View Full Version : Encouragement Please! :-(
wackyjacky1
05-14-2008, 02:20 PM
Apologies in advance for the blatant sympathy-seeking rant that follows:
Ugh. I'm having a bad day, and I went for a little bike ride thinking it would make me feel better. It didn't work. :p
In 45 minutes, I only did a meager 6.5 miles. This is typical for me, and I hate it.
I hate being slow, I hate dreading even the slightest incline, I hate being exhausted after such a short ride. I used to be able to ride for hours, and would literally seek out and attack a hill for the sheer joy of making it mine. But that was 15 years ago.
Since I've gotten back into cycling, I know that I haven't been riding as regularly as I should. I try to get out there at least 2-3 times a week, but I guess that's not enough because I feel like I'm not improving. Some days I feel great and I can ride for an hour (or even a little more) without feeling like I'm gonna die, but in general I pretty much run out of steam at about the 45 minute mark.
Today was particularly bad. I just got in the door from my ride and I'm so exhausted after my whopping 6.5 miles that I almost feel like I wanna puke. I'm trying to rationalize it a little bit because I haven't eaten much today and I haven't been feeling too well for a couple of days (don't know if it's allergies or if I've picked up a little bug) but those feel like lame-o excuses, and the reality is that I'm a fat slug.
Bleah!!! :mad:
ginny
05-14-2008, 02:23 PM
ah, during allergy season I'm lucky if I can make my usual loop with my friends not having to wait for me. Allergies suck! The trick is to not psych yourself out and keep going with the riding. You'll get in better shape, but you should be able to have fun doing that, that's the whole point - having fun!
redrhodie
05-14-2008, 02:29 PM
I just looked up the weather for San Antonio, and was it really 94ยบ there today? For me, when I feel miserable on the bike, it's usually weather related. I'm thinking maybe you got a tad too hot, hence the wanting to puke.
mimitabby
05-14-2008, 02:42 PM
wanting to puke? are you drinking enough? is it too hot?
stop kicking yourself around.
If it was in the 90's i assure you I would be under a tree panting.
Try to ride in the coolest hours of the day if it's indeed in the 90's
wackyjacky1
05-14-2008, 02:48 PM
I think it's expected to top out at about 87 degrees today. Very humid, though.
I guess I'm just bummed at the realization that it's going to be a long, grueling road to getting back into shape. (It's so easy to get fat and flabby! :D ) And I'm constantly contrasting my current physical state and cycling ability with the way things used to be. It's a pretty ghastly comparison! :eek:
Ah, well. On the upside, I adore that Brooks B68 saddle, and the moustache bars with bar-end shifters are awesome and fun. :)
I suppose a person just needs to whine every now and then... :o
Blueberry
05-14-2008, 03:00 PM
Maybe just ride for the pleasure of riding for a while?
I'm right there with you. I've had a rough past year (billable hours and a sucky law firm that I've posted about elsewhere). I've gained about 30 extra pounds (that I didn't need to gain!), on top of my already overweight body. I'm concentrating on enjoying riding. Looking at birds, seeing the flowers in bloom. And little by little, I'm getting stronger. I do think I'd try to drink more, and maybe pay more attention to your body. It really does sound like the heat is getting to you (it does to me too).
CA
SandyLS
05-14-2008, 03:26 PM
Jackie,
You do realize, don't you, that most of the population of the U.S.A. would consider 6.5 miles an amazing distance to be able to ride a bike? Quite beating yourself and just get out there and enjoy the ride. The rest will come in time.
hipersons
05-14-2008, 04:00 PM
Here's some encouragement:
I bought my bike on Friday. Went for a leisurely ride on Sunday. Had my fitting yesterday, and decided to ride to work today. Keep in mind, I had never ridden outside of my neighborhood in middle school, and that was 12 years ago. I decided a while ago that I needed to make a change for many reasons.
6.5 miles took me an hour, and I figured out most of my ride to work is up hill. I had to get off and walk up 4 super steep hills, but I forced myself to make it up the last hill on the way to work, even though I had to stop two times on the way up for water and breath. At one point, I was unable to un-clip and fell 100% into the roadway. You did way better than I did!
