So last week I bought this new mountain bike and she's adorable and cool. I was all excited to ride her. She's mint green and built for a shorty like me and has less than 100 miles on her. Practically new.
I'm calling her Minty, per my friend English's suggestion |
We decided to go mountain biking on Sunday. Greg suggested a ride that he described as mellow and flow-y, and then sent me a link with a description.
I am a novice mountain biker. I have done it maybe 10 or 15 times in my life. I am a good athlete and always up for a challenge, but mountain biking can be scary and dangerous and it requires technical skill that I do not yet possess.
This ride would be like a total beginner skiing down a blue/black run after a few days of lessons. No one would recommend it.
So we decided on a local mountain that is definitely on the easy side. You climb up to the top of a mesa and then it's mostly flat and pretty easy. But it was still a little bit scary.
We started fine but then headed up a part of the trail that was a bit rocky. I have ridden on rocks before but it had been awhile and I don't have muscle memory built up for this sport the way I do with skiing. I was too much in my head and I couldn't remember what I was supposed to do. Within the first 5 minutes, I fell twice.
Which made me tense up and feel super anxious.
Which made me grumpy and disagreeable.
I caught up to Greg and said, "I think I'm going to sell this bike. I'm not enjoying this."
To be clear, I fully realize how idiotic and unreasonable I was being.
Predictably, he said, "WHAT??"
I grumped around and generally acted like a pill.
I felt stupid and incompetent. I felt like once again, I was in a situation where Greg was an expert and I was a moron who couldn't do anything right. He's better than I am at just about everything.
After a while, we made it to the western edge of the mesa where you can get off the bike and climb up for some great views of the front range. I was still out of sorts and I could tell that Greg was (understandably) annoyed with me.
But then when I got back on the bike, something clicked. My brain and my body remembered what to do. I started riding comfortably and realized how much fun it was. It was a beautiful day and everything was green and flowery from all the rain we've had.
When we got back to the car, I said, "that was fun!"
He gave me a look.
I acknowledged that I had been pissy and childish, and I apologized.
We decided to head to a local biker roadhouse - like, a legit biker place where everyone wears leather vests with their club's logo on the back and lots of American flag patches - to have some lunch. On the way, I told him the story of when I taught Josie to ride her bike. How crazy and unreasonable she was.
And then it hit me.
I had just recreated the entire experience.
Convincing myself that I couldn't do it? Check.
Getting on the bike and then lacking confidence and making mistakes as a result? ("I couldn't go - the rock was in my way") Check.
Acting like a crazy asshole? ("Mama, this bike is broken! It doesn't work! This bike is stupid!").
Lamenting that I was a loser? ("I ride like a baby and everybody thinks I'm stupid")
Figuring it out and exclaiming cheerily how great it was, thereby giving the people around me whiplash? ("Boy, I sure was complaining a lot, but now I'm doing really well")
Check check check.
I don't know why it had never occurred to me. My darling daughter, whom I had always thought of as taking after Jason, is just like me.
Or I am just like her.
Greg reminded me that it's a dangerous sport and that he respected the fact that I could do it at all. He reminded me that the hard part is what makes it great. It's something to be conquered.
He's right, of course.
I mean, I will still probably act like a crazy person sometimes. It would be boring if I didn't.
On the way home, we stopped and got ice cream.
As I told Josie all those years ago, ice cream makes everything better.