gavroche
Getting old but not past it
- Location
- North Wales
I sometimes ask myself that question. I took up cycling properly when I was 61 and I am now 65. Many a time, when I see younger cyclists passing me at a speed I can't do, going up a hill at a speed I can't do and doing many more miles that I can't do, I sigh and wish I was much younger. My head is willing to do it but my legs just don't have the stamina. So I settle down and just keep going, and wonder why I waited so long to take up cycling again, wishing I was young again. Then I start to think: how long have I got left, how long before my body refuses to ride a bike? In the last 4 years, I have covered 7500miles and I am proud of that.
This is not a rant, this is reminiscing, this is just showing how much I love my cycling.
This is just saying that age doesn't matter, that how fast you can ride doesn't matter, that how good you are at going up hills doesn't matter. It doesn't matter if you can't ride as often as you would like to. What really matters is being able to ride, being able to enjoy the fresh air under your own power, being able to still feel young enough to postpone ageing years.
This is a also being able to spend your money on something useful and beautiful rather than cigarettes, excess alcohol , drugs etc....
Cycling is a way of life and may it last for many more years.
This is not a rant, this is reminiscing, this is just showing how much I love my cycling.
This is just saying that age doesn't matter, that how fast you can ride doesn't matter, that how good you are at going up hills doesn't matter. It doesn't matter if you can't ride as often as you would like to. What really matters is being able to ride, being able to enjoy the fresh air under your own power, being able to still feel young enough to postpone ageing years.
This is a also being able to spend your money on something useful and beautiful rather than cigarettes, excess alcohol , drugs etc....
Cycling is a way of life and may it last for many more years.
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