I'm back on Trusty this week, and I've realised another reason why I love cycling. You thought you'd heard them all eh? How about self-sufficiency? I couldn't work out why I found returning to it after public transport so very satisfying, until I realised it sort of reminds me of the difference between pocket money and your first pay cheque. I love that I get from A to B all under my own steam. That my body is working well, the finely honed machine it was designed to be. I don't mean finely honed like an athlete, far from it. You wouldn't want to see me in skin tight Lycra. I mean finely honed in that, you know, it works. My legs get me where I need to go. Cycling reminds me how amazing we are, every cell and sinew.I have this feeling in the same way with walking and running (still, toddler like, thinking 'look at me go!') but much much more so with a bike. I'm so fast! Bikes are a magical invention that take my paltry effort and mysteriously convert it into glorious, thrilling speed. It's like the feeding of the 5,000. I know it isn't a complicated technology, and someone cleverer than me could tell me how it works. My guess would be the equation goes:
Power in (P) + rotariness/spinnyness (R) (possibly not the correct name for the force)=(A) amazing.
There must be some variables. Time and distance or something.
I should so be a scientist.
In any case, even though I don't understand it, it doesn't feel like cheating, in the way that the bus or the tube does. Whoever invented the bicycle (apparently Ernest Michaux in 1860, though it's disputed), I salute you, you big brilliant boffin you. You blessed my life.
Ooh. I feel like I'm cheating or being lazy if I ever sit in a car, hop on the tube...or even a bus (this latter one happens only very, very rarely)!
ReplyDeleteThe only way for day-to-day London travel is the bike and poo to anyone who doesn't agree!
:)
(p.s. I love it when people exclaim how cold I must be on the bike...only for me to inform them of how much warmer than them I actually am. It's my 'one up' on the lay people).
I couldn't agree more. I most definitely do not fit the description of a high-level athlete, but the bicycle is a great equalizer. I rode my bike regularly from age four up until my middle teens. After about a twenty-five year hiatus, I returned to riding regularly. I too still get that child-like thrill when I ride and have such a sense of self-sufficiency in getting around by bike. Ride Happy! www.ridehappycycles.com
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