Back on the bike, at last- looking mfpfriends who cycle.

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chezmoss
chezmoss Posts: 79 Member
Apologies in advance if this is not the place to do this in the Cycling Group but I've done a general intro & gained some new friends but frankly you guys are "my tribe" and may understand me/ each other, better!

I'm a life long cyclist and recently back to MFP & on the bike after a long break.
I used to race, last in 2012- I'm too old now.
Done a real mix on the bike from:-Road, stages race, crits, track, grass track, tamdam, MTB....
and all the miles that make any of that possible. Now getting my head around just riding for fun and health & fitness. I've struggled with wanting to go out- and from there it became a downward spiral. I've put on lots of weight which I've started to address, hate putting my Lycra and frankly keep getting messages saying I'm I loosing QOM on Strava and want to win some of the shorter, flat or downhill ones, back!
"You can take the girl out of completion, but cant take the completion out of the girl!"

Would equally love to hear/share the enthusiasm of newbies to cycling,
along with reminisce about the good old days, with the experienced cognoscenti.

I hope to hear from some of you.

Replies

  • TheBigYin
    TheBigYin Posts: 5,682 Member
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    The hardest thing about being an "ex" racer is accepting that riding isn't about all the goal-orientated stuff anymore.

    I had it much easier, my "retirement" from racing was 25 years or so ago, and enforced by a RTA that saw me hospitalised for 3 months, and under daily medical treatment and off work for another 9. By which time I'd pretty much also lost my "bottle" when it came to riding the bike in any way shape or form, and which took me over 15 years to get into a frame of mind to try and conquer the fears.

    BUT still, the competitive edge comes out - I think it always will, because if you were the kind of personality that was driven enough to compete in the first place, that'll always be there in you. But Equally, to dedicate the time you need to get half decent at racing, you've GOT to love riding the bike (even if you sometimes don't enjoy it while training)

    My specialism was time-trialling. I was nothing special as a road-racer, back of the field at 'cross, in "fun" category in MTB's (usually wearing a fright-wig and fancy dress or something similar!), but time-trialling - well, it spoke to my inner masochist. I loved it - and embraced the pain involved - not only in the racing, but in the training too... I was a "big diesel" really - nothing special in the 10miles - 23minutes and change, ditto in the 25miles - around 57-58m for a 25, but I could get under 2 hours for a 50 on most courses, and had a pb of 3:58:17 for a 100... Even now, with the advent of FAR better bikes and much more aero kit (tri-bars were JUST coming into vogue as I retired) those times would get me into the gold-standards of my local club.

    Now, I mention those times, because they have a certain relevance... If you let it be, its faintly depressing to ride around a 100 mile route and get home to find you've been out over 8 hours, and you're wiped out completely. Half the speed I used to go, and I'm still dead to the world after it! God only knows what I'd have been like if all my racing/training stuff had been recorded in the GPS version of technicolour... Probably a gibbering wreck. So, I've had to face a major truth. I'm NEVER going to have the time, dedication, fitness and youth to be able to recapture my earlier glories. I'm old, i'm overweight, and i'm no longer a racer.

    So, my struggle was to basically recapture the sheer JOY of riding the bike that got me into riding in the first place - first came the "wheeeeeeeee" feeling of bowling down the road with the wind in my hair, and the freedom of the open road. Only a couple of years later came the competitive aspect - when I realised that actually I was quite good at riding my bike for a long time/distance (because when people asked me where I'd been on the bike that day and I told them their jaws dropped...) at which point I joined a club, went on a couple of club-runs, then my first club 10, and that was it...

    So, it's down to embracing the actual joy of riding the bike. Now, I've a day job, and not every ride after work can be somewhere fun and new - there's a LOT of "the same old loop" in my strava feed. Because, there's a REALLY well mixed up route that takes just over a hour, or can be extended to 1.5 or 2 hours weather/hunger permitting. And, I ride that route ad-nauseum. Yep, I get sick of it at times... but, I've realised that in order to really enjoy the rides on the weekend when I'm out exploring or riding different areas, I need to get fitter (or at least maintain the meagre fitness I have, depending on the time of year) - so, I still ride the "same old loop" with half an eye on "training" - ok, not as focussed in any way as I was in my racing days, but certainly reasonably focussed - somedays I'll concentrate on spinning the gears, somedays i'll concentrate on really attacking the hills... and of course in the depths of winter, I still spend hours on the indoor trainer (though with the advent of computerised diversionary programs like Zwift, that's not quite the Leonard Cohen like misery inducement it once was) - my "training" IS goal-focused - it's just that my Goals aren't "sub 4h 100 miles on the V278 course in August" - now they're "get fit enough to cope with riding up "Buttertubs" and still get back around the 40 mile loop to where you've parked the car...

    I guess what I'm trying to say is this...

    You got into cycling originally for the love of riding the bike. All the competitive stuff came later. Try and find the thing that made you fall in love in the first place. And Embrace it. Doesn't mean you can't treasure the racing career as well - but it's a different part of cycling, and one that doesn't need to squeeze out the original attraction.

  • ntnunk
    ntnunk Posts: 936 Member
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    Welcome, and it definitely sounds like you found the right place. Judging by your intro post we are for sure "your tribe."

    I'm a bit different from Mark (aka @TheBigYin) in that I'm a latecomer to the cycling scene. I'm 47 now and, though I lived on a BMX bike for much of my youth, only found cycling about 6 years ago and got hooked. Though I was never at all a competitive guy, I've found that I really like challenging myself and bike racing is my way of doing it. So here I am, just starting to race road races, stage races, cyclocross, crits, time trials, and mountain bike races in my mid- (ok, late) 40s.

    I think Mark's right though, you have to remember that you started this because you loved it. I find myself getting wrapped up in goal-oriented and focused training and sometimes I force myself to stop and smell the roses, as it were. I take a look around, realize I'm many miles from home, out on my bike, I'm having fun, and, compared to how I lived most of my life or, if I'm honest, most of my peers, I'm fit, strong, and very capable of getting myself home and enjoying the process. So that's what I try to do: enjoy the process. The goals, the PRs, the races, all that's fun and motivating, but what I really love is just riding my bikes.

    So, find your joy! Ride your bikes. Who cares about the lycra? The only folks likely to criticize are either the ones doing it from the safety of their couches or the ones that would have comments on the cycling kit no matter what kind of shape you were in.

    Good luck and welcome aboard. I look forward to hearing more about your adventures.
  • columbus2015
    columbus2015 Posts: 51 Member
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    I'm just an old dude cranking out 6000km/year... love my bike, it's brought me great joy, health and feelings of accomplishments. I'll never race, never be great, just a guy on a bike....
  • chezmoss
    chezmoss Posts: 79 Member
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    Great to hear from all. Request sent, so we can keep connected.
    Thank you for sharing your own tails.

    For the record it was a hobby a serious one for sure- but never a career.
    I'm too old to be of the era when there was a pro female petition. I do however occasionally, get the chance to put a bit back( as support staff) with GB Pro or elite cycle racing teams, so I'm still very much involved with helping the current elite talent during training camps and occasionally when they race
  • BusyRaeNOTBusty
    BusyRaeNOTBusty Posts: 7,166 Member
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    What about age group MTB races? I saw a woman with 70 on her calf at my last race! She's awesome.
  • chezmoss
    chezmoss Posts: 79 Member
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    Yes cycling is such a great sport for mature competitors.
    This year Masters National (British) Track championship, The 55 + age group for women is getting bigger and will 11 competitor this, with 4 competitors + 60!