Why I Ride
Ten years ago, I met an exceptionally courageous woman.
She came into the women’s self-defense class I was co-teaching, and told us the first day
that she was HIV+. Her fiancé had contracted it, known he was HIV positive, and had deliberately
infected her. After she found out, he fled.
I don’t know why he couldn’t, or wouldn’t talk to her about his HIV status. There
are many possibilities: it might have been an abusive relationship, or he might just not have
felt comfortable telling her he had contracted HIV. But it doesn’t matter: he had infected
her, and then left, because he couldn’t face her afterwards. She, in turn, couldn’t
tell people she was HIV+, because of the stigma associated with AIDS; so she was struggling with
it, with only her closest friends and family knowing.
I didn’t know what to say. I had been working with survivors of rape, domestic violence,
and incest for awhile, and really thought I had heard everything; but that night I went home and
spent one long night thinking about the cruelty of the universe. It was just wrong: that
he had contracted it, that he had deliberately infected her—and then on top of that
to have to deal with the shame and secrecy surrounding AIDS alone—it was just too
much. No one should ever be hurt that badly.
But this is not a victim’s story. Over the next few weeks, as she learned to fight in body,
her fighting spirit emerged. She chose to fight for her life—literally—and it was
nothing short of a miracle. When she left our program, she told us she was going to beat this
disease somehow and that she was moving to another state to start a new chapter of our self-defense
program and empower other women. She was not only going to fight and win, she was going
to make every day count. She was going to live.
I promised myself that night, that someday I would pay tribute to that inhuman—that so human—courage.
Nine years later, I signed up for the inaugural AIDS/LifeCycle to fulfill that pledge.
AIDS/LifeCycle was a revelation. Physically, it was the hardest thing I’ve ever done—the
ride is grueling, especially if you aren’t a natural athlete, which I’m definitely
not. It hurt, especially in the last few days, when absolutely every muscle was sore. But it was
a wonderful experience nonetheless—because of the wonderfully supportive community, and
the dedication of the other riders. The sweeps would drive by, cheering us on; fellow riders would
honk cheerfully as we passed; the glamorous pit crews, with a different outfit every pit stop,
every day of the Ride—it was heartwarming.
I could write reams about my experience on AIDS/LifeCycle 1, but you’ll see the same thing
again on this year’s Webcast, so I’ll skip over it for now. Let’s just say,
at the end of ALC1, I signed up immediately for ALC 2.
Then I decided to travel Southeast Asia—Thailand, Cambodia, Vietnam, Laos, and India.
I had never thought much about AIDS in the developing world before—I had thought of it only
in the U.S., where antiviral medications are relatively easy to come by, and the number of infections
had been dropping steadily for the last decade, and the public perception was that AIDS was over.
Oh, was I wrong.
We are at the very brink of the AIDS epidemic. We haven’t thought about it much, because
we’re only looking at the very tip of it. A 1% infection rate doesn’t sound like much—and
it isn’t, by itself—but understand, it is not stable. It is only the start of the
epidemic, the tip of the iceberg. In most nations, the HIV epidemic is only starting. In two or
three decades, much of the “undeveloped” world may look like sub-Saharan Africa.
Understand: it takes about twenty or thirty years for AIDS to really hit a country. It appears
first in the IV drug user and gay communities. Several years later, it appears in commercial sex
workers; five or ten years after that, just as everyone begins thinking the country is immune
to AIDS, it appears in the men who patronize the sex workers. Five years later, it infects their
wives and girlfriends. At each point, the infection rate doubles or triples.
What this means is, a 1% infection rate, mostly among IV drug users and gay men, unless stopped,
implies a much, much higher infection rate in ten or twenty years. And what we are seeing now,
is a major uptick in HIV cases, worldwide, everywhere but the U.S. and Western Europe.
I spent six months traveling through Southeast Asia. Many of the countries I visited are in the
early stages of the AIDS epidemic, and most of them are extremely poor. Laos doesn’t even
have money to maintain roads—there’s only one paved road in the entire country, and
that is kept open largely with foreign aid, from Thailand. Only 13 of the 18 provinces can even
test for HIV, and there is no money for antivirals. The average income in Laos is only $220/year,
less than a dollar a day.
So AIDS is coming to Laos, very visibly. Migrant workers contract HIV while working in Thailand,
then return home, bringing the virus to the capital; workers migrate from the provinces to the
capital, and then return home; the epidemic continues to spread. Laos is still struggling to bring
clean water and basic hygiene to most of its people—it does not, at the moment, have either
the will or the money to control the spread of HIV. It is nominally a low-incidence country for
AIDS, but that is deceptive: Laos is on the brink of an explosion, according to what I “read”.
Much of Southeast Asia, is in the same boat.
And that is just Southeast Asia. The statistics for the rest of the world, according to the latest
UNAIDS report, are also grim: massive increases in infection rates in Russia, Eastern Europe,
China, India, Indonesia—everywhere but the “developed” world. I’ve read
the report, and it frightens me.
A very good summary of the report is online, here: http://hopkins-aids.edu/publications/report/jan03_6.html
And the full report is here: http://www.unaids.org/worldaidsday/2002/
press/update/epiupdate2002_en.doc. They are both well worth reading.
