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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Jul 2004
    Posts
    2,609
    Tell him to slow down, make him carry all the tools (extra weight), get him a heavier bike, and tell him to SLOW DOWN. If he wants to ride with you, it's partly his responsibility to make that happen.
    For 3 days, I get to part of a thousand other journeys.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Jan 2007
    Location
    Seattle, WA
    Posts
    1,764
    Hi Susita,

    I think that this is making an enjoyable activity be really stressful, at least it would be to me. I realize that people ride at different paces just by nature but but there's no reason for him to put all this pressure on you.

    I've had situations where I've ridden slower and I've also had times when I'm the faster rider. When I'm slower, if the person wants to go ahead that's ok, we will regroup. Right now with my husband, I'm the faster rider because he is new to cycling. What I'm doing is riding behind him and going at his pace, for now. He's getting used to clipless pedals and being on a bike and all sorts of things.

    I kind of wonder how he is ok with the fact you have hurt yourself trying to stay up. Maybe it's better to find other people to ride with and then when the two of you ride, make sure it's understood that it is social and not competitive.

    Good luck --

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Location
    Looking at all the love there that's sleeping
    Posts
    4,171
    Tell him that. Tell him you don't WANT to be a racer, you just want to ride with him.
    It sounds like you can hold your own at a good clip, but can't - and don't want to - make that step into hammer-dom. He shouldn't always expect to hammer - and you shouldn't be miserable trying to keep up all the time. Riding together is supposed to be fun, right?
    Sometimes, my DH wants to hammer and I don't. He either, (a) rides without me, (b) waits for me at the top of the hill or at some pre-determined spot ("Go ahead, hon. I'll catch up."), or (c) hammers with other riders, where I'm with the "b" group in the back. Multi-level group rides are great for that. We *sort of* are riding together, but in a group we find our own pace and hook up at the re-assemble points and the end. See if your LBS has group rides to join.
    Good luck!
    2007 Seven ID8 - Bontrager InForm
    2003 Klein Palomino - Terry Firefly (?)
    2010 Seven Cafe Racer - Bontrager InForm
    2008 Cervelo P2C - Adamo Prologue Saddle

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Location
    Flagstaff AZ
    Posts
    2,516
    Riding with a much faster SO or Hubby. I've been dealing with this since I first started riding. My husband is a natural endurance athlete, plus as a mountain biker he is great cause he rode and raced motorcycles as a young boy and man. So, you can imagine!

    Anyway, I'm an athletic, if not greatly competitive, woman. So, when we first started riding we were late 20's, early 30's age wise (he is 5 years older than me). I've always had a great sense of preservation and realized there was no way I was going to keep up with him. We tried to ride together when we first started riding, but he was younger, much more into competition and wanted to race at all times so it was not a good mix. I had to learn that when he got on my case (as he would do regularly) like when I did not ride over a large obstacle that scared the bejesus out of me or something like that, I finally learned to fly him the bird and ignore the criticism. He was never able to keep his mouth shut! I just learned to take care of myself. If he waited for me fine, if not fine. The only time I made him wait for me was when I did not know the area and then we would just regroup.

    After a while, we both realized what our potential as bike riders was and occasionally, he would just go out for a fun ride with me and that was usually pre-ordained from the start ( and with other riders).

    I should say that most of the above, has to do with mountain bikes.

    Road bikes is a little bit of a different story cause 1. I'm better at road riding (not as much handling involved) and 2. I can draft and learned race tactics so that I could use those to my advantage when I really am slower. So, when we rode or still ride on the flats, I can usually keep up unless he is intent to ride me off his wheel. On the hills, he is still too fast, but he will circle around to come back to me or wait for me at the top. It's usually not that long for me to catch up. On the road I do not have any trouble keeping up downhill so that is okay.

    What we have learned is that 1. I'm not as fast and never will be. 2. on the road, we can ride together better and will ride together more often. 3. on the mountain bike, we don't ride together much, but when we do, hubby has learned that he will have to wait, or we will be creative in our routing so he rides longer and I meet him somewhere (stuff like that). It's all a compromise just like a marriage or a relationship and sometimes it takes a while to learn what the compromise needs to be.

    Keep trying. Express your fears; express your needs; and express to him that women (with few exceptions) are not as fast as their male counterparts. So, even if you can keep up for a while, you are at your max and he is not. Eventually, he will come around a bit and you can have fun riding together.

    spoke (I'm 46 years old now and much more of a selfpreservationist as before. Why? Cause things take a lot longer to heal anymore and guess what, I don't think I'm going to become a pro racer this late in life! ) We ride for fitness and fun at this time in our lives. If you hurt yourself, you are not helping yourself, making yourself healthy or even enjoying yourself. You need to tell your boy this stuff. It's not worth getting hurt.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    Concord, MA
    Posts
    13,394
    If your boyfriend wants to ride with you, he will have to slow down. Otherwise, you will end up hating riding! When I started riding, my husband was into riding very fast. But, he rode with me even when I was toodling along on my mtb on the road. He could no longer ride with our son (too fast), so he was happy to ride with me. When I got a road bike, I could go a bit faster and we started doing longer rides together. At one point, he was recovering from 2 broken wrists and then 2 cardiac stents, so I had my small window of being faster! But, as I have improved, he has become fine with riding at an average of 15-16, sometimes a bit slower on windy days. I can draft him at 20-23 for awhile and it's fun, but not what I want to do all of the time. He rides a bit faster when he commutes, so those are his fast rides. We ride with another couple, also. The guy is stronger than Steve, but they go ahead a bit sometime. My friend is much slower than me, so I usually end up alone, in the middle. But sometimes I ride with the guys if they aren't hammering. On group rides, we usually ride together, near the front, because we go on group rides that are not for racers. We also lead rides and we alternate leading and sweeping. If this is something you want to do together, for the rest of your life, you have to compromise. I am 53 and want to ride until I drop dead. At some point, speed becomes less important and fitness/fun becomes the goal.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Location
    somewhere between the Red & Rio Grande
    Posts
    5,297
    My husband is like Spoke's in ability and we pretty much do the same thing as Regina.

    I just let him go (especially on hills) and he waits at some point. He worries about me, so he won't fully take off. Sometimes I am so far behind he thinks I have had a mechanical issue. We carry a cell phone each, so he can check on me.

    Explain to him you love riding and spending time together, but you are just never going to be a racer. Maybe the ability is there, but if the desire isn't you won't cultivate that ability. I have the desire to improve, but I will never be as fast of my naturally athletic husband and I *think* he finally gets that.

    Sometimes my husband will tack on an extra 10 miles of all out hammering once I am done. The best thing to do is to be honest and find some balance. Good luck!
    Amanda

    2011 Specialized Epic Comp 29er | Specialized Phenom | "Marie Laveau"
    2007 Cannondale Synapse Carbon Road | Selle Italia Lady Gel Flow | "Miranda"


    You don't have to be great to get started, but you do have to get started to be great. -Lee J. Colan

  7. #7
    Kitsune06 Guest
    My ex was a solid cyclist. Speeds that were just effortless to him were gasping-for-breath-blowing-snot strenuous to me. While I've sped up a little, recently, at that point it always felt like I was holding him back. =P Then again, when he got car-biffed it was a good thing I wasn't right behind him. I can only smile about it now because he was okay... at the time it was terrifying.

 

 

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