12.18.2009

Cyclocross Nationals - Bend Oregon!


Sleep comes with difficulty.  The road rash decorating my hips and elbows alerts me to even the slightest movement against the bamboo sheets.

Between these harsh awakenings, I dream of an asphalt corner, covered in ice.  The same backdrop repeats itself in my mind, but the movement in the foreground changes. 

I am riding the Cyclocross Nationals Course, lap after lap. 

Lap one I am railing the corners and the off-camber sidehills; I make not a mistake, lose not a second, I ride the course clean and smooth.

Lap two I make mistake after mistake.  I brake where I shouldn’t, I take bad lines in the corners, I slide down the stairs.  I am a disaster.

If the road rash hasn’t woken me by now, my nightmare does.

I am restless and uneasy; I think back to events that have transpired just a few short days ago.  While some memories are clear and vivid, USA Cyclocross Nationals as a whole seems like a milky daydream.

Lap One: Friday – Master Women: 30-34



It is Friday afternoon.

I stand on the starting line, waiting for the gun.

I have dreamt about this moment.
I have trained for this race.
The next 40 minutes will be a test of physical ability and mental toughness.  An all out, nothing to lose, put-it-all-on-the-line kind of race.

The sun is out and the earth is starting to thaw from a deep artic frost.  The course is lined with spectators. 

I stand in the 2nd row; called up behind some of the strongest women in the sport.  We wait, listening to instructions and preparing for the start of the Women’s Masters 30-34 race.


The gun fires, shoes the clip into pedals, quadriceps engage, pavement moves swiftly beneath the pack of riders.

I make the first turn, narrowly avoiding a pile-up and standing up to chase the lead group.  2 minutes into the race I hit the hard, froze ground on an icy corner, swear out loud, but recover quickly.  After that, I don’t remember much.  The am racing against some amazing women.  Perhaps, one day, I will be one of the amazing among them.


Lap after lap, I am passing girls.  The crowd on the other side of the tape is like nothing I have ever before experienced.  Voices, familiar and unknown, are yelling my name.  I know I am in 13th place, only because someone is counting and lets me know as I ride past.  I do not know how many laps we have ridden, nor how many more we have to ride.  It doesn’t matter.  My legs are strong, my breath under control, my eyes focused on the course ahead of me.  I am continually gaining ground on the girls in front of me.  I pass Emily Van Meter and get a gap.

With two laps to go, I finally look at the lap counter as I ride beneath it; just behind Kristi Berg. 

A smile begins to creep up into my throat when I realize I am riding my way into the top ten.  I am gaining ground on Kristi, who is currently in 6th place.  On the backside of the course, I attack on the hill.  I pull in front of Kristi, holding on to the lead for all of about a minute.  When she launches a counter attack I can’t hold on.

The final lap is as blurry as the pervious five, but as I round the final corner, head down, pushing toward the finish, I am glowing.  I have just ridden my best race of the season. 

7th place is what the official results report, but I feel as though I have just won.   Ben is at the finish line, along with my father.  The smile on my face tells the story the best and thanks to PDX Cross, it was captured beautifully. 


I find Veronica; an amazing women with so much to teach me and pummel her with a bear hug.  Team Sunnyside was well represented on its home turf.  

For the first time all season I don’t second-guess the race.  I don’t think about what I could have done better or what mistakes I made.  I am just happy and enjoying the moment.  I am elated.

Lap Two: Sunday – Elite Women

Sunday I lined up with (or better said, behind) the best women cyclocross racers in the country.  The first row was stacked: Katie Compton, Amy Dombroski, Mary McConneloug, Meredith Miller, Sue Butler and Alison Dunlap to name a few.


The number pinned to my skinsuit was 55.  I started right in the middle of the 105 rider pack.

Two weeks I wrote, Stepping up to that line will be the true test of my commitment to cycling; my commitment to improvement; my commitment to myself.

I had stepped up to that line and before the gun was even fired, I felt like I had accomplished something.  I
had earned the honor to be standing among these women. 

Hands in position, butt on the saddle, right foot in the pedal, left foot pointed, stretching to the ground.  The gun fired and the sprint for the hole shot was on.

