Raynine
Platinum Member
- Oct 28, 2023
- 805
- 1,222
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I can't believe I'm almost eighty. It's a miserable spring as usual but I have been riding my bike since March. By June I will be putting in fifty miles a day. I have three high-quality bikes. You need good bikes to do what I do so I spent money on them instead of smoking, drinking, and doing drugs. I enjoy eating as much as anyone but going to a restaurant and consuming super sized french fries off a plate the size of a Roman shield and drinking coffee out of a cup the size of a bucket was never a big deal to me. I like to keep my weight low; it helps me get up hills.
I did forty miles today and only saw one other bike. Back in the eighties when I first started on the bike I used to see a lot more bikes out there. I worry about all this computer technology and websites turning people into watchers instead of doers. I go to the gym seven days a week because bone density is important and cycling doesn't do much for that. Cycling requires balance and spatial awareness and it stimulates the brain as much as the legs. I'm not concerned about dementia because neural connections are strentghened with every peddle stroke.
Like a lot of things in life the hardest part of my ride is the first step out the door. After that it's automatic. I'm close to eighty years old and I still chase the wind on my bike like a kid in school. I made some good choices a long time ago.
Carry on,
Ray
I did forty miles today and only saw one other bike. Back in the eighties when I first started on the bike I used to see a lot more bikes out there. I worry about all this computer technology and websites turning people into watchers instead of doers. I go to the gym seven days a week because bone density is important and cycling doesn't do much for that. Cycling requires balance and spatial awareness and it stimulates the brain as much as the legs. I'm not concerned about dementia because neural connections are strentghened with every peddle stroke.
Like a lot of things in life the hardest part of my ride is the first step out the door. After that it's automatic. I'm close to eighty years old and I still chase the wind on my bike like a kid in school. I made some good choices a long time ago.
Carry on,
Ray