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-   -   My bike is a time machine... (https://www.bikeforums.net/fifty-plus-50/1007092-my-bike-time-machine.html)

Digital Gee 05-06-15 12:15 PM

My bike is a time machine...
 
It can take me all the way back to my early youth, when being on a bike was just about the greatest feeling of all. I felt free and powerful and fast and unlimited. I could go places that until the bike were completely unavailable to me on my own.

It can take me to a place without time, when it's just me and the bike out there, and I can really hear the sounds of the birds and the bugs, the wind through the rushes in the wetlands and the sound my tires make riding down the pavement. When it's like this, I don't know - and I don't care - what time it is. Feels like I could go on forever in that space between the past and the future.

It can take me back a scant ten years, when I first returned do to cycling after a thirty or more year absence. With my new bike, I can relive all the feelings of being new to cycling. I can marvel at how I can make the gears shift and make the hill a little easier. I can ride in awe of the absolute noiselessness of the bike - no squeaks, no unwanted clicks.

It gives me time - time to think, to puzzle something out, to ponder about the meaning of things.

It can even take me into the future, where I can see myself riding ten, fifteen, or maybe even twenty years down the line. I'm 64 (and a half, as the kids would say). Maybe (okay, probably) on different bikes, but each of them giving me pleasure and fitness, smiles and pleasure.

bobcat71 05-06-15 12:26 PM

Well and beautifully said! Thank you!

randyjawa 05-06-15 06:29 PM

Ah, the bicycle - let it release the child in you again. I did and I love it!

SammyJ 05-06-15 07:11 PM

Very well said!

mrFreel 05-07-15 05:39 AM

This is definitely what it's all about

Mike

qcpmsame 05-07-15 05:50 AM

Couldn't put it any better, or more accurately, Gee, thanks for the post.:thumb:

Bill

obed7 05-07-15 05:52 AM

I can relate to the feeling.

Jim from Boston 05-07-15 05:58 AM

My bike is a time machine...


Originally Posted by Digital Gee (Post 17781993)
...It can take me to a place without time, when it's just me and the bike out there, and I can really hear the sounds of the birds and the bugs, the wind through the rushes in the wetlands and the sound my tires make riding down the pavement. When it's like this, I don't know - and I don't care - what time it is. Feels like I could go on forever in that space between the past and the future.

Usually I ride familiar roads with a particular destination and schedule. When I do an organized ride, where someone else plans the route, and my schedule is just to finish, it’s enjoyable to become lost to time (of day) and space.


Originally Posted by Digital Gee (Post 17781993)
...It gives me time - time to think, to puzzle something out, to ponder about the meaning of things....


Originally Posted by Jim from Boston (Post 17762904)
… mostly my thoughts on the road are about work, family and more immediate issues; sometimes even composing posts to BikeForums in my head. On occasions I might ponder and give thanks for the Existence of Life and the World…



rydabent 05-07-15 12:10 PM

A bicycle is a time machine because it slows down time and aging. When I was a kid I rode everywhere and to school. Mid life I didnt ride much, but when my oldest boys got old enough to ride in the mid 80s I took up riding with them, and have been riding ever since. I will be 77 this year, and am very fit. I ride about 30 miles every other day. While genes have something to do with it, I credit biking for keeping me in good shape.

SammyJ 05-17-15 02:28 PM

May I copy this to my blog, with due credit?

Matariki 05-17-15 03:58 PM

If you don't mind, I plan to print out and put on the board in my office.

Digital Gee 05-18-15 01:06 AM


Originally Posted by SammyJ (Post 17812893)
May I copy this to my blog, with due credit?

If you mean my post, by all means. :)

Digital Gee 05-18-15 01:06 AM


Originally Posted by Matariki (Post 17813128)
If you don't mind, I plan to print out and put on the board in my office.


I'm honored, actually. Thanks.

peterws 05-18-15 04:26 AM

That`s so similar to my experience. Got back on the bike when I was 41. They had index gears by then. I got a bottom end mountain bike (still wasn`t cheap then) and used it for work and riding over the hills in my area. AQlso some I couldn`t manage when I was 16 or so.

I`m 66 and can still do those hills and enjoy it every time. You think your own thoughts; not all good. . . I`ve succeeded blowing up the Houses of Parliament where Guy Fawkes failed, and (by the time I get home) I sometimes realize the futility of this . . (English Shrug)

Have fun Longer on a Bike!

Dudelsack 05-18-15 05:13 AM

When you think about it, everything you said about bikes can also be said of ducks.

CrankyFranky 05-18-15 06:31 AM

But is a duck a transcendental utensil? :innocent:

a77impala 05-22-15 05:31 AM

When I m on a bike I am emotionally and physically renewing my self! I am a teenager in a 70 year old body that can ride 75 miles and still be smiling!
I only hope I never reach the point where I look at a bike and don't want to ride!

Hoopdriver 11-13-18 03:04 PM


Originally Posted by Digital Gee (Post 17781993)
It can take me all the way back to my early youth, when being on a bike was just about the greatest feeling of all. I felt free and powerful and fast and unlimited. I could go places that until the bike were completely unavailable to me on my own.

It can take me to a place without time, when it's just me and the bike out there, and I can really hear the sounds of the birds and the bugs, the wind through the rushes in the wetlands and the sound my tires make riding down the pavement. When it's like this, I don't know - and I don't care - what time it is. Feels like I could go on forever in that space between the past and the future.

It can take me back a scant ten years, when I first returned do to cycling after a thirty or more year absence. With my new bike, I can relive all the feelings of being new to cycling. I can marvel at how I can make the gears shift and make the hill a little easier. I can ride in awe of the absolute noiselessness of the bike - no squeaks, no unwanted clicks.

It gives me time - time to think, to puzzle something out, to ponder about the meaning of things.

It can even take me into the future, where I can see myself riding ten, fifteen, or maybe even twenty years down the line. I'm 64 (and a half, as the kids would say). Maybe (okay, probably) on different bikes, but each of them giving me pleasure and fitness, smiles and pleasure.

I was moved by this post when I read it 3 years ago so I did a search to read it again. I think it deserves resurrection so that those who may not have seen it back then can enjoy it.

Digital Gee 11-13-18 03:28 PM


Originally Posted by Hoopdriver (Post 20661765)
I was moved by this post when I read it 3 years ago so I did a search to read it again. I think it deserves resurrection so that those who may not have seen it back then can enjoy it.

Thank you for this. I'm glad it "spoke" to you! These days, I haven't been on this forum in a long, long time. These days, I'm happily cycling on my TerraTrike recumbent trike in Reno, Nevada and still loving getting out on (3) wheels. :)

thehammerdog 11-14-18 09:57 AM

1994 mongoose rockadile
 
Love my old school mtb fresh paint from back in the day https://cimg8.ibsrv.net/gimg/bikefor...572e4e5fb.jpeg
Old school mtb gwbridgr
https://cimg9.ibsrv.net/gimg/bikefor...bbcc9fe0a.jpeg

Old school mtb museum natural history


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