of romance novels and road rides

Recently, like most women my age who are somewhat unemployed but can cobble together a coherent sentence, I’ve entertained the idea of trying my hand at writing a romance novel [or ten]. This may be part of my continued counterintelligence operations against the parental institution, like how I am currently refusing to even linger on the idea of having children, getting married, or otherwise leading a stable life with steady income of my own. But it may also have something to do with the fact that I have a pen name picked out, a plot that can too easily turn into a series, and a willingness to watch enough porn/read enough romance novels to be able to write a sex scene in my sleep. Not that kind of sleep.
In my mental databank, I have a slew of plotlines involving sexy, alpha-male neo-pros, a few beta-male mechanics, the Spring Classics, sweaty bib shorts and chamois cream [because, of course, my novels would involve cyclists]. There are dramas involving embrocation and bad boy messengers, spectacular crashes and consequent rescues, and possiby a three-way with bi-curious podium girls. But at the end of the day, everyone would get either a diamond ring, a future spouse, endless phenomenal sex, or a similar form of guaranteed happiness.

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Like J.K. Rowling and the Harry Potter series, these future best-selling ideas came to me randomly, between soft-pedaling to the grocery store and sipping my usual Americano at Cafe Fixe as I blankly stared out the window. The latter may have been the subtle impetus, as every Tuesday night [back then], from 5.30 in the evening, clusters of Lycra-ed cyclists would spin their way up Beacon to the Cassidy Field parking lot for the Landry’s Tavern Ride. As a modern-day damsel - but one that was not yet capable of distress on a bicycle - I sighed wistfully as I watched them, realization of speed and power still a vague concept confined in my fantasies.
Over two years later, I had a road bike, but remained the vigilent stalker of the Landry’s Tuesday night rides [which had by then turned into the Greenline Velo Wednesday night rides]. I watched the procession up Beacon Street on those Wednesday evenings, my IF safely tucked away in my apartment. Like a deeply self-conscious cross-dresser, I chose to pull out the tools of my fetishized hobby only in towns that were a safe distance from the one in which I lived. I happily rode to Lexington to get my legs ripped off early Sunday mornings but when Wednesday evenings came around, I could be found in yoga pants and a t-shirt, concealing revealing tan lines. And, you know, casually watching the group ride gather in a totally non-creepy way.

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But every stalker has his/her breaking point. Though this usually manifests itself in some violent act against the stalkee, I chose to tamely come out of hiding. I slapped on some chamois cream, bibbed and zippered up and headed out toward Cassidy Field a few Wednesdays ago. If worst came to worst, I told myself, I had a cell phone, enough friends that could probaby pick up/tell me how to get home, and if need be, an excuse to sputter out between retching up my afternoon snack. In this worst case scenario, where a ride leader might be stuck caring for me, I’d explain between heaves that I was a “writer,” and hope that the implication of being mostly deskbound would relieve me of any obligation to be “athletic,” or otherwise capable of hanging onto a medium pace ride. If Bill Strickland came up, I figured splattering a little vomit on the mentioner’s shoes should be enough of a distraction.
Yes, me of so little faith and so many excuses. All over a sub-two hour ride that, to be honest, wasn’t nearly as terrifying as I’d imagined.
The ride is a 24-ish mile loop with a few fun climbs and a crap ton of descending. Everyone separated into smaller groups by speed with 3-4 Greenline Velo team members leading each group [it’s a no-drop ride in the sense that you’ll get picked up by the group behind you if you get completely dropped]. With a morning ride already under my belt that day, I stuck to the 16-19mph medium pace group and expected to just barely hang on. To, in fairy tale speak, play the role of the helplessly persecuted princess who needed saving [mostly from herself].
I didn’t realize the irony of my mostly-white IF stallion, or that I was riding it, as opposed to being captured somewhere and crying. I believed - and still do - that my legs are generally ineffectual. But when we hit our first climb, I felt a surge of uncharacteristic faith; some sort of hope that maybe not all my friends were lying to me when they said I wasn’t such a terrible climber.

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Besides, when you’re on a bike and the road suddenly turns upwards, there’s not much to do but clip in and dig in. I got to the top, didn’t fall over and immediately die, require resuscitation, or otherwise embarrass myself. My lungs were in a bit of distress but not to the point of princely rescues and/or swooning. And just knowing that I could haul my weight around with a group of strangers who were probably less forgiving than my friends was pretty awesome.
No longer the classic damsel in distress, I tried not to wheel suck too much and closed gaps without someone else leading the way. Because while being helpless can be fun in that it absolves you of responsibility, it will never teach you how to exist outside fantasies of royal co-dependence. Or how to hang on to a group ride.
This realization saturated hopes of a career as a romance novelist as it slowly dawned on me: I’m not sure I will ever understand the desire to mold relationships into the ideal where happiness comes in the form of a diamond ring and offspring. Which, in romance novel terms, means my future books may not be bestselling successes.
...but hey, who said that I couldn’t do research every Wednesday night?

always be closing [gaps]

Last Sunday, I got sucked into another RSC ride. Led again by Geoff, with Neal and Joe [from Seven] supporting. The initial plan was to head out as a group to Concord Center, before breaking off into groups. A few us got separated from the large group, and with Neal in the lead, we ended up hammering it to Concord. Neal also led the “medium-pace” 30 mile-ish ride, and I’d like to think he gave us this motivational speech, inspired by Blake (a.k.a. Alec Baldwin), before we headed out.