From a pure geopolitical strategy viewpoint, this frightens me. Countries like India, Russia, and
China—nuclear powers with massively increasing HIV infection rates—imagine 30%, or
even only 15%, of the population dying from HIV. Without programs, without intervention, this
is quite possible. That’s scary. People don’t just die quietly of AIDS; when that
many people die from a plague, it has economic, and geopolitical, consequences. The prospect of
AIDS sweeping through these nations is, at the very least, extremely worrisome; and if nothing
is done to contain it, it will happen. The CIA has identified AIDS as one of the greatest threats
to geopolitical stability around the world, and they are not kidding.
But from a human perspective, it disturbs me as well. I spent six months traveling Southeast Asia,
meeting a lot of people, and encountering a lot of different cultures. What really came home is
that these are people—they are not numbers, not statistics, not “peasant farmers”—they
are people; they have faces, they have names, they have friends, family, work, worries. Maybe
they plow with water buffalo instead of combines, but that’s a cosmetic difference.
They’re people.
So why ride? For me, it's partly a celebration of the human spirit, of courage, like the woman
who first brought me into LifeCycle.
But it’s also because AIDS is the Black Plague, combined with leprosy. It's killed a lot
of people. It's going to kill a LOT more. We in the U.S. tend to concentrate on the human face
of AIDS, because that's what we see...outside the industrial world, AIDS is beyond faces. It's
death incarnate. I just spent five months in countries that are going to take the brunt of the
AIDS epidemic...I can easily see countries like Cambodia and Laos losing an entire generation
to AIDS. I met a lot of wonderful and delightful people on my travels...I think a lot of them
are going to die of AIDS. I don't want that to happen.
It's hard to imagine. During the height of the U.S. epidemic, I think over 30% of gay men in San
Francisco were HIV positive. I have a hard time imagining the extent, and the pain, of *that*--of
going to so many funerals of so many friends. But now imagine that grim statistic across an entire
COUNTRY...oh, dear God. Well, there are already countries in sub-Saharan Africa, where that's
already true. I see the same thing poised to happen in Asia. I think that's very, very bad.
We're lucky in the U.S. We, at least, have money for prevention campaigns, and drug cocktails for
people who are HIVpositive. Other countries don't have those resources. A lot of people are going
to die. I think that's wrong.
Obviously, the bulk of AIDS efforts within the U.S. are going to U.S. causes. But I think it's
imperative to raise AIDS awareness generally, across the U.S....Americans have largely forgotten
about AIDS, because we've mostly escaped the plague. It doesn't affect the "average"
American, or at least, they don't think it does. But outside the U.S., it's destroying whole countries.
I don't think we should forget this.
So that, in essence, is why I am riding. The San Francisco AIDS Foundation has been fighting AIDS
since before AIDS even had a name; and it is working in Africa as well, through its sister organization
Pangaea. I think that’s worth supporting.
June 5
Well, I’m excited, and terrified, and thrilled all at once…I’m psyched about
riding, about finally being done with training, and most importantly done with all those HORRIBLE
Power Bars…I always like them at the beginning, and by the end I’d rather die than
face another one.
Training has been really grueling for me this year…I got started late, because of my Southeast
Asian travels, and then injured a calf muscle early on…so I had just over seven weeks to
train. (Do not try this at home, kids!) If I’d actually been employed at the time, there’s
no way I could have done it…it was exhausting, and a real strain on my body and metabolism—seven
weeks of doing almost nothing but eat, sleep, and train. But, thanks to an amazing coach (Curtis
Cramblett), and a hell of a lot of work, I think I’m actually ready.
So, we’ll see what happens.
Right now (T minus 3 days) I’m still in the “frantic” stage—putting together
my gear bag, arranging costuming, writing up my bio, writing thank you notes, and trying to remember
if there’s anything I’ve missed. I wasn’t planning on being this disorganized,
but the last few days I’ve been in the tenth circle of hell—I got a bad case of poison
oak on a training ride a few days ago, so the last couple days have consisted mostly of sleeplessly
trying not to scratch. (I’m not going to complain too much, though—some poor
fellow rider went over the handlebars a week or two ago, face first into an entire bush of
poison oak. Swelled up completely, all over—I can’t believe he’s riding
anyway. These Lifecyclists, they’re nuts, you know? ;-) ) So, if my rider information and
bio are completely incoherent, now you know why. Fortunately, my dermatologist assures me I’ll
be healed up by Day 1, and I’m almost starting to believe him. I still look like a piebald
pony, but the worst of the sweling and itching are over...
So, Friday and Saturday are going to be spent frantically accessorizing, because I am riding in
four fabulous tutus this year.
Why the tutus?
Well, last year I made a bet with my donors: I said that if I raised over $5,000 in donations,
I’d go “in drag”: I’d ride in a pink tutu, all the way down the coast
of California. (Realize that most of my friends have never seen me in a skirt, let alone
a tutu. <g>)
I didn’t seriously expect to make $5,000, although I gave it my best try. A day and a half
before AIDS Lifecycle 1, I thought I was safe: I had raised $4,700, and with only a day and a
half to go, I wasn’t expecting to get any more donations.
