Those things in life that are worth having are those things which are difficult to come by; perseverance is made more rewarding by the volume of messages ignored by the mind as we work towards a goal.

Fatigue comes in many forms and is normally framed in negative connotations; weariness, exhaustion – both things to avoid. For a Cyclist, it can carry a range of  meanings. We may become weary of riding in the rain, as I normally am at this time of year; stuffing my shoes with yesterday’s newspaper post-ride in the hope that the dry accounting of our current events will somehow render my shoes less soggy the next day. We may become weary as we approach the big climb of the day when we know what suffering lies around the bend. To push on during an effort despite an overwhelming exhaustion that lays bare our spirit and threatens to stop our legs from turning.

But fatigue can be a beautiful thing. The fatigue that registers as a result of the post-ride status check is the gauge by which we measure satisfaction in our work. Even during the ride, we find that fatigue may not always be the sentinel of the Man with the Hammer; even as the wave of exhaustion washes over us, we learn through practice that we can continue or even lift our effort.

My favorite fatigue is the kind that sets in during a long ride; when the body has acquiesced to the mind and the signals of discomfort and pain have stopped being sent. The legs at this point take on an almost anesthetic quality to them, they don’t hurt but they don’t feel either; they have a thickness that, while they lack the punch they have when fresh, allows us to continue to push on the pedals for hours on end.

This happened to me during my most recent long ride. It was a cold, rainy day – cold enough that snow fell at the tops of the two major climbs of the day. The last big climb came at 160km and, while there is no such thing as a flat route in the Seattle area, the roads home lacked the steep grades that characterize our urban streets. The descent from Cougar Mountain froze me to my core. Starting in the snow and ending in the pouring rain, I arrived at the first of the minor climbs on the way home and pushed the button on my left shifter to slip into the little ring. Instead of making contact, my frozen hand slipped limply along the lever and did little more than jiggle the button.

This presented an unusual problem. At this point I was tired after having a piled a load of kilometers in my legs. I was also becoming just the slightest bit annoyed at how cold I was. I swerved dangerously as I experimented with bashing different parts of my hands and arms against the disappointingly stubborn shifter to try to get it to budge. Inanimate objects and I have an uneasy history, and I soon found myself giving it the customary inputs involving profanity and questioning the pureness of its mother.

Having that unpleasant business out of the way, I resigned myself to riding home in the big ring feeling fortunate that my right hand was still capable of shifting so at least I wasn’t riding a glorified single speed. And then it hit me: it was actually quite easy to carry on this way, riding in the big ring. The legs still managed to turn over and I hardly felt a thing as I pushed harder on them whenever the road pointed up. Even a few of the hills on which I struggle to stay in the big ring during my usual training rides seemed to pass under my wheels without giving undue notice.

That sensation of power combined with the heavy fatigue I carried with me distinguishes itself as one that comes only during my longest rides on those days when my form is good enough that the effort hasn’t cracked me entirely. Wholly unlike the seduction of La Volupte, it does bear a vague similarity in its rarity. Powerful fatigue; vive la Vie Velominatus.

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.

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  • Out with the club yesterday (everyone fully rule compliant apart from a pair of furry legs appearing below the three quarter bibs of a man who surely knows better)and took a beasting over three hills (one allegedly 20%) from six guys who obviously never stopped for 10 years or so to get married and/or have pedalwans and who waited patiently on every one for my hot sweaty carcass to crest the top - to make the point one would always drop back to talk me up the hill. Anyway, it being Mothers Day in Scotland I had to head home "early" for the VMH and peeled off after the last effort for a one and a half hour solo effort back to the car. There wasn't a cloud in the sky and hardly any wind - although the early morning had been frosty the mid-morning saw 12 degrees C and those kilometres through Perthshire with the pressure to perform in front of peers gone were fantastic - passed others out for a Sunday twiddle as if they were standing still and me with 70k's in delightfully tired legs.

  • "stuffing my shoes with yesterday's newspaper post-ride in the hope that the dry accounting of our current events will somehow render my shoes less soggy the next day."

    Very clever.

  • @Tartan1749
    Agreed! Ontario Cogal would make a great breaking-in ride for the new steed. As for me, I'm only pleased with the effort in relation to the last, not in some universal definition of "en forme."

  • Beauty Fronk! For a cyclist, or any other endurance athlete for that matter, fatigue is pains twin brother. The former is chronic, while the latter is acute. Both can be ignored, but when embraced and accepted they help you achieve the next level of performance by pushing your body past the level of discomfort where your mind tells you to stop. You captured the phenomenon perfectly- well done!

  • Great stuff and essential reading ahead of the English Cogal. Having spent time recce'ing much of the route I can almost guarantee fatigue!

    As an aside I come to the conclusion that there's a direct relationship with fatigue and how good beer tastes.

  • Ah, fatigue. For me it's that place on a long hard route that usually occurs more often when I'm alone. Start switching between hand positions on the bars, moving around in the saddle ultimately ending up in the same position; palms on top of brake hoods, wrists resting on bars, alternating between staring at the front tire (dangerous) and forward. Concentrating on not concentrating on the dull burn in your back, neck and quads. But mostly just lost in the fog of lactic acid build up. So why do I (we) do it? Because that pain is soon forgotten and the next time on the same route, that feeling comes later in the ride, then, maybe not at all. Until you decide to do it faster. Beautiful.........

  • Excellent write up, and I totally agree. When you come back from a ride not feeling tired you feel you cut yourself short. But when your so burnt out you crawl home that's no good either.

    Just so you know, I've been secretly laughing to myself at work as I continue to draw heavy snow in the cascades when I do my travel maps at night, especially considering the Midwest is having such a nice spring (along with the northeast). Minneapolis is running something like 12 degrees above normal on the month. International Falls had broken their record HIGH for the day at MIDNIGHT, and the temperature only went up from there. Simply unfortunate you Pac Northwest people are really suffering in the weather department this year, even Cali got a storm the other day.

  • Nice work, Frank. Once the ride is done there's nothing like sinking into the couch with a frosty beverage to revel in that fatigue.

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