I once squeezed a six-pound human being out of my body through an
opening the size of a lima bean. It took twelve hours, and it involved
the loss of massive amounts of bodily fluids and dignity.
That was painful.
Another time I was sitting in the passenger seat of a 1972 Dodge Dart
Swinger as it flew over a concrete embankment, rolled in mid-air and
landed upside down on the pavement ten feet below the street.
As I recall, that was pretty painful, too.
The summer I was forty years old I quit drinking, cold turkey. I went
through withdrawal alone in a crummy little apartment in Oregon City.
Nobody was there to hold my hand -- or my hair -- as I vomited into a
metal wastebasket for five days in a row.
That was VERY painful.
But none of these experiences -- extreme as they were, horrific as
they were, brutally painful as they were -- prepared me for the agony I
endured last Saturday, as David and I participated in the annual
Healdsburg Harvest Century ... my first organized bike ride.
I thought I knew what I was getting into, last month, when I
signed us up for the Healdsburg ride.
I honestly truly did.
My pal Bitter
Hag had posted a blurb about the ride on our women's
cycling message board, saying she thought that it sounded like a
good potential BOOB
adventure. So I followed her link and went to the official
website, where I took a good long look around, trying to decide if
this was something David and I could manage.
At first glance ... it seemed perfect.
We've been to Healdsburg a number of times since I moved to
California. I remembered it as being spectacularly beautiful: mile
after mile of lush, verdant vineyards and endless blue skies
reaching off into forever. The website advertised a choice of 60,
37 or 23 mile rides, depending on skill level. At that point I was
just beginning to get comfortable with weekly forty-mile rides on
the Iron Horse Trail, and I felt certain that I could handle the
37-mile Healdsburg option. [And if not -- if for some reason it
proved to be tougher than I'd anticipated -- I could always cut it
short and do the easier ride ... right?] Plus the event was being
held the weekend of our first wedding anniversary. I'd been
looking for something special for the two of us to do together --
something different and fun and emotionally significant -- and
this seemed like just the ticket. After all, what could be more
'emotionally significant' to two middle-aged people for whom
bike-riding has been nothing short of a miracle?
I called David at his office and said "So what do you think?"
"Let's do it!" he replied.
After I faxed our registration off to the Healdsburg Chamber of
Commerce -- along with our $90 [completely unrefundable]
registration fee -- I had a few weeks to waffle and obsess and
work myself into a thorough, dithering panic. I worried about my
social comfort level, for one thing. Basically, I'd just signed us
up for a gigantic party with 1,000 total strangers: something I
generally would go out of my way to avoid. I worried about
spending money we can't afford right now. I worried about stoopid
girly-stuff: I don't have the right shoes, I don't have the right
helmet, I don't have the right jersey, I don't have the right
breasts.
But mostly I worried about the hills.
Everything I read about the ride mentioned the hills. The
brochure for the Harvest ride optimistically described them as
"moderately challenging." My book of Northern California bike
rides, on the other hand, described the exact same hills as
"brutal." I began to have serious misgivings about the whole
thing. A week before the ride, I timidly broached the idea of
blowing it off to David.
"I'll just eat the registration fee," I said hopefully.
But of course he was having none of it. "You can do
this," he said, zeroing in immediately on the main source of my
anxiety. And he took me, point by point, through a recap of all
the little milestones I've achieved lately. The forty-mile rides
in Contra Costa County every weekend. Riding with fewer breaks and
greater speed. Conquering the Moraga Hill. Gaining greater
technical skill on the new bike. [Read this: I've ridden in every
gear at least once, and I haven't fallen off in over a month.]
I still wasn't completely convinced, but finally I said "OK.
I'll do it."
Friday night after work we tossed our bikes, our cycling
paraphernelia and an overnight bag into the Subaru and we drove
for a couple of hours north to Santa Rosa, where I'd booked us a
room at the local Comfort Inn. Check-in time for the ride would be
6:30 a.m., so as soon as we got to town we grabbed a quick bite to
eat and went directly to bed.
I can do this, I told myself over and over as I fell
asleep that night. I can do this, I can do this, I can do
this.
|
"I can't do this," I gasped.
