
The answer of course is that if you're traveling for work and your work does not actually require you to bring a bike along then you are not a professional cyclist. Therefore you do not need to train at all (much less in December) and certainly not while you're working. Does the blacksmith emulate the glassblower? Does the aardvark wonder how he can be more like the honeybee? Of course not. So why then does the accountant or the designer or the corporate consultant seek to ply the trade of another whilst he plies his own?
Of course, the correct answer to the VeloNews question is: "Don't train." Unfortunately, people are often unwilling to accept simple answers because they mistakenly believe that a short answer is an easy one, and that easy things have no value. (This urge to complicate simple things and make easy things hard is why people train in the first place.) Instead, they prefer an answer that involves equipment and formulae, and they want to hear that if they expend a lot of time and effort that would be better used either working or resting from work, six months from now they will have the fitness they need in order to be competitive at the amateur level.
Certainly, we should all aspire to be healthy. After all, our bodies are temples (or, in some cases, shopping malls). However, chasing the elusive state that cyclists refer to as "fitness" is as dangerous as chasing the exudate of the poppy or the creamy filling of the Oreo. Fitness is akin to intoxication, and when you're under its influence what was arduous seems easy and what was painful seems effortless. But like intoxication, it is also fleeting, and attempts to prolong it can ruin your life. One day, you're climbing at the front of the group ride, and the next you're in an Embassy Suites in Cleveland on a business trip, running up and down the stairwell at 4:30am. Indeed, cyclists find the state of fitness so seductive that when they're not actually pursuing it they're watching videos like this:
Certainly, we should all aspire to be healthy. After all, our bodies are temples (or, in some cases, shopping malls). However, chasing the elusive state that cyclists refer to as "fitness" is as dangerous as chasing the exudate of the poppy or the creamy filling of the Oreo. Fitness is akin to intoxication, and when you're under its influence what was arduous seems easy and what was painful seems effortless. But like intoxication, it is also fleeting, and attempts to prolong it can ruin your life. One day, you're climbing at the front of the group ride, and the next you're in an Embassy Suites in Cleveland on a business trip, running up and down the stairwell at 4:30am. Indeed, cyclists find the state of fitness so seductive that when they're not actually pursuing it they're watching videos like this:
PUSH PULL from Landis Fields on Vimeo.



Having summoned all of his strength, the cyclist then pounces from a footstool onto a drafting table like a housecat leaps from the floor onto the counter when he hears the can opener:


Followed by a pensive look, as though he's trying to figure out how many "S"s there are in the word "nonplussed:"


Meanwhile, he's still trying to figure out how to spell "nonplussed," and he's thinking so hard he's actually broken a sweat:

Finally he just says "Screw it!" and begins pedaling frantically:

The tire is smoking with the friction of a man thrusting himself against the very limits of his spelling ability:

In the end, he is spent and slack-jawed from the effort, and just decides to go with "WTF?" instead:

Speaking of bicycle fetishes and Danes, Mikael Colville-Andersen of Copenhagen Cycle Chic is once again the subject of a short film, this one by Streetfilms (the DreamWorks of smugness):


However, aerodynamic expert Steve Hed--who is so aero that his dimples are teardrop-shaped and his tears have dimples--is nonplused nonpulssed like "WTF!?!"

Speaking of which, another popular excuse for not cycling is bike theft, but one person may have that one licked and is proposing that thieves only steal "from rich people or from assholes:"


this was my bike, it was stolen (lorimer & metropolitan)
Date: 2009-12-14, 11:38PM EST
Reply to: [deleted]
this was my bike.
i rode over the bridge every morning to work.
i owned it for 3 months, and paid 70$ for it.
someone stole it last week, and i can't afford a new one.
now i have to ride the subway and i don't get the exercise and fresh air i need to live.
bike thieves are scum.
bike thieves ruined my day, my week, my month.
i want my bike back.
thieves should steal from rich people or from assholes.
not poor people who need their bikes to get around.
screw you bike thieves, i hate you.
i want my bike back.
if you have a bike you don't need, email me, cos i need one.
god bless eveyone who is not a bike thief.
But what happens when the Einsteins at M.I.T. release "Asshole 2.0?"


this was my bike, it was stolen (lorimer & metropolitan)
Date: 2009-12-14, 11:38PM EST
Reply to: [deleted]
this was my bike.
i rode over the bridge every morning to work.
i owned it for 3 months, and paid 70$ for it.
someone stole it last week, and i can't afford a new one.
now i have to ride the subway and i don't get the exercise and fresh air i need to live.
bike thieves are scum.
bike thieves ruined my day, my week, my month.
i want my bike back.
thieves should steal from rich people or from assholes.
not poor people who need their bikes to get around.
screw you bike thieves, i hate you.
i want my bike back.
if you have a bike you don't need, email me, cos i need one.
god bless eveyone who is not a bike thief.
But what happens when the Einsteins at M.I.T. release "Asshole 2.0?"