Then my boss called me into his office late Friday afternoon, and handed me a check. And my mom
sponsored me for $200.
Damn. Where can you find a tutu on short notice, while frantically packing? And in hot pink?? (I’d
rather die than appear in pink and frilly.)
Well, okay, I have a sewing machine, and I made my own wedding dress, so I’m a reasonably
competent seamstress. I wound up making my own. Hot pink, blazing, with these fabulous fluorescent
pink fishnet stockings that I found in a costume store.
Here’s a photo of last year’s tutu (click for a bigger version): http://www.travelingtiger.com/unindexed/day_one_tutu.JPG
It turned out to be a great idea. Not only was it eminently practical, but it cheered everyone
up--me, the other riders, the sweeps, and so on. It was fun. Fun is important around mile 400,
when absolutely everything hurts.
So this year, I decided to expand the tutu idea, and made myself a couple of custom tutus, which
I have been busily accessorizing. I have four tutus for this year's ride--the hot pink classic
from last year, a blue/orange one in official AIDS/Lifecycle colors, a white and sparkly silver
one, and an extra-special red tutu, for Day 5, which we are trying to do (unofficially) as Dress
in Red Day. They are, in a word, fabulous. :-) Look for photos during the ride!
Is it frivolous to be wearing a tutu? Well, maybe a bit. I do take AIDS very seriously, as you'll
have noticed if you've read the section on "Why I Ride". But I also think it's important
to have fun--because AIDS is so serious, you have to be light at times, or you burn out. And "fun"
is very much a theme on Lifecycle, too...the pit crews dress up as something different every day,
in every pit stop--my favorite from last year was Cirque du SoGay! So it's right in the theme
of things.
And, it's wicked fun.
And, with that, it's back to frantic packing...and accessorizing. (Do those red velvet ribbons
really go with the silver tutu? How about those holographic sequins? Is my tentmate bringing
tent stakes? How about the plastic flamingoes? Is just one tube of BenGay enough?? Oh, decisions!!)
Have a great time everyone, and see you on Day One!!
Tien
Cyclist #5004
Day 1 (Monday, June 8)
Well…I was terrified of Day One.
Day One is the hardest day on AIDS Lifecycle, 96 miles long, with one
very steep hill, and several miles of steady, steep climbing—over
3000 feet of vertical climb. Worse, because I started training so late,
I hadn’t done anything longer than 60 miles, and certainly not
with such difficult terrain. And, last year, with more training, I had
strained a muscle on that hill, which grounded me two days later.
(This year the only thing that let me train for Lifecycle was a very
good cycling coach…I got back late from Southeast Asia, then injured
myself…so eight weeks ago it seemed impossible, until I got an
extremely competent cycling coach who’s also a physical therapist,
perfect for working with an injury-prone rider. (His name’s Curtis
Cramblett—he put together the training guide for Lifecycle as well—Curtis,
if you’re reading this, THANK YOU.)
So anyway, I was pretty nervous as we went out for Opening Ceremonies,
nearly 1000 riders flooding out through Golden Gate Park and down through
the foggy, early-morning city.
Excitement was in the air, just as last year, with crazily-costumed
riders and throngs of rider teams sorting themselves out over the first
few miles…rabbit ears and fluffy bunny tails, pink helmets with
pig ears and snouts…Chicken Lady with his chicken helmet and rainbow
skirt, wizard hats, pipecleaners, roadies in all sorts of colorful costumes.
And, of course, lots and lots of cyclists, pouring through the city.
But the main question on my mind was, would I make it through the hills,
this year?
We rode up through the gray, foggy city, up a very steep hill to Skyline
Blvd, and started going up Skyline. Miles and miles of continuous, difficult
climb, up to a 2500’ pass.
I started getting more and more concerned as we climbed…I hadn’t
had time to do any hill training, so I was working at a higher intensity
than anything I’d ever trained. Last year the strain had done in
my calf muscle a day or two later…and I had already been pushing
overtraining, trying to get ready in time. I was acutely aware that I
was even less prepared than when I’d injured myself last year.
Up, and up, and up, through the gray fog…cold, wet, and dreary….more
and more exhausted…muscles and butts sorer and sorer….but
every few hundred yards, just where we might be flagging, a cluster of
brightly colored roadies, family/friends, or community supporters, would
meet us and cheer us on..
(One of the most wonderful things about riding Lifecycle is the amount
of support from the community…it is really true that the riders
do not ride alone. Every time we finished a tough section, every time
we got to a point where our will might be flagging, someone was there—friends
and family, community supporters, roadies and other riders—to cheer
us on, give us water, candy, or just a pat on the back. It was wonderful.)
Finally, after seemingly forever, my fellow riders and I rolled into
Pit 2, near the top of the toughest climb. The theme was “Southwest
Airlines,” and the pit crew were all wearing hilarious airplane
hats, handing out in-flight peanuts and dressed up in an aeronautical
theme (they even put “warning” signs on the portapotties).