Sounds like a shitty ride, right? Well, I LOVED IT! I was way more productive at work than usual, and looked forward to my mostly downhill ride home that only took me 35 minutes.
It sounds like you used to ride a lot, and I understand your frustration. As a former dancer, I get pissed when I can't stretch or jump or turn the way I used to. But you sound determined enough to get there. Keep at it! It'll get better!
kelownagirl
05-14-2008, 04:13 PM
Apologies in advance for the blatant sympathy-seeking rant that follows:
Ugh. I'm having a bad day, and I went for a little bike ride thinking it would make me feel better. It didn't work. :p
In 45 minutes, I only did a meager 6.5 miles. This is typical for me, and I hate it.
I hate being slow, I hate dreading even the slightest incline, I hate being exhausted after such a short ride. I used to be able to ride for hours, and would literally seek out and attack a hill for the sheer joy of making it mine. But that was 15 years ago.
Since I've gotten back into cycling, I know that I haven't been riding as regularly as I should. I try to get out there at least 2-3 times a week, but I guess that's not enough because I feel like I'm not improving. Some days I feel great and I can ride for an hour (or even a little more) without feeling like I'm gonna die, but in general I pretty much run out of steam at about the 45 minute mark.
Today was particularly bad. I just got in the door from my ride and I'm so exhausted after my whopping 6.5 miles that I almost feel like I wanna puke. I'm trying to rationalize it a little bit because I haven't eaten much today and I haven't been feeling too well for a couple of days (don't know if it's allergies or if I've picked up a little bug) but those feel like lame-o excuses, and the reality is that I'm a fat slug.
Bleah!!! :mad:
I don't have time to respond fully right now but HANG IN THERE! I was right where you are a few years ago. You WILL get better. Baby steps. Keep at it.
wackyjacky1
05-14-2008, 04:53 PM
Sounds like a shitty ride, right? Well, I LOVED IT!
LOL, your post cracked me up! I have not yet ridden to work because coming home is almost entirely uphill, and I'm not quite ready mentally to go for it.
I appreciate the words of encouragement from everyone -- it's exactly what I needed today. I've got to remember the "baby steps" part, and not expect to already be back in form after such a long layoff.
Muchas gracias, everyone! :)
HillSlugger
05-14-2008, 05:19 PM
How is your hydration and nutrition before the ride? You want to start well hydrated and you want to have eaten recently enough so that your glycogen stores are topped up and you have something in your tank.
salsabike
05-14-2008, 05:25 PM
I will offer this--I was a dancer for many years. Very short version--got fibromyalgia, had to quit, gained huge medication-related weight. It took me a LONG time to stop being mad about what I'd lost. So one of my rules is: I never compare myself to that dancer I was. I try to stick with comparing myself to yesterday, or last week, or last year. It's truly disheartening to be upset with yourself for not being who you were then. Just try to be more like what you want to be now. Honest. It helps.
It'll get better. Just keep trucking and it'll get better.
spotlightmama
05-14-2008, 06:31 PM
I hate having days when I'm not meeting my goals or I'm struggling more than I feel I ought to be...but when I have those days, I try to remember - hey I could have been at home sitting on my a$$. :p 6.5 miles in 45 minutes is a helluva lot better than staying home!
You *will* get better. Good for you for getting out!
http://i206.photobucket.com/albums/bb14/zencentury/SpeedRacer-1.jpg
Here he comes
Here comes Speed Racer
He's a demon on wheels
He's a demon and he's gonna be chasin' after someone.
He's gainin' on you so you better look alive.
He's busy revvin' up a powerful Mach 5!
And when the odds are against him
And there's dangerous work to do
You bet your life Speed Racer
Will see it through.
Go Speed Racer
Go Speed Racer
Go Speed Racer, Go!
He's off and flyin' as he guns the car around the track
He's jammin' down the pedal like he's never comin' back
Adventure's waitin' just ahead.
