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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Aug 2009
    Location
    Kansas
    Posts
    83
    Grace makes a good point ~ give yourself permission to get around your blocks so you can ride.

    I had a huge block about riding through the gravel to get to the road, it kept me at really short trips for fear I wouldn't have the energy to get back home.

    When I finally gave myself permission to just drive to the road with my bike and then ride I finally started accomplishing some of my goals.

    Give yourself permission and don't judge yourself. You are awesome and you can do it.
    One out of shape mom getting ready to bike across Kansas

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    Concord, MA
    Posts
    13,394
    I have found that whenever I have a bad attitude toward riding, instead of getting on my road bike and riding for fitness, I get on my hybrid and do an errand. Sometimes these rides are as short as 7 miles, other times they are 15 miles. All I know is that having a destination or purpose and being on a bike that forces me to go slower cures me of the bad attitude. I feel like a kid again and am usually ready to get on my road bike the next time.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Location
    San Antonio Heights, CA (Upland)
    Posts
    1,067
    Yeah, go for a "fun" ride and tell yourself it can be as short as you feel like making it. Just get on and start going. If you only go down the street and back, at least you will have ridden your bike.

    As for weight loss, what worked for me was The Weigh Down Diet, which basically teaches you how to listen to your body's hunger and fullness signals and eat "less food". No calorie counting, fat counting, or even any food restrictions. Just less of it. Another book of similar philosophy is Thin Within. I lost 60 lbs 11 years ago because of Weigh Down and kept it off.
    GO RIDE YOUR BIKE!!!

    2009 Cannondale Super Six High Modulus / SRAM Red / Selle San Marco Mantra

  4. #4
    Join Date
    May 2009
    Location
    Minnesota
    Posts
    96
    Hey, I can really empathize. I had a multi-year sick in bed layoff, and I started out just using the stairs and walking for 15-30 minutes at a time. A couple months later, I started biking to work - only 4 miles, and I took the bus+bike there or back as often as I biked both ways. Then I started riding a bit more for weekend rides, and a little bit of light, close bike errands.

    Another setback with a really bad tibia stress fracture in January (running on the treadmill too fast too soon, my muscles and tendons were back up to par after a year, but not my bones), and when I was eventually allowed to ride again in mid-May, I could only increase mileage by 10% a week. It goes really slowly at first! Plus I needed to divide my time between commute (now 8 miles each way) and weekend rides. At the moment I commute 3 days a week, do grocery errands, have one day on the trainer, and am increasing gradually on the long weekend ride. Only being allowed a couple miles increase per week total (and having to split it between different goals) made it much easier to work up to about 45-50 miles on the weekend (which is what I'm at now for my long ride). I look at the ride books to find rides of the right length, and then add the mileage there and back if I'm biking to the start. Being forced to add slowly made it really exciting every time I got to increase the long ride by a couple miles, so I haven't hit a barrier yet.
    Last edited by Yelsel; 08-25-2009 at 12:25 AM.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Feb 2008
    Location
    Edge of Colorado Plateau
    Posts
    701
    Trying to start all over agian...that is how I feel right now. I have read what everyone hear has said, I think I just need to apply it.

    I have gone on a few rides since the weather here has cooled off. When I have, I have done serious hard rides. Meaning going realtivly fast for me, so I have a high heart rate. Then it takes a while for the heart rate to come down. I'm 40 yrs old which is something that I have to keep reminding myself of. I am not 18-20 when my body was superflexible and could do everything. I do not have other health issues either. So I should be ok.

    I must admit that I really did not do anything over June, July, August, and I guess September too. So my cardio system is not in good shape right now. I miss my bike. I need to go ride but I do not want to over do it either. Then of course it really makes me mad when I see people in lycra on good bikes blowing through stoplights. Then I either read or hear how people are being injured by cycling.

    I do not know if all of this is in my head and I just have to block it all. The other thing I have to work on is finding other exercise I can do when the temps reach over 100 during the summer. My summer is like winter to the rest of the world. Fall, Winter, and Spring are riding times around here. I should be outthere.

    Any suggestions on how to get back ouththere in a safe manner?

    Thank you for listening. I hope I have not rambled to much.

    Red Rock

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    Concord, MA
    Posts
    13,394
    Can you swim in the summer? Take spin classes or get a trainer? Hike/walk very early in the AM? Weight lifting?
    These are all of the things I did when I lived in a 100 degree climate.

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Apr 2009
    Location
    Montreal, Québec
    Posts
    233
    I was in a funk for a while. I had my son, immediately lost the weight because of nursing, but then gained when the nursing stopped. I thought I was going to have another, a number of false starts, until I accepted it was not going to happen (I figured, why put a lot of effort into losing weight and getting tight abs if I am going to get pregnant again?) Then I had an operation that put me out of commission exercise-wise. Afterwards, I bought a bike and started to do decent rides, but I needed more. I finally signed up with a local gym - they have a four month program called 'transform' - they measure, weigh you, follow your stats, you are followed by a trainer and nutritionist during that time, then continue on your own after four months. I have a ciricuit training program and I do the spinning classes, which are fantastic workouts - I rarely get that intensity on the roads (hard when you have a child with you most of the times). The people there are great and gunning for each other. I am starting to see results and I doubt if I would have had the motivation if I was not being coaxed along by the staff and the great people at the gym. Give it a thought - a year ago, I would have never thought I would gone to a gym, just hated them, but now I see results. Good luck, we are all behind you!
    Get on your bikes and ride!
    'Bicycle Race' -Queen

 

 

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