I ate, stretched, took photos with riders and pit crew, and headed out
for the last of the big climb.
A mile later, my left calf started hurting. Then the right calf started,
too.
Cyclists are very prone to overuse injuries, and I’d been fighting
them off the entire training season. Curtis is a great coach, but to
go from injured and out of shape to fully trained in eight weeks is a
pretty big change, and we’d had to push my body to the edge of
what it could do. I’d pulled the right calf before I started training,
and it still wasn’t fully healed; and last year’s injury
on the same hill had been in the same area. So I was really worried.
Fortunately, there was only a mile or two of gentle climbing to go…I
cycled very gingerly, and finally crested the top of the hill, and began
the twenty-mile, swooping, thrilling descent to lunch. (Somewhere in
the first few miles, the blue mini-tutu I was wearing as a helmet decoration
blew off…I guess the wind at 35 mph was a little too much. Whee!
)
Finally, I arrived at lunch a bit dehydrated, and completely exhausted
from the climb. I grabbed lunch, drank an entire can of Gatorade, and
collapsed on the ground for half an hour, too tired to move. Finally,
I picked myself up and moved on.
Seven miles past the lunch stop, my left calf started hurting. Seriously.
It felt exactly like the previous year’s injury.
I rode very gingerly into the pit stop, where I stopped by the medical
tent (the ride is very well-supported; there’s a medical tent at
every pit stop), to see what damage I’d done. Thank goodness, the
orthopedist declared it to be just a muscle spasm, not an injury—probably
the result of dehydration. I drank two quarts of water, massaged the
calf, and rode on. Amazingly, as soon as I rehydrated, the muscle spasms
and exhaustion cleared away, like magic.
The rest of the ride was beautiful…easy, sunny, coastal….we
rode down the Pacific Coast Highway (Route 1), watching pelicans soaring
overhead, stopping to admire the bright crescent “sails” as
parasailers played in the surf below. The fog had cleared away, the cool
sea breeze and the gentle sun played on the dunes and cliffs—a
thoroughly beautiful ride, wonderful after the long, foggy, cold climb
of the morning. Long gentle climbs and thrilling descents (I hit 30 mph
several times on the straightaways!)—a far cry from torturous morning
worries. A pair of Santa Cruz drummers met us at the outskirts, cheering
us on.
Finally, eleven hours after starting, I rode into camp at 5:30pm, to
be met by a throng of cheering roadies and community supporters….seven
and a half hours of cycling, 96.1 miles, and three gallons of Gatorade
later, I’d finished Day One! And, unlike last year, no injuries,
and no muscle strains.
Best of all, our route the last two miles took us right by my favorite
chocolatier in the world (Donnelly Chocolates, in Santa Cruz)…so
I’m sitting here now, refueling on chocolate gelato, and munching
on the world’s best chocolates. Life is tough.
On to Day 2!!
Day 2 (Monday, June 9)
104 miles. Eleven hours. 3280 calories (!).
Got into camp really late—7pm—and nursing a strained
right calf, so I’m off to Sports Medicine, then to sleep.
Day 3 is hard (lots of hills) but shorter, only 60 miles—I’ll
write up more then.
Fabulous costumes at the pit stops—fortunetellers, police
officers, circus freaks—and clusters of schoolchildren
cheering us on…the wonderful folks at Ugly Mug in Santa
Cruz started us off with free coffee and cappuccino. Artichoke
and strawberry fields, passing tractors, and a fantastic view
of the agricultural valley from a tall hill near the end.
More tomorrow!
Day 3 (Tuesday, June 10)
Well, today I met a few of our fantastic roadies. Did you
know there are over 300 volunteers supporting the riders
on the road? This always amazes me…the roadies give up a
week of their life (and vacation time!) to spend twelve+ hours
a day feeding, cleaning up after, carting stuff around for,
directing, and protecting cyclists. Not to mention cheering
us on…which, believe me, is important. Tired, grumpy,
hot, and sore…counting the miles to the rest stop and
thinking about how hot it is, how badly my butt hurts, why my
odometer is OBVIOUSLY broken, why we have to fight headwinds
and hills in the same day…then one of the sweeps drives
by and yells “GO RIDERS!!” or “GO TUTU GIRL!!” and
I have to smile.
Anyway, Day 3: did I say it was shorter than Day 1? Silly me.
We fought strong headwinds all the way out, which meant that
instead of my customary 18 mph flat pace, I was down to 9 mph
and struggling. (Headwinds are particularly frustrating because,
unlike hills, you don’t get the downhill afterwards. It’s
just up, up, up all the way, and to add insult to injury, it
looks flat, so you don’t even get the satisfaction of
knowing you’re going uphill—you’re just moving
very, very slowly.) Worse, the roads out were very, very rough—which,
on an already saddle-sore butt, was pure torture. (I compared
it to using a belt sander for a vibrator, but I’m not
sure the rider I was talking to appreciated my comparison—especially
with several miles of belt sander left to go.)
I was still in good spirits, having a fresh Tutu of the Day,
but physically very, very tired from yesterday, so moving slowly.
