Pictograph of Hands in Red Rock Canyon, NV |
When Gumbo
boy occasionally writes a guest blog I always remind him to look for the
unusual, the details that raise an eyebrow, something that makes you
smile. A week or so ago Corey explained the
relationship between a lazy
eyed llama and motivating junior cyclists.
It was a good example and reminder of the reason you read, like us on Facebook, and follow
on Twitter and Strava. Cycling is just as much of who we are as our
relationships, our professions, and our homes.
If your racing,
doing a charity ride or planning a bike vacation this summer chances are your
car is painted in bird crap, the cats are licking the dirty dishes in your
sink, and you have a family of baby bunnies in the tall grass that used to be
your backyard. I completely understand.
I’ve been
doing the opposite. For the past four
months, since racing Masters Worlds I’ve put my focus on some things that took
a back seat to training. My buddy Frank
calls them “domestics.” I planted daisies
and an Azalea bush, had great conversations on neighborhood walks with my wife,
and used a toothbrush to get the last
bit of Louisville mud out of the shifter box in my 4-Runner. I ran the beach in the Dominican Republic,
hiked down the White Rock Trail to the Colorado River in Arizona and visited Booger Hollow in Georgia. As a result, I
haven’t really had an interest in writing for a while.
It’s not
that I don’t love writing or racing anymore.
I do. I also like pulling weeds
out of the garden. I like reading good
books like “The Art of Racing in the Rain.”
Producing radio commercials for a living, I also like freelance money.
The beauty
of cycling is that our lives aren’t on schedule. We don’t eat dinner at six o’clock every
night, get the oil changed every 5000 miles or put the trash on the curb the
night before pickup. A cyclist’s time is
fluid. What a shame to arrange your life’s
activities by minutes, hours, days, weeks, months and years.
We save
laundry for rainy days; cut coupons on the couch at night, only make the bed
when company is coming over and hide unopened mail in the pantry. You discover how to live among a thriving
population of dust bunnies, how to romanticize a drippy faucet, and smile at
peeling paint.
I was going
to apologize for not writing a whole lot in the four months since cyclocross
worlds. However, I know you get it. To do so would be apologizing for living the
wonderful life we share with bicycles.
1 comment:
Beautiful.
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