Holidays Blues

Highway to hellEvery year getting sick at the Holidays is easier for me to do than finding that perfect gift. Most of us will come down with some bug this winter. And if you have young kids in school or deal with the public the odds go up to 99.9%.

So let’s assume that all of your preventable measures (constantly washing the hands, not having kids, avoiding people…) went to naught and you catch something. What you get and how it progresses plays a big part with your life on and off the bike.

Because of the many things we can catch, I took the liberty of grouping them into three categories, based on severity and how we should address them as cyclists.

Group one: I feel something coming on (this can’t be good).
You can ride, but back off from hard or long rides. Let your body and mind fight the illness without adding to the stress from a hard training day. Doing so may gave you the best chance of not ending up in group 2 or 3. You will know soon enough if what was “coming on” is getting better or grabbing ahold. If you do feel better keep riding and progress back into normal training.

Group two: I’m sick (I hope it’s just a cold).

As hard as it may be, the best thing is to accept the fact that you are sick and you need down time. By backing off and resting you will give yourself a fighting chance to put a stop to the slide. I know from being there how hard it is to back away from training. But remember that it should be about getting better so you can benefit from the training you are doing.

Group 3: Not good, this sucks (this is what hell must feel like).
Staying off the bike is easy, who can think about riding when it’s hard just making it through the day. Now may be the time to see a doctor. It may be more than just a cold and you’ll heal faster if treated properly.

Bouncing Back (I’m dying to ride my bike)
So you are starting to feel like your old self and want to get back on the bike. First thing is to make sure you are not jumping back in too soon. One more day of rest will never hurt and may help in the long run.

The first ride back should be a “lets see how I feel” ride. Easy and alone with nothing more to it, than to see how the body reacts to some stress placed on it. If the fist ride back felt good, start easing back into your normal training. Do not fall in to the trap of trying to make up for lost days, going too hard, just to find yourself back at square one. Remember after a long illness it may take a week or more to get back to full strength. But you will.

Happy Holidays



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Holiday Nutrition

Surf the web and you will find a overload of information on nutrition for athletes during the Holiday Season. Most with the same good advice, don’t over eat, make healthy choices, etc. But none of the advice ever covers my problem about why I gain that extra 2 to 4 pounds. My weaknesses are Christmas cookies…the ones made with butter and topped with sugar icing in the shape of trees, stars or snowmen. It comes from the bad luck of growing up with a mom that was a great baker. And then being enabled by having two wives that could bake as good as mom (don’t go there). Many hours were spent with mom or my family in the kitchen making them from scratch. Cutting out shapes, tasting the dough and eating cookies hot out of the oven. As close to food heaven as I ever been.

As you can guess my problem is more that just the great taste. If it was only about taste I could stop and make a healthy choice like Holiday rice cakes. Or weigh my cookies like Lance. No, my problems stem from the emotional attachment (baggage good & bad) that goes with each one I eat. A mom that passed away to young, wives I’m not with and kids that are growing up so fast, are put aside by the memory of the happy times we spent baking during the Holidays .

So if you are like me and have that one or two poor nutrition choices that for whatever reason you can’t say no to in the Holiday Season, take solace in knowing you are not alone. So this winter I will keep riding and try to keep my weight gain to under three pounds. But I’m going to enjoy the Holidays and eat my fare share of Christmas cookies. It’s a lot more fun and less costly than a year of therapy.

If you are in need of advice on nutrition, please go to a local professional.

Happy Holidays

Socks and me

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