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  1. #1
    Join Date
    May 2006
    Location
    Hillsboro, OR
    Posts
    5,023
    Guilty. But I do try to tone it down around certain people.

    My mom wonders why I never have much of an update on my life anymore. It's because she doesn't want to hear about biking and well...what else is there?!

    Actually, there are a lot of guys here at work who bike, so we tend to get all going on some biking-related topic in the breakroom and when we come down off our 'high' most everyone else has left out of dis-interest!

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Nov 2002
    Location
    South of Seattle.
    Posts
    1,037
    Put me down as guilty too. And like southernbelle and IFjane just said about "distances" . . . that always grabs their attention! For example my sister called me one weekend afternoon and asked me what I was up to and I told her that she had caught me as I was leaving for a short bike ride because I had to be somewhere later that afternoon. She asked, "Oh only a short ride like 5 or 10 miles?" And I said, "No a short 25 - 30 mile ride." She couldn't believe it.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Oct 2006
    Location
    The Netherlands
    Posts
    206
    Guilty. But I think most non-bike people I talk to listen out of politeness not out of interest
    My new baby for 2007

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Jun 2006
    Posts
    143

    careful

    I try to be careful here. Many of my friends I met at the Y or eventually got them to join. However, I've lost friends who were not successful. Recently, some really good friends started asking my husband and me about working out. I even got them a free membership for a while in hopes that they would enjoy it. They never went and we get far fewer invites to their house. When we do visit, they usually start giving us excuses why they aren't doing all the things they dream about. I was recently having a glass of wine at a bar with my husband when a friend I haven't seen in a while caught my eye. He came over to say hello and immediatly started explaining the weight he'd put on. I knew I wouldn't be seeing him again. My husband and I remind each other not to talk fitness when we head to non-fitness type people's parties. We've gone as far as to change out of run tshirts when walking over to get our son's at a neighbor's house. When a friend starts talking fitness to us who doesn't already exercise, my husband I always try to change the subject.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Jan 2007
    Location
    Central NJ, a quick ride from the shore
    Posts
    195
    My friends all laugh and say look at their watches, ribbing me, saying Gee, 30 min before she worked her bike into the conversation! LOL.. it's so funny.

    Now I do it just to bust their chops. I'll very overtly deliberately say "Why that's just like when I [insert bike story/comparison here]."

    Everyone is just glad that I have something that means so much to me in my life.
    I'm a lucky girl!

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Sep 2006
    Location
    Top of Parrett Mountain, Oregon
    Posts
    453
    I have very few bikey friends, so it is worse for me. I am what is referred to as a living widow, so I can't even talk bike stuff to my husband. I have one male friend who calls and he asks me what is new, and I launch into a description of every ride for the past seven days, and now he doesn't ask me what is new anymore. Or worse yet, the conversation veers towards something I did, and I always say, well I had to spend the day taking my husband to the doctors and so I couldn't get my ride in, instead of merely stating that I spent the day taking my husband to various doctor appointments and lab tests; it is always I did this or that and so I couldn't get my ride in, because that is what is really important to me, the lack of the ride, not what I did that prevented me from having the ride.

    Darcy

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Jan 2007
    Location
    Melbourne, Australia
    Posts
    21
    I'm a piglet shaped person who commutes to work and does little rides on weekends. Like 9km each way for the work commute and maybe 40-50km on the weekend. This is such a tiny distance, and I know it is but I never get tired of how impressed non-riders are with my efforts, especially considering I don't exactly look athletic (big bums are great for downhill ballast!).

    I think everyone I know knows my bike's name is Trevor and that his favourite bike shop used to be Cecil Walker Cycles (bianchi specialist), but now he prefers Brunswick St Cycles because he doesn't feel as self conscious about being the only non-bianchi in the workshop.

    When I bought Trevor some new wheels for Christmas I bored everyone stiff with how exciting it would be to have blade spokes and some nice sturdy hubs.

    Oh well - could be worse. All my colleagues talk about is Big Brother!

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Dec 2006
    Location
    Columbia River Gorge
    Posts
    3,565

    It's all about timing

    Most of the time I play down my fitness endeavors with non-tri/bikey friends and family. But all of my friends know how important it is to me so they almost always ask how much I've been training, how long I've been riding...

    Well once they ask, I let them have it but in a very brief way. Sort of like this:

    Them - Did you train today?

    Me - Yep

    Them - What did you do?

    Me - For which workout?

    Them - Pardon?

    Me - Which workout? I ran this morning and biked this afternoon.

    Them - What?

    Well you get the idea. And like Southernbelle, IFjane and Susan 126, I love the looks on their faces when I get to the part when they ask how far or how long. I am evil. Sometimes I think I do this so that when I'm 90 and in a nursing home if the nurse says "My are killing me," I can say in a crochety voice, "You don't know what sore feet are. When I was your age..."

    But seriously, I never talk about my training beyond them asking me questions. It is an easy way to bore people to death.

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Posts
    1,046
    Guilty here, too. Although I found that if you even mention the word "triathlon" to non-fitness people, they invaribly use the word "crazy" in their response.

    I've been making a concentrated effort to see members of my tri club on a social level... we just can't seem to stop talking!

    Quote Originally Posted by Minty View Post
    I'm a piglet shaped person
    LOL! I like to think of myself as an Asian Gumby... looks thin from the side, stick-like arms, no chest, no hips, wide legs...

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Jun 2004
    Location
    socal
    Posts
    1,852
    Quote Originally Posted by Mimosa View Post
    Guilty. But I think most non-bike people I talk to listen out of politeness not out of interest


    what she said.....

 

 

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