Guest Article: The Longest Road

Let us thank @The Oracle for contributing this guest article. We haven’t been putting up many guest articles so it’s good to have something substantial to begin with again. I don’t think cyclists are any more or any less addictive or OCD than anyone else. We are just humans who love to ride the bike. We don’t like to bring our personal baggage with us on the bike, hell we can’t even bring an EPMS, but sometimes we can’t ride away from it. .

VLVV, Gianni

I wasn’t an alcoholic when I left college, but I was on that path. I’d imbibed more than my fair share as a hard-drinking undergraduate at UW-Madison. Through the following years, my drinking was what I would have described at the time as occasionally heavy, but not problematic. Of course, I look back now on my 20’s and early 30’s in a new light. Now I see a pattern of worsening addiction. From a few beers a week and only occasionally getting drunk with friends, to several beers on Friday and Saturday nights sitting alone at home in front of the TV, to occasionally taking nips from the hard liquor in the evening during the week, etc. etc. At the same time, I was distancing myself from my wife and my young kids, and foundering professionally. I was becoming an alcoholic, but I didn’t yet see myself as such.

In my mid-thirties, I finally decided to stop just staring wistfully at my old Cannondale m300 mountain bike from college, and to actually do something with it. I started riding, and it was like finding a long-lost friend. A new mountain bike soon followed and then, due to the lack of trails in proximity to my house, road bikes. I joined local clubs, did indoor training in the winter, did my first centuries during the summer. I lost 20 pounds and was getting the most out of life. I found Velominati.com during that time, and began steeping myself in the traditions of cycling.

But I kept drinking. I did a lot of kilometers hungover during the latter half of my 30’s. Worse yet, I’d been known to ride immediately after having (more than) a few. God only knows how I survived those rides. I’d get home from a long ride and have a few beers (even if it was only 11 a.m.), and justify them as recovery drinks. I posted often on this site, and used the frequent talk of drinking here as a misguided rationalization for continuing to drink heavily even while riding harder and farther than I had ever done in my life.

Even with the growing evidence to the contrary, I still was in denial about my addiction. How could I be in the best shape of my life if I were an alcoholic? The alcoholic mind bends everything to its own use in justifying the all-consuming desire for more drink. I loved cycling.  It was quickly becoming my defining passion. I loved drinking, and (at least through the distorted lens in my mind) it went hand in hand with my cycling—a tradition as old as the two-wheeled machine itself.

It’s a powerful testament to the subversive effect that alcohol has on one’s mind. As my love for cycling grew, so also did my addiction worsen—these two great passions of my life were inextricably intertwined with one another. My alcoholic lifestyle and my cycling lifestyle were ingrained into one another. Alcohol twisted my passion for cycling into a reason to drink more and more. I was poisoning myself to death, slowly but surely. When I look back at it now, I was riding my bike faster and faster to escape the truth: I was an alcoholic.

Of course, one can only try to leave his demons behind for so long. A few years ago, I changed jobs and we moved to a different part of the state. At the same time as the move, my drinking became demonstrably worse. I’d have a beer or two in the evening, but only to cover the fact that I was drinking massive amounts of vodka, tequila or rum straight from the bottle. I’d binge all weekend long—blackout on Friday night; come to on Saturday and have vodka with my morning coffee, and drink straight through to Sunday. I engaged in dangerous behavior, putting both myself and my loved ones at risk. I still shudder at some of the horrible things I did. Somehow, though, I was never stopped for a DUI, I never broke any bones, and I was able to keep the full extent of my drinking hidden for the most part. I guess you might call it lucky, although I’d hesitate to even put that positive of a spin on it. I was nearing the bottom. I risked everything I had every time I picked up the bottle. I knew that in the back of my mind, but again that alcoholic voice was there to convince me that it really wasn’t that bad.

Needless to say, my cycling suffered. It’s impossible to do long weekend rides when you’re in bed with the shakes and sweats all morning, of if you’ve started drinking rum at 6 a.m. to ward off the DT’s. I didn’t seek out any clubs, didn’t look for any cycling companions. I told myself it was because of my schedule or because I preferred to ride alone. Really, though, it’s because I didn’t want anyone to wonder why I never showed up for rides, or why I looked like hell when I did. Impossibly, though, my alcoholic mind continued to use cycling against me, even as I was nearing rock bottom. I was a weekend binger. Drink hard all weekend, sober up on Monday and Tuesday, and then feel decent until Friday rolled around again. I did a lot of short rides on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday. My alcoholism seized on this as proof that I was really okay, that I didn’t really have a problem.

The spiral continued until one devastating night this spring, where I was a hair’s breadth away from losing everything due to drinking  The details of that night aren’t important; the point is that it forced me to finally come to grips with my addiction. I realized that alcohol ruled my life, and was destroying my life.  That was Day 1. I went through two weeks of paralyzing physical withdrawal, and months of anxiety (all part of getting cleaned up). My body was a wasteland—thin, dehydrated, out of shape, and suffering from overwhelming fatigue.  My brain was a mess as well–diminished cognitive function, short term memory, abstract thinking skills. I avoided the bike all summer; it had become a trigger, and I knew now that I could not have one drink, ever, for the rest of my life. I came to see the bike as a danger to my sobriety, and avoided it for months.  My love for the poison had destroyed my passion for the bike. Although I was clean, my alcoholic voice still whispered in my ear:  “don’t bother riding, because you can’t enjoy that ice cold beer afterwards!” I had no enthusiasm for riding anymore.