Go Speed Racer
Go Speed Racer
Go Speed Racer, Go!
kat_h
05-14-2008, 08:28 PM
I hate being slow, I hate dreading even the slightest incline, I hate being exhausted after such a short ride.
I hear ya. I definitely hear ya.
I posted a couple of months ago because I couldn't get up a hill. Not even a small hill. Not even slowly. A week after posting that I made it up the hill by my house for the first time ever. Yesterday I rode up a hill that I've never made it up before. There are four other hills I've conquered in the last month or so, and only three left that I'm still walking. It will come.
I found that weather was holding me back a lot. I couldn't do anything about that though. I've also found that if I haven't eaten enough, drank enough, or slept enough then I can't ride much. Eat, drink, ride, and have fun. Don't rush yourself.
shootingstar
05-14-2008, 08:49 PM
You never need to rationalize anything for anyone as soon as you mount your bike.
Just relax abit more on the bike, ride abit more each time...
learn to know the time of the day that you ride best. You will know...when your heart sings on the bike.
My heart sings the best on the bike, starting early in the morning, when the sun rises...and things are quiet. When I lived in Toronto, early morning rides was the best way to deal with rising summer humidity..and the smog alerts later. It felt so good to get loads of riding done by 10:00 am or earlier after heading out before 7:00 am.
(And remember no one is around in morning, to see you :) --fail or succeed. It's your time.)
It might help if you can find some other reason to ride your bike, so that you feel you're doing something useful or something you want to do, instead of the dreaded "exercise for exercise's sake" :rolleyes: If you can commute, or use your bike for running errands, or just ride for the fun of it - but often - you will get a lot fitter, but you will maybe not be as focused on your day to day progress (or lack of it). Riding often is key, I think, to get your body used to being pushed a little every day or as often as possible.
But then - I loooove my commute :p
OakLeaf
05-15-2008, 03:13 AM
I don't really have any good advice for you, so just to second what everyone else has said, and add my support.
I'm in that position with music. It's really painful to me to not be able to play any more. But it's even more painful to sit down and see/hear that I can't play like I used to. I really want to get past that, but I don't know how.
So hang in there - if you stick with it it WILL get better.
Crankin
05-15-2008, 05:20 AM
I think everyone goes through this at one time or another, no matter what level you are at. I am just not as fast as I was before my Fibromyalgia diagnosis last fall. I generally feel crappy for the first 30 minutes of a ride, and when I only ride 15-16 miles, like after work, that's about half the ride!
I keep telling myself "who cares," but I am putting competitive pressure on myself once I get on the bike. As my husband said, most people who are almost 55 years old can't even fathom riding a bike as far as you do or as fast as you do.
I had a real eye opener this week when I led a ride for people at work. All were 15-30 years younger than me. We went 7 miles and no one could keep up with me, even when I was going 10-12 mph. These people were not unfit. One is a climber,one runs, and one is 23 years old!
So, try and go out and enjoy the ride. I know weather affects me greatly, even when I feel great. I really hate riding in the heat.
Torrilin
05-15-2008, 08:32 AM
I won't do much exercise just for exercise's sake. (ok, realistically I won't do *any*)
I *will* cheerfully bike to the library, the pool, my partner's office, the grocery store... If a hill is too hard for me, I walk it. It gets me up the hill, which is what I want. Next time, maybe I'll go another few feet up it before I have to walk. I am most motivated by having a place to go and something fun to do when I get there.
I don't beat myself up over what I can't do. As a teen, I could climb a 5% grade like my nemesis hill here in Madison. But the nemesis is my nemesis *now*. If I focus on what I can't do, I'll never bother with what I *can* do... and soon I won't be able to do what I can do now. If I focus on what I can do, sooner or later I end up doing more.
I like hot weather, so I'm happy enough biking when it's 85 or 95 out. But I also drink lots of water, and sometimes have frozen water bottles or stop for ice cream. If I don't have my water, I feel terrible when it's hot, and I won't do anything. I *hate* cold weather with a passion, so getting out when it's nasty and cold (like today is 58F... and in the winter getting out when it was 10F was even worse) is hard. On my bike, I stay warmer in cold weather, which helps some. But it's still cold, and my joints ache and it's not as nice as a hot day. Your body is not mine, so it might like cold better. There are always things you can do to make your preferred temperatures nicer, and your least favorite temperatures tolerable.
wackyjacky1
05-15-2008, 11:18 AM
Thanks everybody!
