Petrified's update...so drained sometimes
Yeah, I've spent a lot of money lately just getting enough of the right clothes to be comfortable for longer rides...but I just don't know what I'd do without those little pockets in the back of my shirt. I like not having to wear a backpack.
This is really fun, so far. I feel very sleek and fierce on my borrowed super- fast bike...a little like Laura Croft Tomb Raider (I haven't seen the movie, but for some reason that's the image that comes to mind). I don't know that I'll feel quite so fierce after my first fall, though...
About the hand/thumb joint pain...I went by my bike shop and they took a look at me on my bike and said that the handlebars are really much too large for me, and too far away. They pushed my seat closer, and gave me a shorter shank(?) for the handlebars, so that I don't have to stretch out so far. (anyone who lives in Brooklyn should check out the Bicycle Station on Vanderbilt...a husband and wife own the shop, and she's really strong and really into biking, too...she adjusted my bike and watched me ride past her to check my form and everything, and only charged me for the new part. No charge for labor...I thought that was pretty cool).
I have been trying to get my pace up on my shorter rides...not letting myself coast at all...because I figure it'll maybe help get me in better shape for the long ride, when I don't have the time to do a long training ride. I can do 3 miles in 13 minutes now (much faster than on my old clunker, of course), and not being a patient person, wonder why I can't whittle it down to 10 right away.
I'm a little worried that I wasn't able to get a long ride in this weekend, but I'm planning on a long excursion next weekend...my last one before the real ride! Now my boyfriend is trying to convince me that I should do the 55 instead of the 35. Yeah right! I'm not that crazy...yet. I'd much rather be successful at the shorter ride, and encouraged to try longer ones later, than miserable because I pushed myself too far, too fast.
I am having problems with getting really lethargic after rides of only 14 miles, or so. My muscles never hurt afterwards, but I have no energy at all. I had problems with foot-cramping once, and after reading some threads on here, decided to bring vitamin water with me that had electrolytes in it. I also bring a food bar with me and eat it half way. I didn't have any more foot problems, but again...I felt so, so drained, and had to cancel my plans for the evening, because I only had enough energy to veg in front of the TV. I even ate a good breakfast before the last one: a bowl of cereal, a hard boiled egg, and a banana. I have a feeling that I'm not eating soon enough after riding, maybe. I don't feel hungry, and don't eat for a few hours, and then I think I crash. I'm not sure, though. I feel like I'm drinking water non-stop afterwards, too, but am insatiably thirsty the rest of the day. I'm having a hard time figuring out how to do this athletic thing...It seems like you have to think about fueling yourself differently. This is especially challenging for me, since I've been eating relatively low-carb for a year now. Any thoughts on what I might be doing wrong? What are the best kinds of foods to eat post-ride?
I've also realized that I have a frustrated racing instinct. I keep wanting to be able to pass people, to be really speedy, and am a little bummed, because I've read that you are at a big disadvantage when you're really small...and there are fewer who are smaller than me...Oh well. I am still pretty slow up hills, more because of my asthma than anything else...it's just a little distracting to feel your throat close up...I'm going to try to start taking my preventative asthma medicine to see if it can improve things for the "big ride". And maybe when I'm in better shape, that'll let up because it'll take more to make me exert myself.
Becoming Maybe-a-little-sporty...