. I could sense them resisting the temptation to start rotating their heads until they fell over like she does. The most any of them could muster was joking about how I must look at the beach, at which point I returned the favor of not having a clue what they were on about. Honestly, I’m much more worried about looking good in my skinsuit than I am about looking good in my mankini.

The first thing one observes when meeting Pro Cyclists is how tiny they are; they look like normal folks on TV but when you see them in real life they look like birds with a gland problem. Alpine ski racers also look like normal people on TV, but when you see them in person you realize they are thrice the size of a normal person, plus two. Either of Bode Miller’s arms are bigger than my right gun, the bigger of the two.

Kate Moss said that nothing tastes as good as skinny feels. Apparently even Kate Moss couldn’t go her whole life without saying something sensible eventually. Being light on a bike is an amazing feeling, and we sacrifice all socially acceptable aesthetics in this pursuit. To be skinny is also to look good on a bike; hunching over a top tube chewing our handlebars isn’t a terribly flattering posture to begin with, one not made any more appealing with a gut protruding into the void.

I’ve never heard a Cyclist say they are happy with their weight, or that they feel they are skinny enough. No matter how skinny we are, we are still too fat. Most Cyclists greet each other with a little pinch on the arm to gauge one another’s weight – the first intimidation of the ride or the first bit of morale, depending on which side of the pinch you are. “Cyclists’ Sizing” is a phenomenon where a rider needs to wear their bibshorts a size bigger than their jersey. This is the maximum body image goal of the Cyclist, to have massive guns and a tiny torso.

I’m on the train, but I’m not there yet. To hasten the journey, I fancy the 5am Spanish Turbo Session in full leggings, long sleeve jersey, and casquette in order to kick start my metabolism in the morning. And then I skip breakfast and lunch. And dinner, if I can manage it. I prefer to cut calories out of my food diet than out of my drinking diet; success is all about setting attainable goals.

frank

The founder of Velominati and curator of The Rules, Frank was born in the Dutch colonies of Minnesota. His boundless physical talents are carefully canceled out by his equally boundless enthusiasm for drinking. Coffee, beer, wine, if it’s in a container, he will enjoy it, a lot of it. He currently lives in Seattle. He loves riding in the rain and scheduling visits with the Man with the Hammer just to be reminded of the privilege it is to feel completely depleted. He holds down a technology job the description of which no-one really understands and his interests outside of Cycling and drinking are Cycling and drinking. As devoted aesthete, the only thing more important to him than riding a bike well is looking good doing it. Frank is co-author along with the other Keepers of the Cog of the popular book, The Rules, The Way of the Cycling Disciple and also writes a monthly column for the magazine, Cyclist. He is also currently working on the first follow-up to The Rules, tentatively entitled The Hardmen. Email him directly at rouleur@velominati.com.

View Comments

  • I'm 5'11 and I'm tipping the scales at 144lbs just now. Hugely depressing, last year I was mid 130s...

  • @kah

     

    As I'm reading this, I just swung open the frig door. Yep, all the daily requirements for good cycling: beer, V8,pasta, broccoli, kale, beets, milk (for oatmeal only), and beer.

  • It's a shame that we're not a little like camels. You know, drink a lotta water and it lasts for a week or whatev... I'd love nothing more than to eat a big steak dinner and it last me for a week. It just doesn't work that way regret.

    Anyways, when it comes to being skinny I prefer to exercise my calories off than to control the intake.

    And, I wanna be able to do pull ups too. And push ups. I think that that kinda thing utlimately protects, holds ya together, when misfortune of going down happens. Now, if I was being paid for winning bike races? Then it'd be different I suppose.

    Dang those cats are skinny.

  • Last night I was on the trainer riding for the first time in 2 weeks due to commitments, only wearing bibs because I forgot the fan, and the wife comes down into the basement and asks "what's this?" as she points at a fold of skin in the midsection.

    Conversely, I was happy to see that Wiggo tweet where he took snaps of his scale, and showed a gain of 12 kilos. He has gone from 71kg to 83kg. Last year when the doc forced me off the bike to heal a broken toe, I went from 74kg to 82kg.

    The way i see it, it's more aero to fill that void above your guns when you're in a TT tuck.

  • @frank

    "Being light on a bike is an amazing feeling, and we sacrifice all socially acceptable aesthetics in this pursuit."

    Once in a long while it all comes together, you are 3 std dev below "normal" on the weight bell curve, and the rides feel like you are floating! It is an amazing feeling!

    Then you feel like those guys look!

     

  • @Neil

    I’m 5’11 and I’m tipping the scales at 144lbs just now. Hugely depressing, last year I was mid 130s…

    Great. Thanks for that. Less than 2 inches shorter but about 50 lbs lighter. I mean this in the nicest way possible: Bastard.

  • @wiscot

    @Neil

    I’m 5’11 and I’m tipping the scales at 144lbs just now. Hugely depressing, last year I was mid 130s…

    Great. Thanks for that. Less than 2 inches shorter but about 50 lbs lighter. I mean this in the nicest way possible: Bastard.

    Ditch the Irn Bru and deep fried Mars bars and anything is possible ;-)

    Besides, for all the use it is in the long run, I'm still distinctly average. If skinniness and jealousy of other people's talent made you go faster on a bike I'd be Robert Millar by now...

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