You can do it! Start with little rides, enjoy on the scenery, have fun and soon you will find you are riding further and feeling better!![]()
You can do it! Start with little rides, enjoy on the scenery, have fun and soon you will find you are riding further and feeling better!![]()
I know that in my head. Right now I am riding on pure knowlege, and allowing my body to set the pace. I know that given consistant riding schedule, attention to both the knowlege and listening to my body, and *not giving up*, that I will break on thru gradually to a whole different physical world. I was there before, I have very blurry vision of what I looked like, in my mind's memory, but my physical body doesn't remember it. (which I find odd, I can't even remember how my body felt to actually feel my hip bones, or collar bones). When such a thing as consistant riding is made time for, wonderful things happen.You can do it! Start with little rides, enjoy on the scenery, have fun and soon you will find you are riding further and feeling better!![]()
I started last winter on this forum , under a different user name, ( *I changed email addresses and couldn't retrieve my old user name*) with a grand plan to start distance training. Boy was that grandiose. I mean, I was so full of confidence, but I truly was not using my knowlege. I was writing a check that my lifestyle just could not ever cash. I planned on training to ride a very hilly 100 K. I started this elaborate and radical incremental mileage increase chart, I mean, it was way over the top. Not only did I want to ride these killer mountainous loops of up to 70 miles, but I wanted to bike commute into town 2 or 3 times a week from atop my mtn, for groceries and errands. I think my motivation evaporated about 2 weeks into it. I think I realized, hey, how is the dog going to be hiked with if I even start to do this?
I am determined to learn from that mistake. >> All I really want and need for health and weight maintenance , is to be able to ride once/twice a week, the 25 mile loop right near my house, or some shorter section of it. I don't need to make a complex training chart for that. I think I will be able to ride it by my birthday , which is mid January. I might take 4 hours to do it, but one day I'll be able to do it in under 2 again. I'll then be fit enought to ride my bike into town once in a while, whenever I feel like it. I have no expectations of myself but to continue riding.
Thanks again for all of your encouragement everybody ! ::hug::
Last edited by HermitGirl; 12-04-2008 at 05:31 AM.
You have my complete support and sympathy. To walk out the door and try is is all that is necessary. You have shown yourself what is within you by that single act.
"Adversity does not build character, it exposes it."
Lookit, grasshopper....
I think it's better to ride 3 or 4 much smaller rides per week rather than two longer ones- if possible.
It gets you into the habit of just jumping on your bike as part of your lifestyle, as opposed to 'planning' a ride like it was a special event or chore.
It also is less like something to dread or put off. Often you can do a 5 mile quicky even if you are tired or pressed for time.
What you want to do here is change your lifestyle habits. Losing weight and gaining fitness will naturally start to happen as you ride your bike more often.
Make small do-able goals first. If you are successful at those, then increase your goals little by little. For many people, starting out with big goals just sets them up for failure. First get into the habit of setting and meeting your small goals successfully and enjoying that feeling!![]()
Lisa
My mountain dulcimer network...FOTMD.com...and my mountain dulcimer blog
My personal blog:My blog
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Hey, welcome back! I remember you from last year! I think the new plan is much better conceived. You'll see, riding a couple of 25 mile rides a week will make a huge difference in your health. Even an hour a day a few days a week will build your fitness level, and you'll be surprised how the miles will add up.
I love your babysteps approach , thank you! I'm incorporating the advice from you ladies very carefully this time, and yes, I know more often is best, but I have an hour to hike with the dog in the same hilly backwoods, everyday if I can. I think in future I can cut back onthe hike time the days I manage to do a reasonable ride, and days that I'm just not able to do it all, I have to choose hiking over riding, for our dog's needs. It's a rigorous balance, at my age of nearly 47 to expect to hike daily like I do, AND go out for rides.... but.... anything is possible, and I'm not beyond it. However, the hiking hasn't made me lose any weight , so I have to just keep trying to ride more. I think when I lose just afew pounds I'll be able to manage short rides from my cabin , where it is so steep, there is about 700 feet elevation drop/gain in 1 - 1/4 miles... and continues like that for about 4 miles before the slope lessens. To go out for just a couple miles from home, is major ride for me now, even to go out for a 1/2 mile of our dirt road to get the mail. Heck, maybe just riding down to get the mail on my mtn bike, most days (when I'm fitter, ligher) is equal to 'a little spin' for most of you ? Otherwise, I have to drive to ride, and I'm not crazy about that for a lifestyle, at all. It's really difficult for me to calculate calorie burning on a ride from my house, when it's either UP and my heart is pounding so hard in the easiest gear (and I have easy gears), or coasting down so steep you don't do anything but brake.
Last edited by HermitGirl; 12-04-2008 at 08:50 AM.
Silver's story:
One day, at the age of 35, she felt the need to run. She ran to the corner three houses down. The next day, she ran to the next mailbox down...and next day the next, and the next day the next...and so on.
In six months, she did her first 5K...another six months, her first marathon.
7 years, 40 pounds, 5 marathons, and several triathlons, she:
- is a licensed spin instructor and and LCI
- coaches for the local Y's training group
- has a six pack
- is an inspiration to all!
- all because she ran to the corner one day
...and I used to make fun of her for "running like a girl"......and now I'm doing it too!
It's not how much you do it...it's why and whether you enjoy it. Good Luck!
If you don't grow where you're planted, you'll never BLOOM - Will Rogers