Neal: Let me have your attention for a moment. 'Cause you're talkin' about what...you're talkin' 'bout...bitchin' about that time you got dropped, some son of a bitch don't want to hold your hand during a ride, somebody don't want to ride with you, some broad you're trying to screw, so forth, let's talk about something important. Are they all here?
Joe: I think we dropped a few.
Neal: Well, I'm going anyway. Let's talk about something important. (sees Cyclist 1 drinking coffee). Put that coffee down. Coffee's for gap closers only. You think I'm fuckin' with you? I am not fuckin' with you. I'm here from Lexington. I'm here from RSC. And I'm here on a mission of mercy. Your name's Levine?
Cyclist 1: Yeah.
Neal: You call yourself a cyclist, you son of a bitch.
Me: I don't gotta listen to this shit.

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Neal: You certainly don't pal 'cause the good news is you're banned from RSC. The bad news is you've got, all you've got, just one week to regain your invitation, starting with today, starting with today’s ride. Oh, have I got your attention now? Good. 'Cause we're adding a little something to today’s contest. As you all know, first prize is a custom Seven. Anybody want to see second prize? Second prize is a multi-tool. Third prize is you’re banned from RSC. You get the picture? You laughing now? You got the ride leaders. RSC got good volunteers. Get their names and keep up with them. You can't close the gaps you're given, you can't close shit, you are shit, hit the bricks pal and beat it 'cause you are going out.
Cyclist 2: The rides are too hard.
Neal: The rides are too hard. The fuckin' rides are too hard? You're too weak. I've been doing group rides for 15 years ...
Me: What's your name?
Neal: Fuck you, that's my name. You know why? Cause you had to ride to get here today, I drove an 80,000 dollar BMW. That's my name. (To Cyclist 2) And your name is you're wanting. You can't play in the man's game, you can't close the gaps? Then go home and tell your wife your troubles. Because only one thing counts in this life. Close gaps and attack. You hear me, you fuckin' faggots?
ABC. A, Always, B, Be, C, Closing. Always be closing. Always be closing gaps. AIDA. Attention. Interest. Decision. Action. Attention. Do I have your attention? Interest. Are you interested? I know you are 'cause it's fuck or get dropped. You close those gaps or you hit the bricks. Decision. Have you made your decision for Christ? And action. AIDA. Get out there. You got the rides, you think they’re going to be easy? A guy don't join a group ride lest he wants to get turned inside out. They're out there waiting to murder your legs. Are you going to take it? Are you man enough to take it? (To me) What's the problem, pal?

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Me: You, boss, you're such a hero, you're so fast, how come you're coming down here and wasting your time with such a bunch of noobs?
Neal: You see this PowerTap? You see this PowerTap?
Me: Yeah.
Neal: That PowerTap costs more than your IF. I rode 970,000 miles last month, how much you ride? You see pal, that's who I am, and you're nothing. Nice guy? I don't give a shit. Good father? Fuck you, go home and play with your kids. You want to stay here at RSC, close gaps and attack. You think this is abuse? You think this is abuse, you cock-sucker. You can't take this, how can you take the abuse you get in a crit. If you don't like it, leave. I can go out there tonight, the bike you got, make myself 15,000 dollars in prize money. Tonight. In two hours. Can you? Can you?
Go and do likewise. AIDA. Get mad you son-of-a-bitch. Get mad. You know what it takes to hang on to a fast ride? It takes brass balls to hang on to a fast ride. Go and do likewise, gents. The rides are out there, you close those gaps and attack, it's yours, you don't, I got no sympathy for you. You want to go out on those rides today and close, close, it's yours, if not, you're going to be shining my Sidis. And you know what you'll be saying. Bunch of losers sitting around in a coffee shop: ''Oh yeah, I used to be a cyclist. It's a tough sport.''
These are the new ride routes. These are the RSC ride routes. And to you, they're gold. And you don't get them. Why? Because to give them to you is just throwing them away. They're for gap closers. I'd wish you good luck, but you wouldn't know what to do with it if you got it. (To me) And to answer your question, pal: Why am I here? I came here because RSC asked me to, they asked me for a favor. I said the real favor, follow my advice and ban your fuckin' ass because a loser is a loser.

