It's ok to get slower when you get older
Your max heart rate goes down, you gain weight, you develop health problems, your joints wear, you recover more slowly... it's ok. I'm not slow, I'm just enjoying the ride longer.
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The other nice thing about riding when older is that you think you are going faster than you really are!
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After a long marathon training run this morning, it became very apparent that I'm getting slower as I get older. Now, if you're doing an endeavor that relies on a machine/machines,
and you've been doing that endeavor for 40+ years, and there's been significant improvements to those machines over those 40+ years, you might get duped into thinking that you're turning back the clock on Ol Father Time. But leave the machines behind and go out and try some physical endeavor that doesn't rely on them, and reality will set in quick. |
Max HR really isn't a good indicator of power or your potential for producing power. When you get your heart healthy and all four chambers pumping with valves opening and closing at the perfect rhythm then blood moves more efficiently with less beats per minute. And more efficiently means more volume or gallons per minute going through your vascular system compared to a heart that isn't as healthy and not with all the chambers and valve working in perfect unison. LTHR will tell you more and that can be moved up or down, depending on how much you put into it.
The other things are a problem. But if you make time to deal with them they'll be less of an issue. |
I'm approaching my mid-50s and riding with guys in their 20s, 30s, and 40s, and there's nowhere to hide when you're the oldest guy in the group.
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Originally Posted by Iride01
(Post 23036387)
Max HR really isn't a good indicator of power or your potential for producing power.
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Originally Posted by Iride01
(Post 23036387)
The other things are a problem. But if you make time to deal with them they'll be less of an issue.
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It's ok to get slower when you get olderBut it is not ok. |
Originally Posted by terrymorse
(Post 23036565)
No, it isn't ok to get slower. It's inevitable, it's normal, it's a natural part of the aging process.
But it is not ok. |
Originally Posted by urbanknight
(Post 23036605)
Gee whiz, when *******s gather together to support and console each other, don't come in and rain on their parade.
My name is Terry, and I’m less-abled. [Edited for taste.] |
Originally Posted by terrymorse
(Post 23036623)
It’s also ok when invalids get together to discuss how much it sucks to be invalids.
My name is Terry, and I’m an invalid. |
I am retirement age, but I set attainable PRs and have fun with them. Despite being a year older I set a goal of beating my last-year's time to finish a particular route on a specific bike and I did it by .75mph, not much, and I did have newer tires and different pedal cranks installed on the bike, but I feel okay about it. Also did the same with another bike with no changes to the bike at all, maybe it was a good weather day or some other variable, but I was able to improve my average over a route by .6mph. Not huge accomplishments but at least I did not go backwards on everything from the previous year. Next year I will be thrilled just to get close to the miles or speeds I have this or last year, or maybe just to still be on two wheels as some I have known can no longer ride or have passed away. I did 160 miles in one week recently, a PR for the year and maybe last year too, not a goal but just happened. Also was able to go up a steel hill I regularly ride while remaining seated on my single-speed bike, nothing I had thought of but it just happened so I took note of it because I remember how hard it was to do the same hill even standing at the beginning of the season. At the beginning of next year's riding season I guess just still being on a bike will be the first PR of the year.
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I agree, it is not OK. Dylan Thomas had it right: "Rage, rage against the dying of the light." The fact that we get weaker is not an excuse to give up. It is not OK with me, not at all. I will fight, every inch of the way. This is what we do to keep our spirits up because yes, it sucks. Even though it sucks, we can still swing a hammer and we're not dead yet.
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Originally Posted by seypat
(Post 23036650)
Not in good taste. Same for the previous comment.
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Originally Posted by urbanknight
(Post 23036786)
Sorry, I was not trying to be offensive by injecting some self deprecating humor against myself. I definitely feel like an invalid riding with people a generation older than me yet they are beating me to the top of every climb. I was just trying to make light of the thread that claims you don't have to slow down when you get older, because some of us certainly don't have a choice.
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Originally Posted by urbanknight
(Post 23036786)
Sorry, I was not trying to be offensive by injecting some self deprecating humor against myself. I definitely feel like an invalid riding with people a generation older than me yet they are beating me to the top of every climb. I was just trying to make light of the thread that claims you don't have to slow down when you get older, because some of us certainly don't have a choice.
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Am I getting slower, or just taking riding less fast so I can enjoy the ride longer? Both I think.
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Originally Posted by mcours2006
(Post 23036397)
I'm approaching my mid-50s and riding with guys in their 20s, 30s, and 40s, and there's nowhere to hide when you're the oldest guy in the group.
I hide in the draft, and (at 60 yrs old) I don't feel bad about it. |
Originally Posted by freeranger
(Post 23036913)
Am I getting slower, or just taking riding less fast so I can enjoy the ride longer? Both I think.
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Originally Posted by Carbonfiberboy
(Post 23036724)
I agree, it is not OK. Dylan Thomas had it right: "Rage, rage against the dying of the light." The fact that we get weaker is not an excuse to give up. It is not OK with me, not at all. I will fight, every inch of the way. This is what we do to keep our spirits up because yes, it sucks. Even though it sucks, we can still swing a hammer and we're not dead yet.