By my count, this was the 43,786,918th time I'd uttered the words
'I can't' within the past two hours. Even *I* was
getting sick of hearing myself say it. But now -- as I exhaustedly
pushed my bike up another goddamn vertical hill, straight into withering
Sonoma Valley sun -- 'I can't' was becoming less a whiney
reflex than an absolute statement of fact.
I can't do this anymore.
Cyclists call it 'bonking' ... the state of complete physical and
mental depletion a cyclist experiences during extreme riding conditions.
Basically, all of your systems just shut down at once.
That's what was happening to me.
The first part of the ride had been fine. After registering, David
and I left Healdsburg High School at 7:15 a.m., rolling out of town with
an army of other riders ... 99.9% of whom were 1.) younger than we were,
2.) faster than we were, and 3.) more groovily dressed than we were.
Right away we were being passed in droves by thundering herds of young
Power Rangers. ["On your left!" they would announce, with mixed
deference and derision.] But that was perfectly OK. David and I were
having a lot of fun, toodling along through the Alexander Valley in our
matching buttercup yellow windbreakers ... stopping for occasional photo
opportunities ... taking our time as we cruised the long, rolling hills
of the scenic valley country. [The irony of *me* -- a former cheap
chablis addict -- riding her bicycle forty miles through WINE
COUNTRY was not lost on either one of us.] And yes, there most
definitely were hills, right off the bat. Endless, looping hills, one
right after another after another after another. As Bitter Hag described
them in her very funny journal
entry about the ride, "They weren't hard hills, just
relentless."
Indeed.
By the time we reached Geyserville Elementary School -- the first
official rest stop of the ride, at about mile eighteen -- I was more
than ready for a break. We plunked our bikes [and our butts] down on the
green grass and enjoyed a nice, extended
sit-down. As I slipped out of my shoes and waited for
circulation to return to my bunion-twisted right foot, David went off to
explore the food tables. He came back a short time later bearing Power
Bars, banana bread, little squeezy packets of orange "energy gel," and
-- best of all -- refills of ice cold water. Bitter Hag found me in the
crowd, at this point, and hung out with us for a while as we rested.
[Her transformation from nervous, newbie cyclist into sleek, powerful
Road Goddess -- see picture at right -- has been nothing short of
amazing this year. She looks like a magazine cover, just waiting to
happen.] We ate. We took a few pictures. We chit-chatted about gear and
about riding conditions and about our fellow BOOBs for awhile. It was
definitely one of the highlights of the day for me. [Rumor had it that
fellow BOOB Jenipurr
and her hubby were participating in the ride -- and I was hoping for a
chance to meet them -- but I realized, as I was sitting there watching
the crowd, that I have absolutely no idea what she looks like! Next time
I guess we'll all have to wear name tags. Or BOOB shirts.]
Soon, though, it was time to get back on the road. Bitter Hag rode
along with us companionably for the next couple of miles, until our
pokey middle-aged pace threatened to hold her back. We watched
admiringly as she zoomed off in a blaze of long-legged athletic glory.
Right away, however ... *I* started having trouble.
It suddenly seemed a whole lot warmer than it had been before our
break, for one thing. David and I had both long since removed the
buttercup yellow windbreakers and tied them around our waists, but even
in a ridiculously expensive "moisture-wicking" tank top and a pair of
unflattering bike shorts, I still felt like I was melting. I had eleven
metric gallons of sunscreen slathered on every exposed *skin molecule*
... but I could still feel the sun microwaving me like a Meatball Hot
Pocket. Plus I was desperately thirsty but trying to resist the impulse
to chug down my precious remaining half-bottle of water ...
mainly because I didn't want to add a full bladder to my misery.
I was not having fun.
Still, I plugged along gamely as long as I could. I actually managed
to take a couple of the lesser hills without stopping: a minor
achievement that had me basking in my vast reserves of grooviness ...
for about ten seconds. But pretty soon the 'lesser' hills began to morph
into the 'not-so-lesser' hills, and I was having to get off every couple
of minutes and walk the bike for large chunks of the uphill. Soon I was
walking more than I was riding. Eventually there was no riding involved
at all anymore: just walking.
Uphill.
Into the sun.
Pushing a BICYCLE.
