Tri-girl, thanks! My miles are a particular achievement because I had a bike accident on November 13. No, I don't know what happened other than I didn't crash; the doctors ruled out stroke, heart attack and low blood sugar, so a side gust may have gotten me. I decided to do loops on the bike trail inside the local state park. I was only at mile 3 and I woke up sprawled out on the trail. I had been unconscious for 90 minutes. I spent the weekend in the trauma center with severe concussion, multiple fractured ribs and a right punctured deflated lung. However, good comes from bad, and the doctors told me the cycling has burned off the bad fat inside the torso, the fat that surrounds the pancreas and invades the heart and liver, and that I have exceptional heart, liver and kidney health. I got back on the bike on January 1, biked through the pain, in some snow and a lot of rain and a whole lot of headwind, and put on the miles. I still go to the gym too. I am trying my best to get my body fat down to 24% and it is a long journey.
One thing that works for me is using the training log on MapMyRide. It is because Map has fitness challenges. I join multiple fitness challenges for bike miles and I am surrounded by alpha male cyclists. I am not an alpha anything, and my speed has to look like the pace of a turtle compared to them, but it sure is a motivator to keep up with the alphas and hold my position in the top ten on the Leaderboard for the challenges. I keep my training log public too, so that anyone can look at it, see how much I weigh (horrendous), see exactly what my heart rate, speed and distance is on each ride, and doing so motivates me to do my best, even during the bad winter weather.