Thursday, March 31, 2011

The Rest Week

Anyone reading this blog can ride hard. Hard enough to vomit, hard enough to be sore for days afterward, hard enough to hallucinate and meet god. If you didn’t like to ride hard, you’d be reading another blog. While training hard takes discipline, most of us relish a hard ride. We live for it. We are more than willing to suffer on the bike, even indoors and in darkened basements. If we didn’t enjoy the suffering, we’d go on slow group rides or take up pedestrian sports like golf or bowling. Becoming fast requires discipline and we have it in spades.

Herein lies the paradox: the rest and recovery week. I struggle with it. I feel fast and fit, so I want to ride fast. Consciously, I am aware that the body needs a rest to rebuild and to ultimately allow me to ride even faster. But my unconscious work ethic kicks in and encourages me to subvert my rest. I feel lazy doing deliberately slow rides. Rest feels like laziness.

As I sit typing this, I am on a rest week, tapering for the most important race of my early season. I have put in the hours, done the intervals, climbed the mountains and counted the Watts and kiloJoules. In short, I am as ready as I will ever be. But instead of enjoying the reduced training load, I am chomping at the bit to climb more mountains and do more intervals. My legs are sore from resting. It takes me more discipline to rest now than it did to ride the trainer for 3 hour stretches in early February.

Instead of riding today, I will do some mundane household chores, secure in the knowledge that cleaning my laundry is making me faster.

The race is won on the rest days. Rest hard.

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Wells Needs you this Saturday—Bring a Broom and a Shovel—Saturday March 26 8:30am

I love racing at Wells. Especially early season Wells. The early season Wells Ave A race is like a who’s who of Boston area bike racing. VIP and celebrity racers such as Jazzy Adam Myerson, Mark “The Shark” McCormack, Colin H. Murphy and Justin Spinelli often show up so that us mortals can test our metal against near gods.


Dramatic, perhaps. But seriously Wells in March is when racers of all categories get to see how their training is going in relation to others in both their category and other categories as well.


As many of you know, Wells has been canceled the past 2 weeks in a row because of debris and sand in the road. It is likely to be cancelled again this week if YOU do not come and help clean up.


So here’s the rub: a conglomeration of local racers have organized an effort to help BRC clean up Wells Ave. We are meeting at parking lot where BRC normally holds registration. We are arriving at 8:30 am and plan on working until the job is done.


YOU ARE OFFICIALLY INVITED!


Please bring shovels, brooms wheelbarrows and leaf blowers (including extras).

There is long road ride shaping up after the clean up, so bring your bike and some courage too.


I hope to see you out there.


Unfortunately, I will not see you at Wells on Sunday because I will be getting my a** handed to me at Marblehead.