The first few laps unfolded brilliantly.  I felt like I had just picked up where I left off on Friday.  All I could hear was muffled noise.; my name being shouted by unidentifiable voices.  I saw only the course, the girls in front of me, the stairs, the barriers, changes in terrain. 

I was focused and racing on the edge.  I was following Ben’s advice, Race like you’re crazy.

Working to pick off the girls in front of me and to hold off the ones behind, I rounded an icy asphalt corner like I was invincible.  Before I could comprehend what was happening, I was back on my bike.  Right arm and hip on fire, right brake lever bent inward making braking difficult, shifting almost impossible.  An attempt to correct the damage failed and remembering I had a bike and crew in the pit, I relaxed and hammered the pedals toward the pit. 

The rest of the race was a cluster of errors and miscalculations; a pit bike I was unable to shift, another fall, failing confidence, a lap of my own personal hell, visions of quitting, seeing girls in front of me that I hadn’t finished behind all year. 


After each calamity I chased to reclaim my position, but after having to replay this sequence one too many times, I couldn’t make up all the ground I had lost. 

The final lap and finish line came as a torturous, yet welcome relief and the commencement of my cyclocross season.  The finish shoot was crowded.
With eyes toward the ground and bleeding elbows, I made my way to the back fence. 

Face buried in my hands, I burst into tears.  I forgot about all the accomplishments of the season.  I forgot about the honor of racing with the elite women.  I forgot about the sacrifices and support of my family and friends. 

I could only cry; thoughtlessly, selfishly, and self-pitying.  Ben and Mom found me; wrapped up in my own self-wallow.  I had failed.  I had disappointed. 

But only in my own mind.  No one else was disappointed, no one else saw me as a failure.  They loved me just the same. 

I finished 52nd in the Women’s Elite Nationals Cyclocross Race, with mishaps and mechanicals.  Get over yourself.

The lessons from Sunday’s race are slow to sink in, but with each passing day I see them more clearly.  The smile that covered my face on Friday afternoon is reappearing and I am reminded of the accomplishments of the year. 

There is a fine line between racing on the edge and stepping onto the other side.  Without flirting with that line, full potential will never be achieved.  On Sunday I found that line, road right on it, and then, stepped over.  I will be a better cyclist because of it.

12.10.2009

Tomorrow is a big day.



It’s not time to get nervous.  But nervous I am getting.

Tomorrow is a big day for me. 

How big, you ask?

Tomorrow is the day I have been thinking about since March.  
The idea occurred to me on a bone-chilling ride up Skyliner Drive.  
Cyclocross Nationals – I want to be a part of that.

I road all spring and summer; attempting to race a road bike. 
Learning I had a lot to learn.
Learning to push pedals and spin wheels is easy; racing a bike is a whole other ball game. 

I started skills practice in early August.
My stutter step is all-but-gone. 
I have driven to Portland just about every weekend this fall.

I am no different than any other lover of cross. 
Sacrificing late Saturday nights and lazy Sunday mornings. 
Spending the “date night” money on race entries or new pedals.

Tomorrow I will stand at the starting line of my first Cyclocross Nationals Race.
Looking around I will see only familiarity; but I will feel something new.

I am uncertain of all the thoughts that will run through my mind right before the gun sounds, but
I hope to clearly see the experience for what it is; an honor to be riding my bike and a chance to race like I am crazy.

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All You Wanted To Know About Cyclocross

(But Were Afraid To Ask)


The days are growing shorter, the air smells a bit more like autumn than it does summer and the first snow has fallen in Bend, Oregon.  To many outdoor enthusiasts, these signs point to the not-so distant future when snow covers Mt. Bachelor, pre-dawn hours are spent lapping the cone and “sick days” are full of powder shots and Northwest runs.  But to a niche group of cyclists who somehow get their kicks from 45 to 60 minutes of pure pain, the early setting sun and cool evening breeze means just one thing: Cyclocross season. Read More

12.06.2009

The road is long - Cyclocross Nationals, Writing, and the PeterPan Syndrome


I will be 31 years old in January.  And finally, at least for today, I have figured out what I want to do with my life.  I want to write and I want to ride my bike. 