As I write this, I am on Day 100. A cause for celebration. I’ve come a long way since day one, and while I still have a long way to go, there are positive changes everywhere in my life. A little over a month ago, I started jogging regularly again. It’s amazing what a body can recover from.  The fatigue lessened, and I started putting some muscle back on my bones and color in my skin.  One day, with little thought about it, I pulled the bike down off its rack and hopped aboard.  Thirty kilometers later, my ass was killing me, I couldn’t breathe, my legs were jelly, and I had little hope that I’d ever get to the level I once was.

That ride was nothing special at the time, but when I started thinking about it later, I didn’t remember the pain of my first ride in weeks. Instead I remembered the little things about it:  the whisper of the tires on the pavement; the wind through the trees at the roadside; the smells of the late summer in the Midwest; my regular breathing and concentration on the effort; the sensation of freedom; the thrill of bombing down a slope at 65 kph; the quiet and peace of riding through a warm meadow with no one around for miles. None of this was groundbreaking, and yet each was profound in its own way. I’d found new reasons to ride that weren’t connected to drinking, and I’m in the process of rediscovering my relationship with cycling.

I still only ride a few days a week, but with each ride I discover a new benefit that was hidden from me before. I’m happy to have this part of my life back, and I can’t wait to see what is in store in the future. It is a victory over that alcoholic voice and, although perhaps not my most important victory in this lifelong battle against this disease, it is one that I will cherish.

Oracle

Holy crap, It's been five years since I first posted here. Well, a lot has happened since then, but I'm still riding. Most of the Velominati sticker pack has long since peeled off my bike, but "Obey the Rules" remains. VLVV!

View Comments

  • That took some balls, @The Oracle

    Huge respect to you for sharing this, and for your recovery. Best of luck for the future, both on and off the bike.

     

  • Respect. Respect. Respect. For having the guts to share this. For sticking up for yourself - your true self - and staying on course on your way out of the dark pit. And for writing beautifully and soberly about it. Well done, sir; you're an inspiration, and I mean that from the bottom of my heart.

  • Congratulations on the first 100 days. Please do a follow-up on day 365 with the same good news.

    Best wishes

    David

  • Wow!  So impressive. Truly very powerful and emotional. This is the best thing I have read on the internet in months.

    I know that you have contacts for any set backs that might try to occur in your life of sobriety but I hope that we can also be a help here and that if it starts to get dark, you can try to look for us for help in your clean path ahead.

     

  • I'm very glad you are in the process of getting yourself out of that pit, and that you chose to share the story with us.

    I also came out of uni with a bit of a drink problem - I didn't feel I could go to a social event without drinking heavily, and I didn't know when to stop. Fortunately, my wife had the courage to call me out and make me think about what I was doing, and I pulled back from the edge.

    So although I've never been down in that pit fully I've had a good look and it's not pretty. I can only imagine the guts it takes to pull yourself out.

    Well done mate, keep at it.

  • Isn't Wisconsin great. Our tradition of drinking is worn as a badge of honor by so many of us. I have lived here all my life (61 years) and also attended UW-Madison for law school. I tend to agree with the medical opinion that thinks you are born with the alcoholic/addictive gene. I started on my alcoholic path with binge drinking at 15 years old and progressed from there. I'm coming up on my 12 year anniversary of sobriety. Sobriety is really a beautiful thing. I hope you are part of a good 12 step program. Anyone can quit drinking, the trick is to stay that way. The 12 step programs teach us how to live life without alcohol and be happy in our sobriety. In my opinion, that is the only way we are going to stay sober. My obsession with biking coincided with quitting drinking. I hate to admit this on this site, but I was one of those kids that had a Schwin 10 speed bike that I swore I would never ride again as soon as I got my driver's license. Before that, I road that bike all over creation. During the summer after 8th grade I fell in love with a girl at a church camp who lived 80 miles from me. On a whim, I thought it would be a great idea to ride my bike up to see her. My legs were so cramped the next day I could hardly walk. We have a fairly large hill in our downtown. I remember distinctly struggling up that hill as a 15 year old and having a guy on a motorcycle ride up next to me. He slowed a bit, looked at me and laughed at my struggle, then with a twist of his wrist he cruised away. That did it. I bought a motorcycle two weeks later and sold my bike as soon as I got my driver's license. I owned plenty of motorcycles, but no bikes for the next thirty years. A couple of years before I quit drinking something got into my head to sell my motorcycle and buy two bikes for my wife and I. When we both quit drinking, I started riding a lot, but just around town.  It wasn't long before I bought a road bike (the salesman just shook his head when I asked him if they would be putting a kickstand on it when I picked it up). I lost 40 pounds and started doing a lot of long distance rides (centuries, 200ks and one 300k). I've upgraded my bikes repeatedly since then and I ride at least 50k every other day now. I almost always do it solo. Biking is my meditation and prayer time. I guess I would be considered a "born again" bicyclist, as opposed those who have had a life long passion for bicycles. Keep up the good work. The first 100 days are the hardest. I live in Janesville so if you are in this part of the state, look me up. I love to talk recovery. Dan

  • @dancollins

    Sobriety is really a beautiful thing.

    I love these stories, when people get sober and their lives begin anew. FFS, it sounds hellish beforehand. I have an American friend in europe that does AA online with other english speakers in the area, one of the best uses of social media yet.

    And I agree about the genetic component, I dodged that bullet.

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