On Your Left
This
past weekend for the first time in more than half a decade, I was spending the
afternoon on the bike trail. And admittedly it was thrilling to take in all the
scenery that was passing me by… uh, quite literally passing me by. I was passed
by teams of spandex-clad cyclists with matching road bikes. I was passed by
friends out for a leisurely Saturday ride. I was passed by an overweight dad on
his son’s too-small squeaky mountain bike. (Admittedly, at this this point I
started looking over my shoulder for grandmothers riding fixies festooned with
baskets and bells.) “On your left” was the repeated refrain. And I did not
care. I finally was cycling again… with my wife, outside, on a brilliant day.
Sure
I was traveling at a speed more accustomed to joggers. I pedaled up tiny hills
at such a lazy pace that the sun’s position in the sky visibly changed before summiting.
Heck, to keep pace with me when she wasn’t sprinting ahead to get a little
exercise, Laura nearly had to pull trick-riding moves to balance on her
two-wheeler. In the past, this might have frustrated me immensely. After all I
used to be a regular cyclist, even organizing special event rides on this very
trail (e.g., Bike for a Burrito, slogan “it’s a gas”).
Over
time, though, I’ve learned that when you have multiple sclerosis, there is
little to be gained by bundling valuable energies into mourning the body of
your past. Savor the present instead, and turn shortcomings into opportunities.
On
this afternoon I was going so slowly, I could stare down animals along the
trail that in the past would have skittered for shelter as I romped by. I could
overhear curious kids squeal to their parents to look, loook, LOOOOK at that
cool bike and how badly they wanted one. I could daydream to the hypnotic fishing-reel
tck-tck-tck of the rear hubs when I coasted on the flats. And I could marvel as
future Olympians steamrolled down the trail directly toward me. Egad, daydream
over!
Seriously.
Long-distance runners from the women’s 2016 Japanese team were training that
day, taking advantage of Albuquerque’s mile-high altitude and perfect 70-degree
weather. Coaches, each laden with a half dozen stopwatches, monitored their every
step. Members of the squad kindly nodded my direction as our paths crossed.
Perhaps one day I’ll have to learn how to say “左手に” to pass
these marathoners while speeding along on my trike, but for now I’m quite
content to be the slow dude on the right.
Comments
Larry
Didn't you ever fear being lunch for a mountain lion?
We do what we have to do. Kuddos to you for sitting in the saddle again!
Important question. How do get out of that tryke? I can't do a situp, but I can pedal fine. I am thinking of getting a recumbent tryke in the spring. Any comment would be appreciated.