It was the worst kind of misery. I would get to the top of the hill,
finally, and collapse into a sweaty, nauseous heap by the side of the
road for a minute or two ... only to get up and face yet another
longer/steeper/more hideous incline, dead ahead. After a couple of hours
of this, I began to bonk in earnest. Even the occasional flat spots had
become impossible for me: I would pedal and pedal and pedal, but get
nowhere. It felt like I was riding my bike underwater. Plus my water
bottle was now empty, my thigh muscles ached, I was sunburned nearly to
the point of blistering, and I had absolutely no reserves of energy [or
humor] left.
And that's when I called it quits.
"I can't do this anymore," I said to David, for the 43,786,918th time
... and I burst into tears.
"Then we'll just have to wait for the SAG wagon," he said gently. He
helped me pull my bike off to the far side of the road, and we stood
there in a thin patch of shade waiting for the rescue truck to come and
collect us. As we stood there, I wept uncontrollably.
All I needed was for Danny Kent to show up ... and my humiliation
would be complete.
The summer before I started junior high school, I went on a
bike hike with my church youth group.
As a somewhat lumpy and bookish preadolescent, I loathed
physical activity in general ... and bike-riding in particular.
But I was determined to participate in this bike ride for one
reason and one reason alone:
Danny Kent.
That summer, Danny Kent was the object of my ardent [and wholly
unrequited] twelve-year-old desire. He was my first crush: a blond
Adonis in a crew-neck sweater. I fell in love with him during an
oceanside Bible Study retreat, somewhere between beach volleyball
and asking Jesus Christ to be my personal Lord and Savior. He
already had a girlfriend -- a loathsome pixie named Thea -- but I
didn't care. I loved Danny Kent with a love as pure and as true as
the first golden sunlight of morning.
And for most of that summer, I followed him everywhere ... just
to make sure he knew it.
The bike hike was a disaster from start to finish. All of the
other kids were riding something called "ten-speeds." I had no
idea what a "ten-speed" was. Frankly, I thought they looked
unnecessarily complicated. My bike -- a holdover from grammar
school -- was an ugly purple Stingray with a banana seat and
raised handlebars. On the rare occasions when I rode it up and
down the sidewalk in front of my house, it seemed to do the job. I
figured it would be just fine for a bike hike. What I hadn't
counted on, of course, was the fact that 1.) my bike weighed a
bazillion pounds, and 2.) I hadn't "ridden it up and down the
sidewalk in front of my house" since fifth grade.
I was piteously unprepared to ride down the street to the
mailbox ... let alone a ten-mile ride to the park.
Ten minutes into the ride, I was panting like an overheated
Siberian Husky. Danny Kent was little more than a handsome dot on
the horizon ahead of me.
Twenty minutes into the ride, I was trailing painfully at the
very back of the line, along with the fat kid and the myopic kid
and the kid with the broken arm. Danny Kent had long since
vanished into the distance, along with all his groovier, more
athletic friends.
Forty minutes into the ride I was sitting in the back of Mr.
Turner's 'rescue truck,' next to the fat kid and the myopic kid
and the kid with a broken arm. Our bikes were piled in a heap in
the truckbed behind us. A block away from the park, the truck
turned a corner ... and we passed right in front of Danny Kent. We
were so close to him I could have reached out and brushed that
errant blond hair from his perfect forehead.
Instead I turned my head and pretended I didn't see him, as my
face burst into flames.
It was one of the more significantly humiliating moments of my
childhood.
|
The SAG wagon was heading up the hill toward us, as inexorably as the
executioner's cart coming to take us to the guillotine. In a matter of
moments I would be surrendering my bike -- and my dignity -- and having
the support staff drive me back to our car, less than five miles from
the end of the ride. Worse still, I was about to force my husband -- a
man who once rode his bike from San Francisco to San Diego and back --
to suffer the same indignity with me.
[With my luck, Danny Kent would be driving the fudking SAG
wagon.]
At least you'll get some water in a minute, whispered the
parched, dehydrated little voice in my head. I'd run out of water at
least three or four hills back. We'd considered flagging down a SAG
driver for a refill ... but I knew I needed more than liquids. I needed
relief. I needed a sit-down break. I needed shade and sugar and a
bathroom and complete disengagement from riding, if not for the rest of
my life then at least for the rest of the day. And since none of those
things were likely to happen, out here in the middle of Nowhere County
... giving up seemed like the only option.
And it was at that moment that we experienced our miracle.
