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Bike Snob

Cycling Is Only as Hard as You Make It

Want to see more people on bikes? Get over yourself and the rest will follow.

Published: 
We're not saying cycling can't be hard. You can make anything hard and it鈥檚 human nature to do so.

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Cycling is easy鈥攔eally easy. In fact, cycling is so easy that it's the standard by which all other easy stuff is measured, hence expressions such as,聽“As easy as riding a bike” and, “It's like riding a bicycle, you never forget.” On the clich茅 scale of difficulty, the only activity that ranks lower than riding a bike is a walk in the park.

The main reason cycling is such a doddle is that the bicycle is probably the most efficient machine humankind has ever devised. Consequently, there鈥檚 a profound connection between bike and rider that . Once you learn how to ride a bike, the ability is something you can count on for the rest of your life, like flowers blooming in springtime or U2 releasing yet another album.

Hey, I'm not saying cycling can't be hard. You can make anything hard and it鈥檚 human nature to do so, which is why some of us do stuff like walk on hot coals or live in New York. Still, it鈥檚 worth noting that in order to make cycling hard they had to invent a 2,000-mile race that takes, like, half the summer and covers all of France. Compare that to something that's actually hard, like caber tossing, which you'll never pad out to three weeks no matter how you try. Even an Ironman is basically a tough swim and a marathon with a leisurely bike ride in the middle for recovery and sightseeing.

It's perfectly normal to want to believe what you're doing is hard, because it gives you a sense of accomplishment. When you spend day after day taking life鈥檚 crap it鈥檚 important to feel exceptional once in awhile, and some solid saddle time can give you just that. In this regard, cycling is the perfect balm for your self-esteem鈥攏ot because it鈥檚 hard, but precisely because it鈥檚 just the right amount of easy.

Cycling occupies a middle ground between the joint pulverization of running and the low-impact languor of golf, which means you can keep riding well into old age, yet you鈥檒l still get some actual exercise in the process. Not only will you be able to ride into retirement without having to get a hip replacement, but once you get there you won鈥檛 wind up just another .

Dirty Kanza? Hard. Great Divide? Hard. Your local group ride? Probably pretty hard. But riding a bike? Not even remotely hard.

But while a little bit of smug satisfaction can be a good thing, a lot of it can be toxic, and unfortunately there are too many of us riding around thinking we're elite athletes pushing ourselves to the very limit of human endurance as opposed to, you know, reasonably fit people enjoying some fresh air while riding a Specialized.

What happens when too many of us take our cycling too seriously is it fosters the delusion that other people couldn鈥檛 possibly do what we鈥檙e doing, too, and this has repercussions far beyond the insular world of recreational cycling. Consider bike share, for example. When Citi Bike launched in New York City in 2013 there was widespread speculation by tabloid pundits and 鈥avid cyclist鈥 types alike that the program would fail because the average schmuck couldn鈥檛 possibly survive riding a bicycle. a typical op-ed from the time, which predicted nothing less than 鈥渃arnage鈥:

Now, imagine introducing 10,000 new bicycles in Manhattan, Brooklyn, and Queens to the mix that will be used daily, but not by people who have had proper training riding through our rough and tumble streets. Nope, these bicycles will be ridden by novices, likely even tourists, who very well may be clueless about the flow of New York City traffic. This is the reality that will launch any day now with the introduction of the Citi Bikes bicycle share program to New York. (You're not in Kansas anymore!)

These prognostications couldn鈥檛 have been more wrong. Citi Bike turned out to be both wildly popular and perfectly safe, because鈥攕urprise!鈥攔iding a bike isn鈥檛 that big of a deal. By the time the system hit its five-year anniversary in May 2018, the system had seen something like 60 million trips, and to date there鈥檚 only been one fatality.

Now of course bike share is widespread, in no small part due to the success of Citi Bike, and today a city without a bike share program inspires the same sense of bemusement as a person still using a flip phone. However, as the shared mobility revolution enters its next phase, so too does the It鈥檚 too hard for people attitude. Across social media, some of the most vocal critics of shared e-scooters , and they make the same arguments we heard at the dawn of bike share: novices not schooled in advance paceline technique couldn鈥檛 possibly handle traveling short distances on tiny scooters. (Never mind the millions of toddlers who successfully do so every single day.)

As with bike share, there鈥檚 already evidence to suggest these scooter concerns are overblown. Nevertheless, the notion persists that navigating 21st century life without a car requires a level of athleticism beyond that of the average person, and it mires any meaningful policy discussion in an extra layer of bullshit. It鈥檚 difficult enough to overcome the retrograde attitudes of entitled motorists and the politicians who serve them; there鈥檚 no reason we should also have to trudge through the ego-driven objections of cyclists who really should know better.

Dirty Kanza? Hard. Great Divide? Hard. Your local group ride? Probably pretty hard. But riding a bike? Not even remotely hard. The idea that cycling is fundamentally difficult is behind an inordinate number of falsehoods and misconceptions that hold cycling in this country back: everything from 鈥淵ou can鈥檛 do it without safety gear鈥 to 鈥淵ou can鈥檛 carry groceries鈥 to 鈥淵ou can鈥檛 do it in snow/cold/rain鈥 to 鈥淵ou can鈥檛 do it with kids.鈥 It鈥檚 also why drivers think anyone out there on a bike is just having fun, and isn鈥檛 a 鈥渟erious鈥 road user like they are.

So go ahead and revel in self-inflicted pain, but never lose sight of the fact that riding a bike is still as easy as riding a bike.

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