Telltale Signs That Cycling Has Taken Over Your Life
(You say this as if it’s a BAD thing?)
By Joe Metal Cowboy Kurmaskie
Hello, my name is Joe…
“Hello, Joe.”
… And I’m a cycling addict. It’s been ten days since I clipped in, twenty since I checked my Cateye, and a full month since I bought something I did not need off the clearance table at my local bike shop.
OK, so I’ve never been forced to make this confession, but if there really were a 12 step program for addicts of adventures on two wheels, friends and family would have tackled me to the ground years ago. Except for things like, say a job, or sleep, meals and the occasional social contact with people, there’s really nothing stopping any of us from dreaming, thinking, scheming or actually cycling 24/7… or close to it.
Of course it would be utter folly for you to push away from that desk you’ve been riding like a little corporate jockey all these years. Foolishness of the highest order for you to sublet the house or sell the farm and roll out the door for a world trek, or what about signing up for the local race series, cyclocross or every century on this season’s schedule. Life could get interesting in a hurry, God Forbid. So while you contemplate a few of these rash choices I’ve littered your lane with, let’s see just how over the edge you are with this little test:
(Full disclosure: Like any good test maker, I’ve compiled this pop quiz from many sources over the years: my twisted brain, websites, surveys, emails from friends – but most come from cyclists in the act of pedaling, getting ready to pedal, or lying on the side of the blacktop after pedaling too far too fast or both. In other words, experts. I would like to thank them collectively for their inspired madness… Pedal, Forest, Pedal!)
Now, pencils ready…
Are You Addicted To Cycling? Check Off All Which Apply To You (bonus points for speed, deductions for drafting)
• You know every traffic light sequence in the tri-county area for stop free pedaling.
• Either it’s a Brooks saddle or I will stand and pedal the whole way, thank you.
• You wear more tights than a children’s theater group performing Peter Pan.
• You have eaten pasta directly out of your front bag, while pedaling.
• You have more up-to-date knowledge of bike specs, gear and camping equipment than the staff at your local shop, the reps in your community and the
editors at national magazines.
• You have a killer set of bodybuilder quads and a pair of angel hair pasta thin arms. That ten year old boy called again. He wants his biceps back.
• You don’t hate drivers as much as pity them in their steel cages, surrounded my shock jock rhetoric and their vague anger over how it came to this.
• You think about each hill as a cyclist, even when you are driving in a car.
• You calculate distances between cities by how long it would take you by bike. ( 21 bike days from St. Petersburg to St. Louis)
• You know how many miles you rode last night, last week, last year.
• You don’t find it over sharing to tell people you just met how many miles you rode last night, last week, last year.
• You have a Biker’s Tan. (bottom 2 /3 of your legs, lower 1/2 your arms, and two little circles on the tops of your hands)
• You get sad when your Biker’s Tan fades.
• You have nothing good to say about logging trucks or RVs with living fossils behind the wheel, or anything sporting wide mirrors.
• You have lost feeling in your hands, neck and groin for substantial periods of time, but still you consider it the fair price of doing business on two wheels.
• You have far too many photos of yourself on or around your bicycle next to signs at the top of mountain passes, Welcome To So and So State, National
Park entrances, starting lines of bike rides, historic sites, and in front of bicycle shops.
• You’ve lost sleep over the trailer vs pannier debate – of course you own both.
• You can’t bring yourself to recycle any magazine remotely related to cycling. (Bicycling, Adventure Cyclist, Dirt Rag Bike, even that issue of GQ where Al Gore was on a bike)
• You’ve given your bike a nickname.
• You’ve used that nickname out loud… in mixed company… and felt no shame or embarrassment. Some of us aren’t so brave.
• You lift your butt off the car seat as you go over potholes, railroad tracks and speed bumps.
• You turn the air vents of your car to blow directly into your face and imagine you are on a bike ride.
• You own a pile of lightweight stuff that has multiple uses, and you’ve tested all of them in real life situations.
• You have enough funny/scary animals chasing me stories to close a bar of rowdy Irishmen or outlast a windbag uncle at the family reunion. (note: No
windbag uncle? Hmm, could be you)
• You’ve slept in a church, playground, cemetery, farm pasture, yurt and jail (voluntarily?) beside you bicycle.
• You know the other definition of Critical Mass.
• You are an expert at spotting thunderstorms, tornados, windstorms, marauding cattle and ice cream stands from a distance.
• You have been caught in a thunderstorm while still in the saddle blinking away water and grinning all the way home.
• You check your helmet mirror for what’s behind you even when you are off the bike and not wearing it.
• You hate headwinds, hills and trucks parked on the shoulder of any descent.
• You secretly love headwinds and hills, but those trucks parked on the shoulder of any descent are still the work of an angry god.
• You forget, much like a woman after childbirth, all the pain, headwinds humidity and hills within days of a long ride, and start dreaming about the next.
• You have coachroached: bonking so badly that you have to lie on your back, pull your arms and legs tight and spasm your legs into the air to relive the
cramps. Take a picture of that sometime.
• You can say “My bicycle has been stolen!” in six different languages.
• Your bike is more expensive than your car. (if you even own one)
• You never ask anyone in a car if the road you are on has “hills” or “climbs”.
• You wave to drivers with bike racks.
• You have convinced yourself and others that protein bars are tasty. Here, try the coffee, banana, peanut butter Sundae ones, they’re the best.
• You have tested your hypothermic limits and found that they can be expanded with pedal speed, layering and hot cocoa.
• You agree with the statement; “If everything feels in control, you just aren’t going fast enough.”
haa. I like, “you lift your butt off the car seat over potholes…”
“Of course it would be utter folly for you to push away from that desk you’ve been riding like a little corporate jockey all these years. Foolishness of the highest order for you to sublet the house or sell the farm and roll out the door for a world trek, or what about signing up for the local race series, cyclocross or every century on this season’s schedule. Life could get interesting in a hurry, God Forbid.”
God forbid I do something I enjoy even if it is sitting at desk, it must be utter folly not to want to be chased by psychopaths in trucks, an act of stupidity not to leave my home open to thieves. It must be idealistic of me to think that when someone has something they enjoy that it should not bring others to harm; Foolish of me to believe that there can be hobbies without competition and the arrogance to think there can be hobbyists without the arrogance that their hobby should be adopted by everyone else.
How about, Your family yells at you for driving too slowly, but you feel like you are going pretty darn fast!
we all endeavor to pass this quizz… not quite there yet sorry i don’t lift my butt off the car seat at crossings… now pot holes that is another story… but my bike is worth more than my car….
Give me an old cool bicycle, and I’ll ride around the city for days.
*You yell “Coming up on your left” when passing somebody in the supermarket.
[...] all "normal" and not like that, right?? Here’s a funny thing from the internet ("Metal Cowboy") that might help ya get in the mode for tonite as well… Are You Addicted To Cycling? [...]
[...] Until you get your copy of Metal Cowboy, here’s a taste of Joe’s writing from his blog: Telltale Signs That Cycling Has Taken Over Your Life [...]