The older I get, the less I believe in the divine sort of "miracle"
we learned about at those Bible Study retreats ... and the more I
believe in the miracle of plain old right-place/right-time serendipity.
Like the serendipity of meeting my husband-to-be in an AOL chat room.
The serendipity of being offered the perfect new job the same day I'm
leaving my old job. The serendipity of walking into Long's Drugs at the
precise moment that Luna Bars are going on sale for ninety-nine cents
apiece.
Or the serendipity of standing on that road in Healdsburg, as the SAG
wagon approached, and hearing David say the ten most beautiful words in
the English language: "Wait a minute. Isn't that a store across the
street?"
Isn't that a store across the street?
I swear to god, that store hadn't been there thirty seconds earlier.
[Maybe it's one of those Brigadoon things: the store appears magically
every hundred years ... or whenever perimenopausal cyclists are
threatening to drop dead from heat exhaustion.] We waved the SAG wagon
on as it passed us -- Maybe next time -- and wheeled our weary
way across the street to get a cold drink and rest for a few minutes.
"If that doesn't work," David promised, "then we'll get a ride back."
I plopped myself gratefully onto one of the shaded picnic benches in
front of the little general store and waited as David went inside to buy
drinks. There were several other Healdsburg Harvest riders hanging
around nearby -- I recognized the pink wrist bands, identical to the one
chafing at *my* wrist -- all of them refilling water bottles and
swapping hill horror stories. I took off my helmet and felt a
delightfully cool breeze on the back of my neck. For a few minutes I
layed my head down on the picnic table and closed my eyes.
Heaven.
A few minutes later David was back with our drinks. I was expecting
him to bring us bottled water -- all of the other riders standing around
were drinking Calistoga and Arrowhead -- but instead he had a Vanilla
Coke in one hand and a Pepsi in the other. I grabbed the Pepsi and
slugged down half of it in one long voracious swallow. I'm sure there
are a hundred perfectly valid reasons why Pepsi is the worst possible
thing to drink in situations like this -- sodium, sugar, caffeine,
preservatives -- but I don't care. It revived me instantly. I took the
rest of it in little sips, over the course of ten minutes or so, and by
the time I was finished I felt like a new person. After that I sent him
back into the store to buy a large Calistoga, which I divided evenly
between our water bottles.
We stayed at the general store for almost half an hour ... long after
the other riders had already remounted and ridden off into the distance.
Finally I stood up and started strapping myself back into my helmet.
David looked at me questioningly. Well? his expression seemed
to say. Are we going for it?
"I think we should go for it," I said. I still wasn't convinced I was
going to make it. We had at least another hour -- and, according to the
map, at least another two or three monstrous hills -- left to go. But at
least I was starting this last leg of the journey feeling replenished in
body and in spirit.
As we loaded up the water bottles, I remarked that my tires had been
rolling 'funny,' the last hour or so of the ride. "That's one of the
things that has made it so tough," I said. And I told him how it felt
like I was riding underwater ... how I would pedal and pedal and pedal
and get nowhere.
David picked up my bike by the handlebars and gave the back tire an
experimental spin. It rolled smoothly. "Nothing wrong there," he said.
Then he did the same thing to the front tire ... except that the front
tire didn't "spin." It rolled about half an inch forward ... and then it
just stopped. "Well, that's not good!" he said, surprised. And he
monkeyed around for a minute with the gears and the levers and the
miscellaneous doodads hanging off the handlebars. After a moment, he
looked up at me with a look of pure amazement on his face.
"I don't know how it happened," he said slowly, "but it looks like
you've been riding all this time with your brakes locked."
He gave me the quick technical explanation. Somehow the brake wire
had gotten tangled up with the parallel flange indicators -- possibly
when I plunked my bike down in the grass at Geyserville School during
that first break, hours earlier -- and it had essentially locked my
brakes in place, making it impossible for my front tire to roll
smoothly.
I had been trying to ride uphill with my brakes on.
I didn't know whether to laugh, or to scream ... or to just lean over
and vomit Pepsi all over my shoes. In the end, though, I did none of
these things. What I did instead was this: I got on my bike. I followed
David back to the road. I adjusted my sunglasses, and I tucked a couple
of stray hairs under the brim of my helmet. Then I slipped my feet into
the toe clips, I gripped the handlebars, I took a big deep breath ...
... and I followed my husband towards the finish line.