Yesterday was another day of firsts, it was the first day that I felt antsy to get out and ride, not antsy anxious, but antsy so much that I'm starting to look at mountain trails and see what openings I have in my schedule this week. I'm even starting to take the first step of buying a new bike and going into the shop that I work at for a proper bike fit, instead of just saying "oh maybe next week I'll get to it." I'm even going to bring my road bike in to see if there is anyway it can be salvaged to be at least somewhat functional, not race functional but let me go to the store at a slow pace functional.
The only problem is that I have this sudden desire to just grab my mountain bike and go to some random woods (no mom, not completely random, I will not be calling for directions . . . again) and find some single track or double track. Unfortunately my car, which I would be using to transport my bike away from the crazy Worcester roads is in the shop because some masshole decided it would be a good idea to run into the back of my car and take out my bike rack. I swear these people out here have something against bikes, and all things related.
So I'm going to try and go out tomorrow after I pick my car up, which is ironic because it would be my first ride on the east coast since the accident and it's also the first day of court proceedings. I'm not sure where the new found motivation to go out is coming from, maybe it's the nice weather, or the fact that I had a complete break down on Friday and my mind realizes it might be the only way to stay sane until graduation . . .I'm not sure, but I don't hate it.
As far as read goes I read "Cycling Philosophy for Everyone: A Tour de Force" which has seemed to jump on the band wagon of calling everything Tour de _______ (cleverly fill in the blank to replace France and BAM you have a cycling hit!) The book talks about the ways philosophy, culture, and existential experiences arise when human energy is propelling two wheels. It encompasses a lot though, Lennard Zinn, Greg LeMond, and Lance Armstrong (and if you only know 1 of those names you are propably in line with the majority of Americans, and by default I'm sure you can figure out what the other 2 do if you know Lance). It touches on kinesiology, literature, political aspects, issues woman face in the industry, so a nice introductory book into our next focus of the course, which is cycling. It also means that after this book I get to pick the reading for the remainder of the semester! Harry Potter?!?? I'm sure we can work that in! Ha
Actually I went to the book store the other day and scaled their stands for bicycling related books. There are plenty of training bibles and books that promise you the ability to "climb like Lance" but not a lot of books that talk about other aspects of riding than just training. Training is very important, but I can't exactly keep a training diary and have that count as class credit, that would be pushing the envelop a little much. . . whomp whomp.
Does this look like a professional sufer to you? |
Does this look like a rider? |
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