(Tutu of the Day: bright turquoise tutu, with frilly pink roses
and a hot pink cycling jersey—plus big ribbon bows on
the helmet. Quite fetching, if I do say so myself. I really
must get those photos up soon.)
Then we hit a monstrously steep hill, aka Quadbuster.
Oddly, I was quite happy to see Quadbuster, at least initially.
Last year, I saw it from the back of a bus, after injuring my
right calf/heel—I had to sit out Days 3 and 4. This year,
I trained for less than half the time—and here I was!!
(Thanks again, Curtis—it’s amazing what a good cycling
coach can do.)
So, just seeing Quadbuster was a major step forward.
I’m not quite sure how I got up Quadbuster. I think I may have suppressed the memory. I remember
at one point staring intently at a patch of asphalt about two feet in front of my wheel—which
was all the attention I had left—and I was already exhausted from fighting the headwinds
to get there, and from the two long days before that—fortunately, the calf problems from
the day before had cleared up overnight, but I was still worried about straining muscles. (I injure
myself so regularly that my friends have accused me of cycling solely to meet cute physical therapists.)
So I walked partway, and cycled partway, up. Towards the end the wind was so fierce I was seriously
worried it might blow me backwards…I was barely making better time riding than the people
walking their bikes up the hill.
But, we finally made it, to be met by Ginger (the fabulous
transvestite who cheers on the riders on every AIDS Ride), looking
gorgeous in a Fairy Godmother blue ball gown, with big sparkly,
sequined tulle skirt. And the most amazing pair of crystal heels.
Of course I had to stop and take a photo, like everyone else.
I don’t remember much else about the rest of the day…I
was fighting exhaustion and dehydration for most of the day,
and also had four (count ‘em, four) flat tires within
two hours, which was intensely frustrating. The second to last
was particularly frustrating—I had been noticing that
the ride was bumpier than expected, but thought it was a problem
with the bike frame. So I had been riding along on it for at
least a mile and a half, getting progressively more puzzled/frustrated!
And then felt like an (hot, tired, dehydrated) idiot after another
rider helpfully pointed out the flat.
So there I was, changing my third flat for the day, when…the
tube I was inflating blew up. It was my last spare tube.
At this point I thanked the wonderful other riders who had
graciously stopped to help me, suggested they move on before
the caboose caught up to them (we were nearly the last riders
of the day), and then used up my stock of curse words and started
inventing others. A minute later, one of the sweeps arrived.
Sweep vehicles patrol the ride route, looking for riders in
trouble. (They also cheer on riders not in trouble, which is
very sweet of them, but isn’t part of their job description.)
Generally, any time you’re in trouble, a sweep isn’t
far behind. This particular sweep was traveling with the caboose
(a yellow truck which follows the very last cyclist of the day),
so couldn’t pick me up, but they offered to stay with
me and keep me company, so I wouldn’t have to wait by
myself. Which was also very sweet of them.
Two minutes after that, the caboose passed by, and right after
that another cyclist pulled up. A bike tech! Usually the bike
techs live at pit stops, but towards the end of the day, they’ll
often ride the route, looking for riders in last-minute trouble.
Unfortunately there wasn’t anything he could do about
my exploded tubes—especially since I have nonstandard
wheels (extra-small for my extra-small bike). But a moment later,
another sweep arrived, picked me up, and brought me into the
next pit stop, where the bike techs repaired my flat and loaned
me an extra tube, even though I’d run out of cash for
the parts. (Labor is free, but parts are extra—and this
was my fourth flat for the day.)
So, after all the woes, I rolled out of the last pit stop,
and fought my way through brutal headwinds another 12 miles,
to camp. I was exhausted, dehydrating again, and couldn’t
think straight. I almost ran off the edge of the road twice
on the last few miles, because I was too exhausted to pay attention.
I was one of the very last riders into camp.
I still got a hero’s welcome.
That’s one of the best things about Lifecycle in my opinion—no
matter how late you are, getting into camp (and thus far I have
always been one of the last riders), you will always be met
by a crowd of people cheering you in—roadies, earlier
riders, townspeople, all of whom wait for the very last rider.
It’s wonderful.
Tomorrow is 100.7 miles. Given how exhausting today was, I
have no idea how I’m going to manage it. But what the
hell.
Day 4 (Wednesday, June 11)
Well. Today was a good day.
Day 3, of course, was hell on wheels, but apparently Day 3
is the traditional day for riders to melt down (they warn all
the roadies about this). Or maybe it’s just that being
hot, tired, and dehydrated makes people a wee bit irritable—and
there’s plenty of that going around on Day 3.
At any rate, this is Day 4, and I’ve come to accept my
place in the universe. Which is to say, about two miles ahead
of the caboose, and about 50 riders from the very last. (I am
getting to know the other slow riders very well.) Fortunately,
I’ve also realized that the rest stop closing times are
quite flexible—despite the dire threats, they really won’t
sweep you into camp unless you have no possibility of finishing
by sunset. (Most riders who are sagged because they’re
running out of time, know very well they can’t finish
in time, and quit voluntarily.) So, I’ve quit worrying
about running late—I’m a slow rider, but I can ride
100 miles by the end of the day, so I’m not worrying about
it anymore.