But I do 'modify' that Intent much more than I did in much younger times. I'm no longer focused on Max Performance (haven't been there some time) . No Longer 'Dedicated' to a tight focus. I'm Dedicated to Max Joy, Exploration and Appreciation of everything around me, in my observable world (which includes that which isn't easily connected to). So 'Riding' now is a much bigger Universe. I ride for 'Improvement of my current self - even though it I'm clearly no where near what I was in prior days. I ride in Social situations, groups and indiividuals whom I might not have ridden with before. I ride to Enjoy the Camraderie of a group and the ride environs. ANd it's balanced quite a bit more with things "Not RIding'. So, in Honesty, even though I still "Rage, rage against the dying of the light.", it's measured and mixed and much wider vision of me. I'm OK with that, in fact, I feel so much more complete, more appreciative - a wonderful side of aging - finding Joy in your own, current skin. ...it's OK to work at the person you wish to become Ride On Yuri EDIT: In that, I'm 25 minutes away from heading to a Sunday ride in which I will get 'shelled' for sure, if not on the 1st climb, certainly the "hill of pain", that 3rd bump... ANd I'm looking forward to it ! And the conversation after, with my small stout ale in hand ! |
Originally Posted by urbanknight
(Post 23036786)
Sorry, I was not trying to be offensive by injecting some self deprecating humor against myself. I definitely feel like an invalid riding with people a generation older than me yet they are beating me to the top of every climb. I was just trying to make light of the thread that claims you don't have to slow down when you get older, because some of us certainly don't have a choice.
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Originally Posted by cyclezen
(Post 23037024)
I totally get this - it is also my Overall Plan/Intent/Daily Mantra.
But I do 'modify' that Intent much more than I did in much younger times. I'm no longer focused on Max Performance (haven't been there some time) . No Longer 'Dedicated' to a tight focus. I'm Dedicated to Max Joy, Exploration and Appreciation of everything around me, in my observable world (which includes that which isn't easily connected to). So 'Riding' now is a much bigger Universe. I ride for 'Improvement of my current self - even though it I'm clearly no where near what I was in prior days. I ride in Social situations, groups and indiividuals whom I might not have ridden with before. I ride to Enjoy the Camraderie of a group and the ride environs. ANd it's balanced quite a bit more with things "Not RIding'. So, in Honesty, even though I still "Rage, rage against the dying of the light.", it's measured and mixed and much wider vision of me. I'm OK with that, in fact, I feel so much more complete, more appreciative - a wonderful side of aging - finding Joy in your own, current skin. ...it's OK to work at the person you wish to become Ride On Yuri EDIT: In that, I'm 25 minutes away from heading to a Sunday ride in which I will get 'shelled' for sure, if not on the 1st climb, certainly the "hill of pain", that 3rd bump... ANd I'm looking forward to it ! And the conversation after, with my small stout ale in hand ! |
Originally Posted by seypat
(Post 23036316)
After a long marathon training run this morning, it became very apparent that I'm getting slower as I get older. Now, if you're doing an endeavor that relies on a machine/machines,
and you've been doing that endeavor for 40+ years, and there's been significant improvements to those machines over those 40+ years, you might get duped into thinking that you're turning back the clock on Ol Father Time. But leave the machines behind and go out and try some physical endeavor that doesn't rely on them, and reality will set in quick. |
A few decades ago I trained all season to race in time-trials and I got faster and faster as the season wore on. I was really excited about the last TT of the season because I had gotten pretty fast for someone on a classic 36-spoked standard round-tube steel bicycle, but a few days before the event I got a bad virus and although I still ran in the TT, it knocked about two mph off my top speed. This past season as an old man I got quite a bit of riding in and noticed I was a bit faster than the year before. So I was able to time myself on a really nice day on the old TT circuit at about the same time of year the race had been decades earlier and found I could go as fast as I did when I was young with a bad cold/flu. So I am still competitive with the me from decades ago, as long as it is the deathly ill one.
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Originally Posted by 88ss
(Post 23036686)
I am retirement age, but I set attainable PRs and have fun with them. Despite being a year older I set a goal of beating my last-year's time to finish a particular route on a specific bike and I did it by .75mph, not much, and I did have newer tires and different pedal cranks installed on the bike, but I feel okay about it. Also did the same with another bike with no changes to the bike at all, maybe it was a good weather day or some other variable, but I was able to improve my average over a route by .6mph. Not huge accomplishments but at least I did not go backwards on everything from the previous year. Next year I will be thrilled just to get close to the miles or speeds I have this or last year, or maybe just to still be on two wheels as some I have known can no longer ride or have passed away. I did 160 miles in one week recently, a PR for the year and maybe last year too, not a goal but just happened. Also was able to go up a steel hill I regularly ride while remaining seated on my single-speed bike, nothing I had thought of but it just happened so I took note of it because I remember how hard it was to do the same hill even standing at the beginning of the season. At the beginning of next year's riding season I guess just still being on a bike will be the first PR of the year.
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