I want to write, to inspire, to motivate.  I want to submit the edge-of-your-seat, nail-biting stories that publications like Women’s Adventure and Wend and Outside can’t get enough of.

I want to ride my bike, to pedal, to sweat, to feel the pain and the pleasure that comes with stepping up to the line and riding all-out for no less than one hour.

When broken down to the lowest common denominator, cycling and writing aren’t so different.  
To excel, to succeed; I just have to put myself out there.

I want to perfect an article or execute my finest race and then, get thrashed.  
Beaten down, torn apart.  
I want an editor to get out the red pen.  
I want my coach to raise the bar.

I want to suffer and sacrifice and then, slowly, with care and gentle masseging; rebuild, restructure, and rebirth the stories I once thought magnificent, the legs I once thought were strong enough.

The road is long.  Improvement and strength come from commitment, dedication, failure, sacrifice and a dash of lunacy. 

My first big test is now.  
USA Cyclocross Nationals…just one week away.  
Am I ready for knowledge and development that will come from racing at this level?

I say I want to get thrashed, but am I ready to get lapped in front my friends, family, and all of Bend? 

Stepping up to that line will be the true test of my commitment to cycling; my commitment to improvement; my commitment to myself.      

A friend ask me yesterday if I was “stoked” for Natz.  
Stoked….well, excited for sure.  Nervous, under-trained, over-trained, tired, lazy, scared out of my mind!

It is hard to mentally prepare to get lapped, racing for top 35 instead of top 10, getting creamed.

I watched a video interview of Mary McConneloug last night, filmed before the US MTB Championships this summer... she was calm and confident and smiling.  She didn't seem a bit nervous, not a bit worried about how she would perform.  She was confident that she would give all her body would allow on the given day.  
She was just a regular person, sitting in a coffee shop, talking to a friend (with a video guy in the background).

Does she know that there are kids like me, plagued with the Peter-Pan Syndrome, that want to grow up to be like her?

Do Katie and Amy and Georgia know that their pictures fill the training journals and bedside-table drawers of local top-5 racers?

What would it feel like to know you had a chance at the hole shot, a possibility of standing atop the podium, that zipping into the jersey with the stars and stripes wasn’t far from reality?

What will it feel like to stand next to those women one week from today?

For me, cross is a money-sucking addiction, a hobby that fills my weekends and free-time, a passion that brings a smile to my face.
For these women, it is who they are, their passion, their livelihood.

When I contemplate the feelings that will fill my mind as I stand on the line and prepare for 45 minutes of wonderful, torturous bliss, I realize how crazy it is that I have the honor to, for just one split second, as the gun goes off, be racing with my idols.

12.03.2009

A fine Line - Cyclocross Nationals and the Portland USGP


There is a fine line between excitement and nervousness; pain and pleasure; dedication and obsession.

24 degrees.  Windproof tights, 2 jackets, warm gloves. 
45 second intervals – all out efforts. 
Why are the last 3 seconds always the hardest?

Quads burning, lungs experiencing equal pain. 
Each inhale is a reminder of the ambient air temperature.

It is December; it is cold, and I am doing the intervals that will make me stronger, tougher, faster.

I roll back to my invisible starting line; ready to repeat 45 seconds of pedal-turning bliss.


What are you thinking?

These races are different.  I will not be racing to win. I will be racing to survive. 

I will be racing for the experience of lining up with the likes of Katie Compton, Amy Dombroski, Alison Dunlap, and Georgia Gould.

I will stand on the line, honored that I can pretend to chase these ladies around for three-quarters of an hour.

I will race as hard and as fast as my legs will allow; I will remember the time and effort and support Damian, Don, Ben and Team Sunnyside have given me. 

I will race because I love it. 
I will race because it makes me smile. 
I will race because somewhere deep down, I can’t seem to draw the line between love and hate, dedication and obsession, pleasure and pain.

Last night I got some advice from Ben; the person who knows me better than any other being on earth:

Race like you are crazy.