Once upon a time I was a cyclist. It started out commuting as a teenager. When I saved up enough money for a car, I spent it on a nicer bike. I never raced or trained, but I rode 100-200 miles per week and stayed in shape through winters. Then kids came along- 5 of them. For seven straight years I was pregnant for at least part of the calendar year. I sold my bike nearly eight years ago, and haven’t been on since- until yesterday. Now I want to quickly get back to and surpass my old level. Yesterday I rode 40 slow, fairly flat miles. Today my husband left at 6:15 a.m. so I only managed to squeeze in about 20 minutes on hills around the house before he left. I can ride in the mornings M-F between about 6:00- 7:30 then shower at the office before work. We have a gym in the building, so I might be spending one or two of those days doing strength training instead. I should usually be able to get a ride in on Saturday mornings between 6:00 a.m. and 9:00 a.m.- until our cold winter sets in.
I imagine I’ll be riding alone. There are a lot of cyclists in my building, but they are total hammers: racers, ex-Olympians, etc. The only girls I’ve known to hang with them are Allison Dunlop and Jenny Longo. Any chance I would ever be able to hang by just putting some time in on the saddle? Or is my only hope to do some serious training? I figure I’ll start working on some intervals in a few weeks. How long until I can stomp up hills and just be fast? How many miles is a lot, and what’s not? How many of those miles need to be serious rides? Is there any benefit to just tooling along sometimes? With Carmichael Studios a few blocks to the west and the Olympic Training Center a few blocks east of my office, I’m right in the middle of some pretty serious athletes.
I’m short, thin and eat great, but I am seriously lacking in strength and endurance. Sorry for the long introduction! I just need a few pointers and a lot of encouragement- without too much technical jargon at this point.



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Sounds like you are on the right track for getting back into the swing of things. You are highly motivated and that will definitely help your training. Since you are located near the Carmichael Studios, why not contact them and set up a session or two with a trainer? What better advice could you get than to have 1 on 1 training with them? If I recall correctly, anyone that purchases a Carmichael book, they are entitled to a free (or discounted) session with a trainer online. If I were you, I'd take advantage of the opportunity to research and possibly train with the area facilities. Good luck and glad to hear you are back on a bike.
