Saturday, May 4, 2013

What is a journey?


One of my all-time favorite commercial is from Louis Vuitton, more for its creative rather than the product itself. Amidst haunting music from Gustavo Santaolalla, the voice over ponders – “A journey brings us face to face with ourselves; a journey shows us not only the world, but how we fit in it”. That has always stayed with me and I was reminded of it again on the MS weekend as I pedaled through the good parts, the difficult parts, the scenic parts and the dreary parts, parts that made me smile and parts that made me realize why I was doing this. As I came across riders with jerseys saying “I ride with MS”, the cause made even more sense. We do it to make this a better world one step at a time, in whatever little ways that we can. We do this because we are all in this world trying to find meaning and find our place in it. The BP MS 150 ride brought me a step closer to it.


Any first time rider could not have asked for a better weekend to do the ride. It was a chilly 40 degrees F with a slight tail wind. We had a great start with the Direct Energy Team sharp at 7:00 AM. With a quick check-in, photos and words of encouragement from the great volunteers we were off. I did curse myself for not getting the full gloves as my fingers froze for the first few miles. By the first rest stop it was all good. Never in my practice rides did I get any tail wind and therefore finding myself at the lunch stop at around 9:30AM was encouraging as well as a little disconcerting.

The rest of the distance for the day total of 88 miles was actually not that difficult. Maybe it was the adrenalin or maybe it was the crowd that made the distance go quicker. Talking about the ride itself, it is something that one needs to experience first-hand. People of all shapes, sizes and shades on bikes of every possible configuration riding in one huge mass for as long as you can see – riders with Tigger tails, plush kitties clinging to their jerseys for dear life, dressed in Minnie outfits. It’s a celebration!

We camped out with the Direct Energy Team at a RV park near La Grange which was a very cushy arrangement to say the least; including beer on tap which I realized does work as a pretty good recovery drink. 





It was a perfect day to camp too, in the middle of a ranch land amidst longhorns and a busy looking armadillo.



I had been pushing back on the idea of doing the Bechtel Challenge Route for day two even after being encouraged by a couple of friends. But the good ride on day one was convincing me that I should give it a try. Then someone conned me into believing that it was just 10 odd extra miles and the camp site we were on shaves off nearly 3-4 miles of the 10 miles. After getting a decent amount of sleep through the rather cold night, I was feeling pretty good apart from a slight cramp on my left shoulder. So at the start, when someone said let’s do the challenge route, I was immediately in.

Truly speaking, if I had researched the route I would not have done it. The fact that I did not even know that the route goes through a state park was to my advantage. Ignorance is bliss. Every hill in the park was an unknown and once I was able to absorb it, I had to collect the last ounce of will to climb. I thought of counting them at first and after a while I gave up. There were simply too many. I think it was somewhere in the middle, at the foot of a steep climb we could hear some beautiful bagpipe music but were not able to see where it was coming from. After chugging through the hill, the musician was finally visible dressed in all his Scottish finery and then I heard this rider who was next to me chuckle – “Oh! Its him, I thought I died and went to heaven”.

The challenge route made the ride extra special. I was happy to have done it. I would have felt disappointed if I had chosen not to do it. I was ending the ride into Austin with a little extra sense of achievement and the hilly terrain of the capital looked tame in front of what I had just endured. It also made me admire “pickle juice”. That is exactly what it is - salty brine from jars of pickle that tastes like flavored sea water, except it is saltier. But it is the best hydration available for riders. Cramping has been a perennial problem with me whether I am riding or running and with pickle juice I did not cramp at all. And you get them at H-E-B. As they say – you live and learn.

But any of this would not have been possible if I did not have all of you who supported, cheered, donated and wished well for me. Thank you. You all made it happen for me. The ride definitely changed a part of me forever… for the better.