5 Things to Do If You Come Up on an Injury by Bike Ambassador Tom Stott

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Injury. Is there any scarier word for the endurance athlete? Over the years as a cyclist and runner, I’ve personally worked through a number of injuries, and I’ve helped people rehabilitate from countless proximal hamstring strains, piriformis irritations, iliotibial band restrictions, and thoracic & cervical spine pains. It’s a nightmare-turned-reality situation that can surface, seemingly, out of nowhere. Whether it’s at the ankle, knee, hip, lower back, shoulder, or neck, an inflammatory process can derail our training plans and send us spiraling down a hole of depression.

After more than an entire year of social distancing, safety precautions, and solo workouts, many of you are likely carrying some momentum behind you. Maybe you even feel fit! Then, like a sock full of quarters, you wake up one day to the reality that you can’t put your foot on the ground without extreme pain in your arch. *cue the really sad trombone slide whistle* For the unforeseeable future, your life is going to look vastly different. The hours you spend training and producing pleasure-enhancing brain chemicals will seem like an unfillable void in your life. Here’s what you should do if you find yourself in a spot of bother.

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1) Talk to your close friends. If you can meet them up for a walk, do that. If you are not ambulatory at the moment, meet them up for tacos. The point is that, when injuries arise, we often crawl into seclusion. While time for reflection is an important part of the process, communication and human contact are pivotal for our psyche. SPECIAL ATTENTION to all of you men out there, as we’re historically terrible at conveying our feelings and both asking for and accepting help.

2) Plan what you want to do coming back from your injury. While this might seem a little frustrating at first, setting your sights on what you want to do is as important as setting a goal for a race. Focusing forward on the positive sets the intent for healing and will help ground your (temporarily less-active) brain.

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3) Do something on your life checklist that you never get to do because you’re always busy training. Frame some inspirational posters and put them up in your training space. Paint an accent wall or put up a decorative stencil in the room where you do most of your relaxing. Clean out a part of your closet or dresser and organize your training gear, so that you’ll be more efficient when you get ready to head out the door in the future. Find a way to be beautifully productive. 

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4) Breathe and accept the situation for what it is. Can you still be pissed off? Ab-so-freakin-lutely! Should you dwell in self-pity and sorrow for more than a finite amount of time (depending how how quickly you process things)? Most definitely not. Adding stress about being stressed that you can’t do the thing that helps destress you will only cause you more… well… stress. Instead, try to alleviate your frustrations through outlets that work for you.

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5) Nail the mental piece to training your body. As endurance athletes, the physical body is what we nail when executing a training plan. The mental side of things? That discipline can usually use at least a little bit of work. While you may not be able to satisfy your craving for those delicious endurance endorphins, you can still provide your self with some love. One of the most self-rewarding human experiences occurs when you show gratitude and appreciation toward others. Take a moment to handwrite a letter to a friend, a training partner, a mentor, or a coach. Express how they helped you grow, either as an individual, as an athlete, or both! I’ll leave it up to you as to whether or not you want to send it. ;) Looking for something more passive in nature? Help soothe your autonomic nervous system and relax your reptilian brain with some guided meditation. Hop on Amazon Prime or YouTube and find a 20-minute routine that will provide a backbone for you to temporarily “check out.”

In my 20+ years of working with endurance athletes, I have yet to meet one that hasn’t had to overcome adversity in the form of a comeback from injury. From my experience, if all rehabilitation methods & recovery strategies are equal, the biggest separator that determines how fast an athlete bounces back easier/smoother/faster is the resilience of the individual’s mind. Find something from the list above that peaks your interest and start there. Build that bridge to recovery!

Bike Ambassador Team Blog: Commuting Delivers Daily Joy

Guest Blog post by I-Ling Thompson, Bike Ambassador

More than Miles, Bike Commuting Delivers a Daily Dose of Joy

Just shy of two years ago, we decided to move from the trail mecca of Golden, Colo. (complete with across-the-street trail access) to Denver. While I loved having trail access out my front door, I found climbing in a car to go anywhere exhausting and tough on my carbon consciousness. We found a darling, yet woefully dated bungalow in West Highland that offered a #ridemoredriveless daily lifestyle, shaved my daily commute to 15 minutes by bicycle, and served up plenty of renovation projects to keep us busy.

Our first year was hard – city life was dramatically different than rural Golden. The parking hassles, the noise, pavement everywhere…despite my best intentions to ride everywhere, I found the adjustment to city life difficult and old car habits were hard to break. Add to that my work and travel schedule kept me off the saddle and behind a desk more than ever…the days of carefree riding, simply opening my garage door to roll out on canyon roads or dirt felt foreign and beyond distant.

Interestingly, I found a daily dose of sanity by reaching for my bike to make that 15-minute commute to work. I chose between bikes lanes, bike paths and neighborhoods roads to pedal out the day before and behind me. And despite traveling upwards of three weeks a month, I strapped on my helmet to commute 96 times. The simplicity of grabbing my bike to go to work, dinner or the grocery store is indescribable. My commute became my joy and the system of bike paths around Denver, my new stomping grounds. I finally invested in a cruiser bike, complete with rechargeable lights, a rear wheel lock, fenders, a basket and a grocery getter pannier. The neighborhood was an old friend now, and I knew it’s streets. It wasn’t the foothills of Golden, but it was pretty awesome.

When my second spring rolled around, the quiet streets of West Highland blossomed into an entirely new neighborhood. My morning commutes were fragrant with spring flowers, and train of commuters on my route home brought familiar comfort when my days ran into darkness. I was now going days without moving my car. I added Lyft, walking and begging rides from hubby to my commute mix.

Even bigger this year, my hubby and I took our first cycling vacation. Rather than rent a car, we explored Norway by bike for eight days. The experience of riding our bikes in a foreign country, along quiet roads and boarding ferries to cross a fjord was indescribable. Sitting in a fruit stand to have lunch before pedaling to the next town...pure joy.  

I also found peace with merging my professional job + commuting. I don’t have a shower at work, so the struggle with hair + sweat management + outfit selection is real. I embraced the side ponytail to make my new post-helmet hair manageable and slowed my pace to avoid glistening. I tested my “professional” wardrobe and found that most everything was bike-friendliness for the time/distance required for my commute.  Despite my crazy travel schedule, I managed 92 commutes and 331 rather stylish miles by bike, if I do say so!  

If 2017 taught me anything, it’s that a commuter mindset happens in small, every day actions, not just the bold ones. I'm so grateful for my commuter team..this team is comprised of women from all backgrounds...medical, executives, lawyers, nonprofit leaders, small business owners and mathematicians. Despite their full schedules, these ladies stay committed to the bike commuter lifestyles they want to lead and remind me of the possibilities, joy and experiences to be had by bike. It would be very hard to trade in this lifestyle, given the freedom and hours of car-free life I’ve taken back. 

So here's to 2018! I'm ready for the adventures you have in store!