I am not so down-in-the-dumps today...I think my head was just in a bad place yesterday (work has been particularly stressful as of late) and I couldn't shake my bad mood, even when I was on the bike.
I'm usually pretty heat tolerant, but I was feelin' it yesterday. Possibly I was a bit dehydrated since I had been having some stomach problems for a few days.
All in all, I had a major case of the "blahs." I really do want you all to know how much it helped that you let me use up some bandwidth in order to vent, and then gave me such great feedback.
If it didn't look like it was fixin' to rain, I'd go for a little ride right now -- kind of a "get back on the horse" sort of thing. :D
http://foolstown.com/sm/velo.gif
sundial
05-15-2008, 11:40 AM
Here's a hug for you to get you going again. http://bestsmileys.com/hugging/4.gif
Don't be so hard on yourself. Last summer when I took up cycling after a long hiatus, I could only do 2 miles. I dragged my body back to the car and thought gee whiz, whatever happened to me?? Then the next ride it was 3.5 miles. And then 5. Our lbs mechanic is a competitive cyclist and he said the first ride he took was only 1 mile and he had to call his roommate to come get him. So please, just pedal at a pace you can enjoy and s-l-o-w-l-y build up to it. You're not on a schedule, you don't have a race to train for, you have all the time you need to enjoy it. And you will have plenty of company here who have pedaled in your shoes. :)
Fujichants
05-15-2008, 04:48 PM
Can you find somebody to go riding with you and to encourage you during the ride? I find that when I run by myself, I give up easily. That 5 mile run I can easily complete with my bf or friends, I just can't do on my own. Well, I can, but it takes a lot of mental strength from myself.
And don't beat yourself up for being slow, or for not being able to ride far. Everything takes time!
I'm heavy and slow too. If we were close we could ride together. I never have been able to find someone to ride with that is close to my speed or the lack there of.
You will get better. My problem is consistency and I have a hard time getting better when I let other life things get in my way of riding.
Beane
05-15-2008, 06:43 PM
I don't beat myself up over what I can't do. As a teen, I could climb a 5% grade like my nemesis hill here in Madison.
Which hill is your nemesis? My personal least favorite is Observatory in Paoli.
teawoman
05-15-2008, 07:55 PM
You get there when you get there. Measure your own progress and don't compare it to anyone else's
(Says she who is always moaning about how slow she is compared to the fast people in her club :o:p).
Torrilin
05-18-2008, 03:18 AM
Which hill is your nemesis? My personal least favorite is Observatory in Paoli.
There's a little stretch of steep by Edgewood College (it's about 3 blocks from the crest to level). Nothing special, but I'm out of shape enough that it's a challenge. So every so often, I take myself out and go splat against the hill.
BarbaraAlys
05-18-2008, 06:21 AM
Odd are you are pushing too hard from the start, so you run out of steam too fast. I speak from experience :)
I am not a strong rider; on flats I can do 'okay' but the minute I get to a hill I poop out. It seems that every source I've found agrees that they way to get stronger is to slow down....funny, huh? The point is that new riders (and I suspect people who used to ride a lot but have not in a decade) tend to try to go harder than they are able to do over a sustained period. They say the key to getting stronger is to do training rides where you stay in low gears, but keep a good fast cadence (aprox 90rpm). I just got a computer with a cadence counter in order to work on that.
I took a ride this AM who's goal was to work on hills, not to add miles or speed. I only did 9.5 miles. I only averaged 10.5mph, but I didn't have to walk any of the hills and by the end I was starting to figure out the whole 'keep the cadence up' thing.
So, maybe if you slow down, think about your cadencean d the beautiful spring days, rather than how far and fast you are going, you will have more fun and get better results.
Barbara
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