Sunday, April 29, 2012

Lance's Lowest low before his Highest high (the Seven Tour-de-France victories, highest by any individual till date)


Lance's Lowest low before his Highest high (the Seven Tour-de-France victories, highest by any individual till date)

-- from his autobiography - "Its not about the bike"


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After Lance survives cancer he feels psychologically challenged, and starts wasting his life and even hates and evades cycling like the most wrong thing of his life. His wife (Kik) however was with him during this difficult period of his life, and finally made him get back on his bike. Lance was a champion one day racer, but not good in races that stretched over weeks, and this was before he was a victim to cancer. But it was a different story after he found his way back on to the saddle. He was a much better rider, and he was better at longer races, that stretched over weeks. In fact he became an all-round racer, and this helped him win the seven tours.


This post is an excerpt from his autobiography "Its not about the bike" which exhibits Lance's psychological state, and especially how Kik, Lance's wife, finally gets him back on his bike.


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"I don't know how much time I have left, but I don't want to spend it cycling," I said. "I hate it. I hate the conditions. I hate being away from you. I hate this lifestyle over here. I don't want to be in Europe. I proved myself in Ruta del Sol, I showed that I could come back and do it. I have nothing left to prove myself, or to the cancer community, so that's it."

I braced myself for her to say, "What about my school, what about my job, why did you make me move here?" But she never said it. Calmly, she said, "Well, okay."
...
I said, "This is what's wrong with cycling. It's not what my life should be."

"Well, let's get a good night's sleep, and wait a couple of days and then make a decision," she said.

The next day kik went back to her language school, and I didn't do a thing. I sat alone in the apartment all day by myself, and I refused to even look at my bike. Kik's school had a strict rule that you weren't supposed to take phone calls. I called her three times.

" I can't stand sitting around here doing nothing," I said. "I've talked to the travel agent. That's it. We're leaving."

Kik said, "I'm in class."

"I'm coming to get you. That school's a waste of time."

Kik left the classroom and sat on a bench outside, and cried. She had fought the language barrier for weeks. She had managed to set up our household, figured out how to do the marketing, and mastered the currency. She had learned how to drive the autoroute, and how to pay the french tolls. Now all her effort was for nothing.

When I arrived to pick her up she was still crying. I was alarmed.
"Why are you crying?" I said.

"Because we have to leave," She said.

"What do you mean? You're here with no friends. You can't speak the language. You don't have your job. Why do you want to stay here?"

"Because it's what I set out to do, and I want to finish it. But if you think we need to go home, then let's do it."

"I'm out. I'm not racing anymore"

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I was a BUM. I played golf every day. I water skied, I drank beer, and I lay on the sofa and channel surfed. I was given a second chance and I was determined to take advantage of it. But it wasn't fun. It was lighthearted or free or happy. It was forced. I tried to re-create the mood I'd shared with Kik on our first European vacation, but this time, things were different, and I couldn't understand why. The truth was, I felt ashamed. I was filled with self doubt and embarrassed by what I'd done in Paris-Nice. Son, you never quit. But I'd quit.

I know now that surviving cancer involved more than just a convalescence of the body. My mind and my soul had to convalesce, too . No one quite understood that - except for Kik. She kept her composure when she had every right to be distraught and furious with me for pulling the rug out from under her. While I was playing golf every day, she was homeless, dogless, and jobless, reading classifieds and wondering how we were going to support ourselves. My mother sympathized with what she was going through. She would call us, ask to speak with Kik, and say, "How are you doing?"

But after several weeks of the golf, the drinking, the Mexican food, Kik decided it was enough - somebody had to try to get through to me. One morning we were sitting outside on the patio having coffee. I put down my cup and said, "Well, okay, I'll see you later. It's my tee time."

"Lance," Kik said, "What am I doing today?"

"What do you mean?"

"You didn't ask me what I was going to do today. You didn't ask me what I wanted to do, or if I minded if you played golf. You just told me what we were going to do. Do you care what I'm doing?"

"Oh, sorry," I said

"What am I doing today?" she said. "What am I doing? Tell me that."

I was silent. I didn't know what to say.

"You need to decide something," she told me. "You need to decide if you are going to retire for real, and be a golf-playing, beer-drinking, Mexican-food-eating slob. If you are, that's fine. I love you, and I'll marry you anyway. But I just need to know, so I can get myself together and go back on the street, and get a job to support your golf-playing. Just tell me.

But if you're not going to retire, then you need to stop eating and drinking like this and being a bum, nd you need to figure it out, because you are deciding by not deciding, and that is so un-lance. It is just not you. And I'm not quite sure who you are right now. I love you anyway, but you need to figure something out."

She wasn't angry as she said it. She was just right. I didn't really know what I was trying to accomplish, and I was just being a bum. All of a sudden I saw a reflection of myself as a retiree in her eyes, and I didn't like it. She wasn't going live an idle life, and I didn't blame her.

'Okay," I said. "let me think about it."

I went to play golf anyway, because I knew Kik didn't mind that. Golf wasn't the issue. The issue was finding myself again.