I’ve also discovered the secret difference between being
frustrated, tired, and hating life, and enjoying the beautiful
scenery on an absolutely gorgeous ride between here and LA.
Surprisingly enough, it turns out to be about one mile an hour.
Yep, that’s right. Riding at max possible speed, I can
get there about an hour quicker, and hating life. Riding just
a little bit slower, I can kick back and enjoy the view. So
today I decided to slow down a bit, to the point where I could
focus on other things besides riding. Surprisingly enough, I
enjoyed it a lot more.
(I am sure this discovery has deep philosophical implications for life in general, but I’m
studiously ignoring them. My friends have been trying to beat some sense into my Type A personality
head for years now, and heaven forbid that I should deprive them of the joy of continuing. They
should rest cheerfully assured that I have not secretly been replaced by a space alien, and will
go back to my normal habits as soon as I finish AIDS/LifeCycle.)
So anyway, today was fun. We started out with a long but not too steep climb up the Evil Twins
(a pair of hills near camp). The weather was cold and foggy, perfect for hill-climbing: warm and
sunny makes it too easy to overheat. At the top of the second Twin, we paused for photos with
the fabulous Ginger, who was wearing a beautifully coutured gown made of pink plastic bubble-wrap—specially
designed for the occasion by one of her fashion-designer friends. (It looked a lot better than
it sounds—in fact, I didn’t even realize it was bubble-wrap, until she pointed it
out to me.) Then we all stood in line to take photos of … the halfway point!
Yes! We are now more than halfway to LA … which amazes me, considering how good I feel. Last
year I missed this day of the ride, having injured myself on Day 3. So it was great to be riding
today at all, and wonderful seeing the big banner reading “Halfway to LA!” We all
got up on a big rock by the fabulous view at the top of the hill for photos—I plan to use
that photo as my Christmas card this year. It’s me in a great Tutu of the Day: hot pink
tutu with orange roses, Halloween orange cycling jersey, and fluorescent orange fishnet stockings.
I’m standing over my bike with a giant grin, in front of a sign saying “Halfway to
LA!” I figure if that doesn’t convince my relatives I’m nuts, nothing will.
But I digress.
After the photo session, I was running late, so I coasted down
the fantastic downhill (5 miles of downhill!) at 30 mph, and
pedaled quickly into the next pit. The rest of the day was fun—almost
completely flat, and most of it coastal, meaning pedaling smoothly
along the gorgeous California coast, admiring the view. The
beaches looked inviting, the surfers decorative, the sun was
shining, a cafe was offering free coffee to riders, and the
winds were all tailwinds. Life was good.
The rest of the day was mostly like that. It was a long ride,
though—over 100 miles—so I got in pretty tired,
and late—around 7:15pm. Thankfully, I found that the roadies
and fast riders had set up my tent and even hauled out my gear
bag! for which I will be forever grateful. (That’s one
nice thing about the ride—the riders really do go out
of their way to support each other, which is great when you’re
coming in exhausted at the very end of the day.) I grabbed a
shower and got to dinner around 8pm, right around the time the
last rider came in (she got a standing ovation from the entire camp, that lasted almost five minutes). I’ve spent most
of the time since in Sports Med, getting some kinks worked out
of my left leg. Sports Med is a hoot, but I’ll write more
about them tomorrow; it’s late, and I want to get to bed.
Tomorrow’s tutu, in keeping with the “Dress in
Red Day” theme, will be a fabulous red tutu, and I do mean red. It has two layers—the underskirt is flashy red
sequins, the overskirt is a bright red metallic mesh. It goes
with the ever-fashionable red-and-gray AIDS/Lifecycle 1 jersey
from last year, a Miss America sash of bright red sequins, and
flashy metallic silver fishnet stockings. I even have sequined
armbands and wristlets to match. (Remember—you saw it
here first!)
Oh yes—I signed up for AIDS/Lifecycle 3 today. This was
the result of a very unsporting trick by Pat Christen, Executive
Director of the SF AIDS Foundation, and I think you should all
write in and complain to her about it. She announced free AIDS
Lifecycle logo towels—on the spot!—for anyone who
signed up for ALC3 tonight. If you don’t understand why
this is unsporting, you have not seen a camp towel after four
days on the road. So I have just signed myself up for countless
hours of agony next year, my friends will probably never speak
to me again (they won’t have a chance to, because I’ll
be too busy training anyway), and my sponsors will all run when
they see me coming—but hey, at least I’ve got a
clean, new towel.
I personally think it’s despicable of Pat to be preying
on confused, suggestible riders like that, and I encourage you
to write in and complain about her unethical behavior. I have
no idea what her email is, but I’m sure you can find it
on the San Francisco AIDS Foundation’s webpage, http://www.sfaf.org. And while you’re there, make sure you donate a couple
thousand bucks, so she can give us all free towels next year.
(I’m joking, of course. I think AIDS is an extremely
serious social/political issue—probably the biggest crisis
in our generation—which just hasn’t hit yet, so
people don’t fully understand how bad it is. (Read my
rider bio if you want to know more about why—and check
out my travel photos on my website, at http://www.travelingtiger.com, for a look at the people likely to be affected.) So, I’m
happy to sign up again. But I could use a free towel next year—so
write that check anyway.)
