In the middle of the journey of my life, I am--as always--a woman on a bike. Although I do not know where this road will lead, the way is not lost, for I have arrived here. And I am on my bicycle, again.
I am Justine Valinotti.
14 March 2011
13 March 2011
The Gates To The Seasons
Today I took out Tosca for the first time since the week before Christmas. In fact, this is the first time any of my Mercians have been out since then.
At Alley Pond Park, we got an interesting welcome:
The "gate" is in Alley Pond Park, near the Queens-Nassau line. I hadn't been there in a long time. In fact, the last time I was there, I was on a mountain bike. So were the three guys who were riding with me.
We didn't need--or, in my case, want--an open gate or door. We used to feel more drawn to entrances like this one:
We were young. They were guys; I was living as one--and trying desperately to show that I was one of them. We wouldn't talk about the signs of spring we saw or felt; the seasons didn't really matter. Nor did the quality of the light. Actually, I cared about that and other things I didn't talk about then.
At the end of the day, there was the day's ride and the bike. Some things don't change. In fact, even though I'm not and probably will never be in the kind of shape I was in back then, some things are better. That includes the ride and the bike.
Each of them has brought me to the gates of a new season.
At Alley Pond Park, we got an interesting welcome:
The "gate" is in Alley Pond Park, near the Queens-Nassau line. I hadn't been there in a long time. In fact, the last time I was there, I was on a mountain bike. So were the three guys who were riding with me.
We didn't need--or, in my case, want--an open gate or door. We used to feel more drawn to entrances like this one:
We were young. They were guys; I was living as one--and trying desperately to show that I was one of them. We wouldn't talk about the signs of spring we saw or felt; the seasons didn't really matter. Nor did the quality of the light. Actually, I cared about that and other things I didn't talk about then.
At the end of the day, there was the day's ride and the bike. Some things don't change. In fact, even though I'm not and probably will never be in the kind of shape I was in back then, some things are better. That includes the ride and the bike.
Each of them has brought me to the gates of a new season.
12 March 2011
On My Bike, I Know The Season Is Changing
Tonight's post on Girls and Bicycles reminded me that cycling is, above all, a sensual experience. After you've done some miles in the hills, any slice of pizza can seem like the manna from Heaven, and even the most ordinary cup of tea or bottle of beer (not that I've drunk the latter in a long time) can seem like the nectar of the goddesses.
And, in the course of a ride--even a commute or a short "shake off the cobwebs" ride at this time of year--the senses attune to the subtlest nuances of light and the finest variations of clarity and mist in the air.
The photograph you see was taken from a park near the Nassau County line. The ride there was flat yet invigorating. Perhaps that was the reason why I could sense, in every pore and orifice of my body, the play between the light that is opening from dimness to softness and the wind's inspiration turning the weariness of bare limbs stretched against gray skies into calmness that will turn to serenity as the clouds open for glimmerings of reassurance.
It's a wonderful feeling, even if it's momentary. But moments like that make rides and get you through the day, and night. Really, what other reason is there to ride a bicycle?
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