Yesterday I got carded.
Not just a joking, "No, I really have to check your ID", but a genuine, "I'll need to see your ID."
I looked up a bit surprised, as did the missus.  Was our waitress simply trying to work a nice tip?
Her stern face belayed that thought.
The missus smiled.  "He's forty."
The stern face melted into surprise.  "No!"
I pulled out my ID.
I got my beer.
See, I've been trying to drink a bit more.  I feel like I'm taking a break in my training, sort of a "recovery period".  It seems that whenever I take such a break from the bike, I try and start drinking.  This way, when I quit, I'll get better.  At least that's what all the guys around me seem to do.
"Yo, just quit drinking for a bit.  I did, lost 15 pounds, now I'm flying."
(This after the guy destroys me in a sprint.)
So during our break (in Vegas), I tried to drink more than normal.  A couple margaritas, a mohito, a couple (full) glasses of wine.  I think I managed to get 8 or so drinks down, making my year's total about 10 or 12.  I figure I'll need to drink a couple more drinks, then I can quit.  Hopefully then I'll lose 15 pounds just like that.  Then I can drink again, maybe another 10 or 12 drinks, and lose another 15 pounds when I quit.  I'll be like 140 by August.
That's how it works, right?
Drinking, for me, is kind of difficult.  Yeah, yeah, laugh all you want.  I crammed all my drinking into my college years, then a couple days after that, then... not too much.  One big night of booze preceded my best ever Gimbles ride, but that's a long story for another post.  At least I'm a cheap drunk, a drink or two and I'm seriously buzzed.
So anyway, I'm in bike racing limbo.  No races scheduled, no big bike type trips, nothing.  I have this "break" for a couple reasons.  One was the aforementioned Vegas trip.  I decided to skip riding for the trip, and in fact, against orders, didn't do an iota of work while I was out there.  Just a lot of walking around.
The other is a bit more serious - I'm actually trying to get a job.  It's a tough life being a "full time cyclist" but I really need to get on with my life.  I've been doing a lot of soul searching for the last couple years and I've decided on two possible career paths. I've been thinking about non-bike stuff about as seriously as I think about bike stuff, maybe even more seriously.  The missus pointed out that I looked "stressed".  Nervous might be more accurate, but part of being nervous is being stressed.
Nonetheless the racing season isn't sitting still.  I have one major commitment - to help Connecticut Coast Cycle hold their second CCC Criterium.  Luckily it's in Bethel so it's a familiar venue for me.  There are a couple minor commitments - riding a sponsor's ride (or helping out at it), finishing up Bethel (we never got the Women's trophies - I have to go pick them up and mail them to the winners), and hopefully, somewhere in there, do a couple races I just love, Hartford and New Britain.  There are some other potential projects but I need to be discrete about them for now.
I also want to go down to the urban jungle where I used to do my sprint workouts.  Up here I simply can't find a similar area to do sprints and it's really been irking me.  Since I want to do it at night, using all my lights and the helmet cam, it'll be a semi production.  And since I'll want to do it at night, I'll have to get down there so I can get on the bike at around 9 PM or so.
I also want to do Gimbles, a ride I haven't done since I don't know when, and one that I didn't do for a long time because I worked weekends.  Ironically, even without working weekends, I haven't done one in, well, for probably a year or more.
For now though, I'm at the bottom of my first major training cycle of 2008.  Almost a week off the bike, minor mileage before and after (seems like my old ways of training), legs complaining even after a short, easy ride.
I've made a few adjustments and adaptations though.  First, I never got my shifting down right on the new bike.  It never dropped down well in a sprint, making my jumps less than optimal.  Actually I was scared every time I jumped that it wouldn't shift, so I eased into my sprints. I've fiddled with it for a bit and now it's good.  My jump should be its chain slamming self again.
Second, my right knee was bugging me.  I normally adjust my cleats one way for a narrow Q-factor crank, another for wider ones.  I thought the narrow Cannondale cranks would be fine with my standard narrow Q-factor angle but I seem to be wrong.  I went with my wide Q-factor angle and my knee twinges disappeared.  I always think your body will let you know what it wants to do, and I've been riding the trainer a lot while twisting my foot a bit.  Now the cleat is in such a position that I don't exert any twisting force on my foot.  Hopfully this translates to no knee pain/twinges.
I'll do a harder ride tomorrow to verify both these things were really fixed.  And then start on Part 2 of my 2008 season.
See you out there.
Good luck on the job search. If I ever get back to racing we should start and all asian racing team.
ReplyDelete-Chris
SDC-you need a job like mine. Oh, and I'll let you know when I'm back in CT.
ReplyDelete