Yours from Day 4,
Tien
Day 5 (Thursday, June 12)
Okay. I just have to share this with you, because it’s too damn funny. Today, our
fastest rider hit a cow.
Yep, a cow.
AIDS/LifeCycle, of course, attracts all sorts of riders, from the very very fast, to slowpokes
like me. Some of the faster riders are in extraordinarily good condition, and in fact our fastest
cyclist biked all the way from Tennessee to San Francisco (!) to join up with us for AIDS/LifeCycle.
(I hope he’s flying home!)
At any rate, he’s Cyclist #5556, and, as might be imagined, is an extraordinarily fast rider.
In fact, yesterday he was the first cyclist into camp, arriving there in just two hours
(!)
However, today he was riding at his usual 35+ mph speed (a speed I only see when going down really
steep hills), and somehow (I’m still not quite sure how) hit a cow. And went flying.
Fortunately, he’s only slightly bruised (his sheepishness may be considerably more bruised),
but I’m still impressed that he managed to hit a cow, considering how fast-moving the critters
are. Pat Christen’s comment on this was, “So, Cyclist #5556 may be fast, but…”
Then again, we’d ridden 375 miles in 4 days. I’d say he’s got an excuse.
Which gets me to my own Day 5.
As you might imagine, riding three centuries and one 75-miler in four days is the sort of thing
that turns one’s brain to cottage cheese. The folks at AIDS/LifeCycle are perfectly well
aware of this, which is why you are issued two sets of dogtags at the beginning of the ride: one
tag with your tent number, which goes around your neck, and one hospital-style bracelet that goes
on your wrist and does not come off—it has to be cut off after the ride. This bracelet
identifies you by rider number, and gives the AIDS/LifeCycle emergency contact number. So, if
you mysteriously wind up lost in a coffee shop off the route (don’t laugh—you
try living four days without a latte), get smacked by a car door, or, say, hit a cow, you have
the number right there, the paramedics know to contact the ride organizers, and the farmer
knows who to sue. This is handy when dealing with confused cyclists.
So, by Day 5, I’ve more or less accepted that I will have the brains of a grapefruit, and
any small objects not chained to my cycling jersey will crawl away. Nonetheless…
Day 5 dawned bright and early—too early. I had been up late last night writing Day 4’s
journal, which meant that I really hadn’t had enough sleep. A cup or two of coffee didn’t
really help, so I staggered out to the ride start in my fabulous orange tiger jersey, sequined
sash, and metallic red tutu (for Day 5, “Dress in Red” Day), and blearily started
riding.
Now, on Day 4 I’d been having trouble with my left leg, all up and down the entire leg. I
had been stretching it, keeping it warm, and working out the knots, but kept having trouble. I
was also annoyed that my left shoe seemed to be “sticky” on the pedal. But I was running
behind, so I took off without looking into it more deeply.
Then I got shooting pains in my left knee, ten miles out of camp.
AIDS/LifeCycle is a great place to learn about pain, because there’s plenty of it. But there’s
really only two kinds of pain: the kind you ignore, and the kind that means STOP IMMEDIATELY.
Knee pain, as far as I’m concerned, is the latter. Knees don’t heal, so it’s
way better not to injure them.
So I slowed way down, pedaled gingerly for awhile, and, noticing that it was getting more irritated,
flagged down a sweep vehicle and went to the next pit stop, in search of Sports Med.
Ah. I haven’t talked about Sports Med yet, have I? I call them the Angels de Sade. Angels,
because they are fantastic about fixing muscle and joint problems. De Sade, because, well…let’s
just say that masochists are wimps. If you really want to experience pain, date a physical
therapist. Never in my life have I experienced anything near the sort of pain that Sports
Med hands out on a regular basis.
This is basically because overused muscles tighten up, and knot. So to restore muscle use, you
have to get the knot out. You can tenderize meat either by gently massaging it over a period of
days, to get at the knot—or you can beat on it with a hammer. Guess which method Sports
Med uses?
Yep. Their priority is getting athletes back out on the field (or on the road) now, so they dig
in as deeply as possible to get the problem fixed. The result is usually a couple minutes
of blinding agony followed by the discovery that your leg works again. Which is wonderful, in
a horrible evil sort of way. There’s almost always someone screaming in the Sports Med tent,
but they usually leave smiling.
At any rate, to cut a long aside short, Sports Med wasn’t at the next pit, so I went over
to Bike Tech to see if they could suggest saddle adjustments, to make things easier for the knee.
They suggested moving the saddle up, and I blearily grabbed the tools and started fixing it myself.
Somewhere in the process, I found myself staring at the pedal, and remembered the sticky foot.
I suddenly put two and two together, looked at the bottom of my shoe, and discovered that a cleat
screw was missing. Oh.
Bike fit is extremely important for LifeCycle, because even minor problems with alignment will
cause major problems later. One of the reasons I’ve been relatively injury-free this ride
is because my coach (Curtis Cramblett) fit my bike down to the millimeter—so I’ve
avoided many of the foot, leg, and neck problems the other riders have had. The missing cleat
screw had taken my knee very slightly out of alignment, straining all the muscles in the leg,
and finally doing in my knee.
