Fitness. The rhythm, the feeling of precision in our movement, the sensations of The Ride. The temptation of knowing we might in some way control our suffering even as we push harder in spite of the searing pain in our legs and lungs. The notion that through suffering, we might learn something rudimentary about ourselves – that we might find a kind of salvation.
Cycling, like Art, is based on the elementary notion that through focussed study, we might better understand ourselves. But to describe Cycling as a an Art does it an injustice. An artist, they say, suffers because they must. A Cyclist, I suggest, suffers because we choose to.
This element of choice, what psychologists refer to as the locus of control, is part of what allows us to feel pleasure through suffering. Through this choice unfolds an avenue of personal discovery by which we uncover the very nature of ourselves. Like Michelangelo wielding his hammer to chip away fragments of stone that obscure a great sculpture, we turn our pedals to chip away at our form, eventually revealing our true selves as a manifestation of hard work, determination, and dedication to our craft.
Having chosen this path, we quickly find that riding a bicycle on warm, dry roads through sunny boulevards is the realm of the recreational cyclist. As winter approaches, the days get shorter and the weather worse. Form tempts us to greater things, but leaves us quickly despite our best intentions. Its taste lingers long upon the tongue and urges us to gain more. Even as life gets in the way, we cannot afford many days away from our craft before we find ourselves struggling to reclaim lost fitness.
To find form in the first place, and to maintain it in the second, is a simple matter of riding your bicycle a lot. This simple task asks of us, however, a year-round commitment to throwing our leg over a toptube in heat, cold, wind, rain, or sleet, lest we spend months fighting to reclaim last year’s lost condition.
But with riding in bad weather is revealed a hidden secret. It is in the rain and the cold, when all the seductive elements of riding a bicycle have vanished, that we are truly able to ensconce ourselves in the elemental qualities of riding a bicycle. Good weather and beautiful scenery, after all, are distractions from the work. Without them, we have only those elements that we ourselves bring to The Ride: the rhythm, harmony between rider and machine, our suffering, and our thoughts. As the rain pours down and all but the most devoted stay indoors, we pull on extra clothing and submit into the deluge.
We are the Few, we are the Committed. We are those who understand that riding in bad weather means you’re a badass, period.
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1) That photo of Cuddles is wild.
2) Fignon's Big Ring Legs look splendid in that photo.
3) What is going on with the booties he's wearing? Are they loose-fit waterproof ones? More along the lines of warmers? I'm confused.
@frank
Just not tri-geeks.
@Marcus
That has to be photoshopped. If that is a 'real' photo, i'm disappointed. Fer Merckx sake, there are a shit ton of hotties in Aussi land from what I hear. Send him to P-town and I'll hook him up with a hipster stripper (a shaved one even!).
Her hand is as big as his head. Cuddles could use her shoe as a canoe. It's like a traffic accident. Can't stop looking at the horror.
@Blah
@scaler911
Just because you are such Doubting Thomas', here is another photo taken at a different angle. She big, he small - you should see how big the kangaroos are out here.
@Marcus
Me? I know how big the roos are: I'm from Melbourne.
And yes, I once came a cropper on tram tracks. Just once, though. My audience were some patients from a Kew psychiatric home. They were not subtle.
ChrisO - those tales of driving are blowing my mind.
I'm disappointed, saddened, enraged, angered, flummoxed by people who think it is okay to drive and play with a phone. Sure, smoking and tuning a radio aren't great, but punching out messages on a tiny keyboard is just madness. Now that you can basically run your life from your hand, is there any hope people will cease?
@Blah
Sorry - meant to click reply to Jeff from PM. When you came a cropper on the tram tracks were you riding a 'roo? My one gets freaked out around trams, but is pretty quick on the open road.
@Marcus
No probs at all.
Actually, with me it's all wombat, all the time. Apart from my wet-ride, a platypus. Both pretty fine with tram tracks.
@Blah
Used to know a girl who could platypus. But that look is out of fashion these days.