R.O.O.T.M.
(Rider Opinion Of The
Month)
Every month, or so, we give
a team rider carte blanche to sound off, however
they see fit. So, you really never know what
you're gonna get, except yet another reason
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Ride
Positive in 2007
Did
all your meticulous winter training plans pan
out?
If you live in anything close to the kind of
climate (Minnesota) I do, you know how winter
can piss all over those plans. Oh sure, there’s
“cross-training.” Winter has all
sorts of frolicsome activities that can promote
a healthy body mind and spirit. Exercise that
rejuvenates, while giving tired muscles and
cartilage a chance to rest.
Of course that’s all bullshit. Winter
sucks the life from your bones and organs. If
it’s not the cold (and I mean blue-extremities
cold) or the ice, it’s the dry air or
the sick co-worker coughing in your face. It’s
depression disguised as a season.
My training plans have not gone as planned.
The last cold snap and two late-season snowstorms
have put a big dent in what was to be an all-out,
rabid assault this year. Because I made a resolution
during the last race of 2006 to never find myself
at that end of the pack again in 2007.
So here I am in early spring, just weeks before
my first race, with weak legs, weak lungs and
a winterized brain. What’s a guy to do?
I guess I’ll try to keep things in perspective.
It’s not like I was given a third-larger-than-normal-Secretariat-like
heart. Or have some happy-martyr tolerance for
pain. Nope, I’m a confirmed sissy. But
I learned an important lesson back in the ‘80s
during my BMX days, when I’d wear anything
that said, “Club Homeboy” on it.
And Club Homeboy’s motto was “Positive
Attitudes are Free”
Club Homeboy was something that Andy Jenkins,
Mark Lewman and Spike Jonze dreamed up. It rocked
my cycling world. Club Homeboy was all about
expression and attitude. It was less about making
distinctions and more about just plain riding.
Riding hard, being put away wet and enjoying
the hell of out it.
Now there’s much to be said for the discipline
of training. For hill repeats, tempo riding
and bike handling. It doesn’t matter if
you’re trying to beat someone to the line
or land some sort of crazy table-top; practice
invariably makes perfect.
But bitching ain’t going to help. You
or anyone else.
It’s so easy to start complaining: about
your bike, your jersey and your fitness. It’s
even easier to start to complain about your
team, your local race association, etc. That’s
an easy, contagious and sick vibe. It’s
killjoy.
Am I saying things couldn’t be better?
Nah, I’m just saying fix them with a smile.
Suggest a better solution and keep your bitching
to a minimum.
I’d like to challenge every one of you
to Ride Positive for the 2007 season.
Make a point to curtail the whining about the
way your race was run. In fact, I double-dog
dare you to get there early and help set up.
Don’t bitch about your bike, your fitness
or your whatever. Instead, compliment someone
else who’s been reduced to complaining
after not ascending the mountain of perfection.
Enjoy the team ride. Even if it’s with
a teammate that bugs you. Say thanks to team
leaders for all their hard work. Thank your
competitors for the hard race. For letting you
in the pace-line or how they somehow decided
not to knock you off your line.
I bet by Riding Positive, you’ll start
seeing cool things you might have missed. Bet
you’ll make more friends, maybe even get
more free beer. Bet your riding community will
feed off your vibe. People will dig that and
chicks will give you the nod. Maybe even a feel.
I can dream, can’t I?
Now, since I didn’t get shit done over
my lame-ass-winter, I gotta make myself go do
some hill repeats on some crappy-ass hill that’s
probably too dangerous to ride and I’ll
probably get hit by a car. Stupid cars.
Ride Positive for 2007.
Epilogue
A week after writing this, I nearly got hit
by a car. And the dude wanted to fight. So did
I, being angry and feather-ruffled. I was ready
to go. Plus, I was with three teammates, so
the odds were tilted heavily in my favor.
Though we didn’t fight, it still ruined
a whole day. After a sweet long ride, I suddenly
became bitchy and moody. Yeah, so sometimes
it’s hard to stay or ride positive. So
what. It’s hard to take life as it happens
and it’s hard to let some rich-dick call
you a pussy ‘cause you wont hit him first.
Hello new leaf.
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FROM PETER AT: fpascene.blogspot.com |