This should probably have occurred to me, since the exact same thing had happened a few weeks earlier
in training. But, as I said, a tired rider has the brains of cottage cheese.
There’s not much else to be said about Day 5—I did finish out the day, pedaling very
gingerly, and Sports Med fixed most of the knots (ouch, scream, OW!!) this evening. I missed about
14 miles due to sweeping ahead to the first pit, but I’m still riding. I’m worried
about the knee—strain is strain—but there’s not much to be done about it, and
fortunately I caught it early. Thankfully, Day 5 was really short—less than 60 miles—so
it’s practically a rest day. Tonight is the Talent Show, then we’re back on the road
for two “short” days. More than halfway to LA!
Oh yes: despite my brain-dead state, I did not manage to hit a cow. So I still have my aspirations.
:-)
Day 6 (Friday, June 13)
Ah, Day 6.
Day 6 is traditionally the day when your week of fast living catches up to you. Up until then,
body parts are still introducing themselves individually, and can be reasoned with. On Day 6,
they get together and have a block party.
So the legs are seizing up, your butt is on fire, your shoulders hurt unbelievably, your hands
and feet are going numb, and your back is not happy. Fortunately, there’s also only
one more day to go, and you can survive anything for one more day, right?
Actually, I enjoyed most of Day 6.
Day 6 features my very favorite hill of all of AIDS/LifeCycle: a long, gradual climb in the morning,
through beautiful rolling hills (and lots of cows, although I didn’t hit any ;-) ), followed
by a thrilling descent through five miles of similarly beautiful hills.
In fact Day 6 is my favorite day, even though all the muscles are tightening: the scenery is beautiful,
the ride is mostly flat, and I’ve had a “rest” day on Day 5. We’re almost
to LA, the pit crews make an all-out effort on the costumes, and people are happy.
So after climbing up and down through the hills, we wound along the California coast, on the shoulder
of the 101 freeway, watching seagulls over the blue Pacific, admiring the surfers, and enjoying
a fantastic, leisurely view. We rode through Santa Barbara, including a beautiful coastal road,
turned inland for awhile, then rode along the coast for the rest of the day. I think it’s
the most beautiful day on LifeCycle.
The pit crews were also fantastic: one pit did “Heaven,” with angels strolling all
about, and another did “Space Aliens,” with ray guns and far-out alien costumes. Paradise
Pit—an unofficial pit put together by ALC supporters—served ice cream, and
at the water stop I bought and ate the best hot dog I’d ever tasted in my life. (You’re
not supposed to eat that kind of stuff while riding, but after four days of Clif Bars, bananas,
bagels, and oranges, I was not about to listen to reason.)
And, I was having fun with my costume. I’d saved my very best costume for Day 6. The hot
pink tutu from last year, with the same trashy pink fishnet stockings I’d worn the last
year, and a go-go-girl bikini top I’d bought in Bangkok—all sequins and sparkly dangles.
But the best part was the 8’ whip I’d borrowed from a friend, with pink ribbon wrapped
around and around, and two giant frilly pink roses on the handle. It was unbelievably silly, and
also very funny. People were giggling all day, and the pit closing captain borrowed the (frilly,
pink) whip to shoo people out at lunchtime.
Probably the funniest part of the day was just before lunch, though. I had blown out a tire somewhere
along the road—I mean really blown it, no hope of repair—and was standing by
the side of the road with my thumb out, waiting for a sweep to drive by. In a skimpy, sequined
go-go-girl top, a bright pink tutu, and cycling shorts.
Now, if you’re familiar with suburbia, you know that any time there’s a minor accident,
people slow down to rubberneck. Usually there is in fact nothing to see—which makes this
behavior all the more puzzling—but this costume was a traffic-stopper. I thought it was
hysterical, watching the cars slow down for a closer look—then I decided, what the hell,
let’s give them something to look at (and amuse my fellow cyclists, limping their way up
the hill). So I brought out the pink, frilly whip, and started waving that around.
Sadly for the fashion show, a sweep arrived almost immediately (they are very good about patrolling
the route), and they swept me into lunch, where the bike techs slapped on a fresh tire and got
me rolling again. (They really are very well-equipped; I have non-standard tires, but they
had them in stock.)
The rest of the day was more beautiful riding, relatively uneventful. The knee didn’t bother
me until near the end of the day…in the last ten miles, though, everything seemed to seize
up at once, so I’m off to Sports Med (scream, scream, agony, writhe, scream, AHHHHHH) to
get it taken care of. I think it’ll be OK, at least for tomorrow.
I love LifeCycle, as physically demanding as it is: it’s a very warm, welcoming community,
and it’s also a great challenge. It’s also good to meet some of the folks whom LifeCycle
benefits—the Positive Pedalers (who are a real hoot, at least the ones I’ve met),
people who have lost loved ones to HIV/AIDS, people who have friends or relatives living with
HIV. I’ll talk about that a bit more tomorrow, if I have time.
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