The bicycle is still freedom.

Choice, or the perception of it, is one of the most powerful forces on Earth. The great secret lies in the locus of control, which suggests that if given the perception of a choice we will be more willing to endure hardship or suffering. We’ll suffer even for the promise of a future intangible reward so long as we feel we have a choice. The Matrix was based on this principle, which means it’s true.

On good days, I will ride with a strong sense of control over my pain. It still doesn’t mean I enjoy the pain itself, but I enjoy the power I feel in my legs, the constant hum emanating from my tires telling me that I am pedalling smoothly (a pulsating sound indicates I am starting to pedal more square than round). My legs will burn as always – as will my lungs – but there is a calm that cannot be shaken with this kind of form. At will, I can push hard enough to force infantile wails from the deepest recesses of my being – sounds that feel as though they originate from another person altogether. Those sounds may well be coming from me, but I feel as though I’m outside myself, driving the tempo and benevolently amused at the suffering I’m imposing on myself.

Most days, however, the suffering doesn’t come so easily. However much I love Cycling, the reality of life means a constant push and pull between getting on the bike and staying at home. Some days, it will be a relief to climb aboard the bike and stamp away at the pedals, squashing some workday quibble that couldn’t be resolved at the water cooler. Other days, it will take every bit of determination to stumble into the cellar and emerge with a bicycle and not a bottle of wine. On still other days, the bike is a break in the routine of a rough day at the office; I won’t go hard, I won’t seek out the hills; I’ll just get on the my machine and wrap myself in the sensations of being one with my bike until the stress melts into pleasure.

On every one of my usual rides, I know exactly where the challenges along the route lay. I feel them as I get closer to them, and I count them off, one by one. I’ll have them laid out even before I clip into my pedals. I will have been steeling myself against the first of the day’s efforts – an effort so different from my professional life. To ride is to enter a simple word full of the sort of physical exertion that purges worry and concern from the mind while it is completely occupied by the singular focus that only pain can offer; pain is a greedy thing that can coexist with nothing else. If only for a few fleeting minutes, I will be away in the Cave, where nothing else can touch me.

But the freedom found at the other end of the Cave isn’t free and it never gets easier to accept. I’ll prepare myself for the suffering I know is coming long before it arrives. Sometimes, even days before. I will remind myself of its fleeting nature, that it will settle in like a shadow before it strikes out in full force. But after the effort is through, the pain will wash away. And like a dream, it will be hard to remember how it felt when it was there; only the notion will remain. I will compartmentalize what is coming, put it in a box of defined size that I know I can understand during the effort. During the effort, I will choose to put myself inside the box. After, I will choose to be free.

As adults, we understand that most of what we do are those things we must do. The rest of the time, we do the things we choose to do. The artist is said to suffer because they must, whereas the Cyclist suffers because we choose to.

Riding a bike spelled freedom to me as a child seeking to escape the bounds of my house. As an adult, it spells freedom from the stresses of daily life.

The variables have changed, but the fact remains: the bicycle is freedom.

frank

The founder of Velominati and curator of The Rules, Frank was born in the Dutch colonies of Minnesota. His boundless physical talents are carefully canceled out by his equally boundless enthusiasm for drinking. Coffee, beer, wine, if it’s in a container, he will enjoy it, a lot of it. He currently lives in Seattle. He loves riding in the rain and scheduling visits with the Man with the Hammer just to be reminded of the privilege it is to feel completely depleted. He holds down a technology job the description of which no-one really understands and his interests outside of Cycling and drinking are Cycling and drinking. As devoted aesthete, the only thing more important to him than riding a bike well is looking good doing it. Frank is co-author along with the other Keepers of the Cog of the popular book, The Rules, The Way of the Cycling Disciple and also writes a monthly column for the magazine, Cyclist. He is also currently working on the first follow-up to The Rules, tentatively entitled The Hardmen. Email him directly at rouleur@velominati.com.

View Comments

  • You got me! There are certain days when nothing can touch me or bother me -- there is a ride already scheduled. 

  • One of the great things about a ride is that you can get completely wrapped up in the now and not have to worry about anything else. Just the moment of you and the machine. Life affords us few luxuries such as that.

  • Gospel again Frank, well done.

    The amount of times that I've gone out for a ride and come home thinking 'that was a mistake', I can count on one hand. Every other time, even on the nastiest of days I get home with a full sense of accomplishment and satisfaction. The hardest part of any bike ride on the days that you just don't feel like going, is the first pedal stroke....After that it's easy, even within the suffering.

  • Thanks for the post, Frank. In my late forties, I was still playing soccer (my main sport as a younger man) in a rec league. As I entered my fifties, I switch fully to cycling because, on the bike, I can chose my pain. Getting a boot in the ankle or a knock in the head are some of the chances I took on the field. On the bike, entering the pain cave is entirely my choice. Self-induced suffering. Free will in its purist form.  Dial it up. Bring it down. My cup overflows. Whether its the endorphins, the improved form or the bonding with riding buddies through shared struggle--my soul is restored.

  • Big Frank - You have stood around a watercooler? It seemed clear you only ever hung about the cute female soigneurs cabin.

    WORD! to that, Frankster. I've come to a moment and point in my life where I realize my priorities must change. Just has to be. That's cool. I'm still a goddamnVelominatus. What do I care? Gotta make it happen.

    I only was afforded twenty minutes of "ride around town" time today. Just how she went. Still, so fucking what. I was on me bike, I enjoyed being on me bike.

    This essay fuckin' rocks and I'm pumped. I feel a parallel peace - walking the Velomintus Path, walking the humdrum of daily life. It's okay.

    I've still got that Gravel Ride to crush on Saturday.

    Nice!

  • @Nate

    Spot on. There is nothing like the freedom of covering roads on your own power.

    Nate! Ha, I was just telling the VMH that I couldn't find the mini-awesome bag I kept my Sunnies cloth in, as I used it the other night during a rain ride, mid-ride cleanse. I think one of the darn cats swatted it away from the table.

    Anyway, she commented, "You have a bag for the cloth? That is a bit much."

    "Do you regularly go out for four hours on a bicycle with one two pockets of help in your V-jersey?"

    She knew I wasn't being argumentative, but got it.

    To leave at dawn, to ride four hours, to come back with just a "kids toy" and to do it with just your own legs, spirit, and a spare (butyl!) tube is pretty darn cool. Keeps a person spry.

  • Well said, Frank. Lately, the things I must do far outweigh those I would choose to do. When I can steal an hour a few times a week it's on a track or TT bike for maximum suffering in limited time. Barely quiets my mind, but promises freedom, albeit Rule #9 style, in the off season.

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