Fire Road 900 above Winthrop Washington

No technology can increase the energy of the willpower of the rider, nor can it lessen the doubts which sometimes overwhelm him.
– Bernard Hinault

As I swung off the main road, I was momentarily consumed by the simple thrill of my tires leaving the hard tarmac and hitting the rough gravel of the unpaved forest road. It was a brief distraction of the sort that keep me falling in love with the sport over and again; these small thrills fill even an ordinary ride; all you need to do is notice them. Nevertheless, the reality of the climb I was about to start was never far from the surface of my mind. I’d been preparing for it for a few hours; the heat, the gradient, the diabolical nature of the sandy gravel.

We never get used to the pain, it never stops clawing at us. The best we can do is harden our minds against what is to come and endure it, pulling the most from ourselves along the way. Mostly, we learn that pain is quickly forgotten and its sharpness begins to dull the instant we finish the effort. Then we train ourselves to remember that point and use that to resist the urge to stop. The Will is the only weapon we have in this fight: when it is strong, we fly; when it leaves us, we falter.

I’m horribly finicky about my equipment and my kit, that’s not news to anyone who knows me. Everything has to be perfect – always –  but extra care is taken to guarantee perfection before an important ride. On a good day, it won’t matter whether the machine is silent or the bar tape clean; those things will never give me good legs. But if the legs are gone and I need to rely even more heavily on my mind, a creaking chain will start the tailspin into psychological collapse. The technology in our equipment can never stoke the fire of our determination but it can choke it off in an instant.

The best gains aren’t found in technology; they are found in building the strength of your Will; the Cave is a lonely place – if you don’t bring it with you, you won’t find it where you’re going. No one compels us to ride hard, to suffer. No one even asks us to. The choice to suffer is ours alone. The Will, it comes only from within.

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.

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  • @frank I love posts that cut to the essence of cycling. The will. Gold.

    @unversio

    turn
    an unlimited maximum
    will
    there is no end
    ciclismo
    a un glorioso strada
    victory
    one truth to find

    unversio

    You've captured it!

    @frank how about a haiku contest at the end of the VSP? Kinda like an ITT at the second last stage.

  • @Owen

    @DeKerr

    @KW

    "The best gains aren't found in technology; they are found in building the strength of your Will..."

    This (and my Velominatus Budgetatus status) is the reason that I have no problem riding a steel bike that weighs 23lbs (gasp!) with 9 speed (double gasp!) Sora groupsan (are you fucking kidding?!).

    Better/lighter equipment might make me faster, but it will never make me stronger.

    Wow man... just... wow. Hard man this one.

    The VMH has a Sora set on her commuter. It gets the job done, but it ain't pretty.

    Hey hey hey don't knock Sora 9-speeds. I've had the Sora 9-speed Gruppo on the commuter since it was the #1 almost 10 years ago. Don't worry, I've replaced the chain and cassette during the intervening years "” she's the commuter bike now, but she still deserves love and respect. The Sora shifts more reliably than the Ultegra I have on the current #1 and at a fraction of the price.

    Maybe the lesson to be learned here is I should go back to the aluminum Scott Speedster for more than just a few miles each day. That way I'll appreciate the Carbone all the more, even if the shifting can sometimes be wonky.

    Man The Butler has 5 speed and down tube shifters, you were lucky.  In fact.........

  • @freddy

    @unversio

    turn
    an unlimited maximum
    will
    there is no end
    ciclismo
    a un glorioso strada
    victory
    one truth to find

    unversio

    You've captured it!

    Thanx. I plan to incorporate this into a design project soon after. And will let you know when. In fact my design career is about to go full tilt ciclismo. I especially appreciate the 'unlimited maximum' -- inspired by Emerson -- at a stop during solo training. Began to think about no end in nature -- no end in cycling.

  • @unversio

    @freddy

    @unversio

    turn
    an unlimited maximum
    will
    there is no end
    ciclismo
    a un glorioso strada
    victory
    one truth to find

    unversio

    You've captured it!

    Thanx. I plan to incorporate this into a design project soon after. And will let you know when. In fact my design career is about to go full tilt ciclismo. I especially appreciate the 'unlimited maximum' "” inspired by Emerson "” at a stop during solo training. Began to think about no end in nature "” no end in cycling.

    endless cirlces

  • Regarding equipment...about a decade ago I spent a few years running on the hilly powerline behind the plant during lunch breaks.  One day I forgot my running shoes.  So I put on my work boots and ran anyway.  My running buddies thought I was crazy, but I follow the old racing adage "Run what you brung".  Years later I showed up to my first real charity ride (a century in Maine that shall remain nameless) with a Jamis mountain bike to which I had fitted road tires.  It was leaning against a porch, and I was walking around.  Some pros who were participating (and shall remain nameless) noticed it there and mocked each other, suggesting laughingly that one or the other should ride it in the century the next day.  I did.  Pussies.

  • Love this article and its implications for cycling and life.

    @KW For the past 13 years I have almost exclusively ridden a 23-24 pound Trek 1000 (red white and blue) with Sora 7spd.  I had upgraded to better drive train, wheels, and cockpit components, but it got stolen.  My brother and I had bought the same bikes back in '01 and he was no longer on the Enlightened path so he gave me his.  When I've really looked at it I've at times felt embarrassed about my ride, but once I start riding it doesn't really matter any more. The Sora still shifts like I need it to,  I turn the pedals over as fast as my too fat to climb self can, and I just ride as hard as I can. In the end that's what matters.  Of course, I am in the process of  building up a new to me steel bike...

    @Optimiste I often think about going more old school with down tube shifters...maybe on a second bike, when the above is finished.

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