Lacking any modesty, I use any opportunity to pronounce my new-found religion. Meet for lunch? Only if it’s nearby – I cycled to work today. Give you a lift? Sorry – rode my bike this morning. Lost weight? Thanks, yeah, 30 pounds now, riding my bike all the time. This is typically greeted with a positive response – Really? That’s cool. – followed almost immediately by one of the following.
You don’t wear spandex do you
This seems to be the primary concern of my friends. It’s almost as if they’re afraid of catching some heretofore unproven-but-suspected sickness that might render them powerless against showing up at the office Christmas party or the Friday-night poker game in head-to-toe spandex. Ken, completely bonkers downhill racer, a man I’ve known since before either of us could shave and never noted as a conformist rolled his eyes “oh gawd, you’re not wearing those black spandex shorts are you?”, the disgust dripping from his words.
In truth, I don’t but that’s not because I’m unwilling…now. When I was 40 pounds overweight (as opposed to the optimistic 10 I am now), you wouldn’t have been able to bribe me into them in public at any price. I rode in my cargo shorts with the stealth chamois shorts hidden underneath. I thought it was perfect but then single-digit temperatures arrived.
It didn’t take too many mornings in the almost-freezing air to figure out I needed something to cover my knees if nothing else. Enter my first stretchy-pants – the MEC winter cycling tights. When asked recently if I wear those shorts I replied “no – I have stretchy pants, like tights” just to watch the reaction. As predicted, my friend reacted with horror, disapproval and disappointment. You’d have thought I’d just told him I’d been having an affair with the neighbour’s poodle.
It’s not like I’m asking them to join me in my new-found clothing choices. I’m comfortable in my choice of clothing – I don’t need someone else to validate it for me. Yeesh – it’s not even like we’re riding together and they can’t handle being seen with a lycra-clad rider in the group. Doesn’t matter though – switching back and forth between the cargo shorts and the stretchy-pants leaves no doubt – stretchy-pants rule and stretchy shorts are a foregone conclusion when the temperatures relent.
You’re not going to be one of those guys
Jason and I went for lunch recently and the topic of my riding came up…because I brought it up. Jason, who doesn’t ride and hasn’t expressed an interest to (yet) has no problems with my stretchy-pants though he expressed some degree of relief that I wasn’t wearing them in the restaurant. Jason was supportive and complimentary, arguably the most supportive of my small cadre of friends. He came from a different angle. “Are you going to ride this winter” he asked, to which I replied with an enthusiastic maybe. “I’d like to” I told him “but we’ll see how much I want to when there’s snow on the ground and no room in the lane”.
“Noooooooooooooooooooo” was the immediate response, his head shaking . “Don’t be that guy! Put the bike away and just drive a car like a normal human”. Now, I could see if I was his courier or pizza delivery service how my desire to pedal through the winter might cause him some concern. Luckily for both of us, I am neither of those. So, what’s the issue? We don’t work or live in the same quadrant of the city and virtually none of our respective commutes or general travel overlap…so what if I ride? The reaction is almost reason enough and Jason is not alone in his disapproval of my plan. Well, not really a plan so much as an idea.
Now these are all friends that have eaten my food, who have fed me and my family. They’ve taken their weekends and evenings to move me – in the case of Ken, 3 times in a single 12 month period. These guys aren’t peripheral or fair-weather friends – they’re the real deal and I’m lucky to have them. So what is it about cycling that makes even your closest friends hang their heads, cluck their tongues and nod disapprovingly? If I’d bought a motorcycle and we were talking about leather chaps or riding in the rain, there wouldn’t be any such reaction – unless I demonstrated my predilection for wearing the chaps without anything underneath them. What is it about bicycles that puts everything on its head?