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Thread: Grr...

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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Apr 2007
    Location
    Brooklyn, NY
    Posts
    820
    Quote Originally Posted by Cella66 View Post
    A friend of mine actually took a picture of my bike and sent me an email (from my bike) telling me how much it missed me.
    That's brilliant! Does this friend have a bike? Sounds like a built-in riding partner to me...

    There have been some great ideas on this thread, and I'm bookmarking it in case I ever run into the same issue. All I can say is that I second the bike computer idea if you don't already have one. Tracking my increase in speed and mileage has been a huge motivator for me. I've never been good at anything athletic, and it's awesome to see evidence of my improvement.

    Good luck, and get out there and enjoy the beautiful summer!

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Location
    Central TX
    Posts
    757
    So, hows it going? Did you get out there and ride?

    I am having this problem on and off, but mine is because the weather will not cooperate and I am afraid to ride when the rodes are wet.

    We have had so much rain in TX and I am really tired of it. All the cool weather rides have been ruined by rain and then when you do have a clear day someone has appts. or life things get in the way.
    I have been going anyday I can, and yesterday it was so hot and humid that I thought I was going to melt before I got home. LOL
    It's all good though, I still enjoyed my ride.
    Donna

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Location
    Ohio
    Posts
    54
    My motivation comes and goes. There are evenings when my day has just been hectic, I'm tired and I'd rather plop my butt on the couch and read a book. DH rarely rides with me during the week -- he's a weekend rider only. So, when I'm fighting a mental "should I do it or should I not" battle with myself, I agree with myself that I'll just ride to my daughter's house and back (She lives a mile away). Once I'm on the bike and going, I'm fine. I don't think I've ever just ridden to her house and back. I'm no marathon rider by any stretch of the imagination -- I ride because it is the form of exercise I enjoy most. I usually end up riding at least 6 - 7 miles and feeling much better when I'm back home!
    "I learned what every dreaming child needs to know - no horizon is so far that you cannot see above or beyond it." -- Beryl Markham, Aviation Pioneer

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Location
    Seattle
    Posts
    8,548
    Cella, i am not sure what will work for you; but mortality is what did it for me.
    When my mother fell 2x last year and broke bones both times, I had my wakeup call. Osteoporosis and being out of shape are a bad combo. You need to be in shape to keep from stumbling. You need to be in shape to be able to open jar lids and climb stairs. Bicycling has been a great gateway drug for me. From there i have progressed to walking, stairclimbing, weighlifting and pushups.
    I am not someone who exercises 3 hours a day; but for sure, I am trying to do SOMETHING 6 days a week.
    I hope you get off your azz soon
    Mimi Team TE BIANCHISTA
    for six tanks of gas you could have bought a bike.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Posts
    95
    Hey, Cella—

    I had a similar spell in the early part of this year. Over the course of a few months I went from riding outdoors every chance I got…to riding mostly on a trainer in front of the TV…to riding occasionally on a trainer in front of the TV—and being afraid to ride outside again—to hanging the bike in the garage and putting the trainer away. I sort of got into this weird place where I even contemplated selling my bike and getting something less fancy because I wasn't worthy of carbon and Ultegra. Yup, it was a spiral.

    The good news is, spirals work both ways, because once I finally forced myself back out on the bike for an outdoor ride—with no pressure to do anything epic or exhausting—I rediscovered the exhilaration that lured me into cycling in the first place. I think the key is to reestablish the joy in your relationship with cycling—that pleasure that doesn't understand the language of "training ride" or "hill repeats" and instead recalls the freedom you felt as a kid when you got your first bike. I'll come back to you in time, but you might have to cajole yourself into that first ride. Keep the faith, and enjoy the trip back.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Posts
    317
    I stay motivated by competing with myself. How fast can I get to my partner's office to meet him for lunch? (around 8 minutes for 2.1 miles) Can I ride 10 miles? (not yet) Can I break my weekly mileage record? (yes!) How many miles can I get in in gear combo X?

    Since I just moved and I use my bike as my primary transportation, I'm always going new places. That helps keep the interest level up. Finding raspberries in the Arboretum on Wednesday was awesome! If I'd been in a car I'd never have seen them. Now I have a reason to ride that route more... they should be ripe soon and I want to beat the birds to them.

    The exercise high doesn't hurt either, but by itself it wouldn't be enough.

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Jan 2007
    Location
    PVD
    Posts
    52
    I think it's a familiar cycle, to get burned out. Three months ago was March, and March was nasty up here in the NE--I rode home in ice storms, just about lost my desire to ride. I took a day off, and rode different routes. I rode for fun instead of to work because riding in there actually wasn't fun...so I added a couple loops to the commute and that helps.

    Get back on the bike and ride in circles around the yard, the driveway, whatever you've got. It's FUN. It feels GREAT. Just get back on. I think the rest will come to you if you just start again.

    My personal motivations are to drive as little as possible and to bike instead, to get fit enough to race, and to race 'cross, and to prove to the lunky guys at work that a chick can do it...even when they won't/can't. It's my own foolish pride and a point of principle, but if I won't ride, I have to walk instead of driving. And I hate the walk to work. So I ride.

 

 

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