public vomiting and solitary riding

A few nights ago, I woke up to uncomfortable stomach pain. In the hour that followed, I emptied the contents of my stomach into the toilet, hurling out half-digested food and bile with the gusto I usually reserve for rides or make-out sessions. Crouching in front of the toilet with a bathmat underneath my legs to pad my knees, it was the first time in my life that I have vomited in solitude.
I understand this admission risks leading to the assumption that my life thus far has been unusually coddled and sheltered. Such is not the case; my public vomiting has always been a thing of choice. Like a shameless cry for help and pity that was not so much aural as visual and olfactory, I have thrown up the remnants of soup onto the hallway floor, mussels and oysters into plastic bags in the kitchen, and [the only time I made it to a porcelin receptacle] a mixture of nachos and Grey Goose into my sister’s toilet. Each time, there was someone within vomiting earshot. Someone who came running and either held my hair, the plastic bag, or offered to clean up the mess. I never flinched [even in hindsight] at how readily I accepted their offers of help. In fact, I found comfort in this, and could not understand why, when my sister threw up in her own room one day, she refused to accept my offer to clean it up, going so far as to tinge her rejection with a threat of physical harm should I so much as even try.
That night I threw up alone, through sweaty nausea, I wished for once that I had a room mate. This was a preference that, under normal circumstances, would have been immediately dismissed. I view living alone as not only a necessity but a sign that I have grown out of the phase where lack of sufficient income forces one to make the less than optimal choice to live with a person one is not simultaneously sleeping with. In school, I justified my comparably indulgent living situation as critical for academic success [or, failing that, at least an academically optimal environment]. At present, lacking any income and thereby opening myself up to be labeled as a hypocrite, I rationalize my aversion to sharing common living areas with other people as solitude suffered for the greater good. A benevolent, selfless act undertaken to assure that any potential room mates will never be subject to my slovenliness, bad cooking, or terrible music; and that I in turn, will never have to execute passive aggressive countermeasures based on suspicions that a stranger is partaking of my condiments.

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This self-awareness of my own flaws - however limited - also extends to my riding. Fully conscious that I pose a significant danger to those around me due to my lack of bike handling skills, I primarily ride alone. Despite how comfortable I may be with my solitary riding, when people hear this, they feel compelled to comment. “You’re never going to get better riding alone,” some say, as they look me up and down, expecting me to rise to the challenge. Others misinterpret the information as fishing for an invitation: “I’ll totally ride with you! We need to ride together,” they’ll say. The philathropic offers are appreciated, but I’m also blessed with friends who don’t tend to follow up. They leave me to ride alone, pedaling towards that day when I might be able to sit in calmly without the fear that I will most certainly kill the person riding next to me.
“But you always say how much you hate riding alone,” Mike says. And to his credit, I have at times expressed a desire to have company that is more tangible than Kanye’s voice. Fortunately, Mike actively attracts group rides, so I get to hear all about them. “We were supposed to leave at 9:30, but so-and-so was running 15 minutes late. Then he really wanted coffee so we ended up leaving around 10:15.” Call me an ass but even the thought of hanging around an extra 45 minutes - precious extra pillow time when you’re talking about a Sunday morning - chafes harder than wearing men’s chamois shorts. I love my friends, but few would be worthy of such cleat-tapping tardiness. “And then some of the guys were just hammering,” Mike might add, in between complaining about the pain still running around his legs. I shake my head in pity, my relaxing solo ride challenging, but still safely within the confines of “fun.”

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The irony is that recently, these solitary rides are catching up with me. My lone figure seems to invite invitation to join a paceline more times than I’m actually comfortable with, demands to stay on a wheel or take a pull to close a gap inevitably follow. Tests to see how well I can hold a line ensue, as I secretly thank my non-parabolic rollers. My visions of casual riding in the little ring go the way of Cavendish’s chances of a win in Milano-San Remo post-crash as I drag a stranger up to his friends or vice versa. Blame it on too much Kanye, or too easily bending to perceived flattery [“do they really think I can keep up?”]; a feeling of perverse guilt and obligation consistently keeps me from waving them off in a polite “no, thank you.” “Riding alone,” is quickly becoming “riding alone until someone decides to pace me, drag me a few miles on their group ride, or otherwise cause me unnecessary pain.”
With my history of relative reclusiveness, it wouldn’t be a stretch to assume that I resent these charitable strangers. But much like how the stark loneliness of vomiting in solitude only comes into focus after a lifetime of public retching, to be caught up in a group ride that is not your own, then dragged along for a portion of it, makes the solo ride a peculiar anomaly. An activity that one might not pursue so adamantly after a few moments of proximity to other, real-life cyclists. I think about this, sometimes, as I pinch my tires and put on my shoes, coiling my right earbud around my helmet strap. There are questioning thoughts about tardy friends who like to paceline aggressively and all the group rides I’m not trying. I try to want those things as I swing my leg over my saddle, heading out alone, wondering who I’ll meet today.