Monthly Archives: July 2013

Prices Seem Awack

This entry was posted in Just Life on by .

I think it is kind of fun and interesting comparing prices of different things and services and seeing if they seem in line with each other. They never really do, but recently it seems completely out of line. Trying to compare the cost of gasoline to the price of food to the price of bikes and I have no idea where to start as a baseline.

I drove down to Dallas on Friday and yesterday went by Richardson Bike Mart. I wasn’t there to shop, but I don’t get into bike shops that often, so I looked around for a bit. It is amazing how much some stuff costs.

Bike shorts for example. There were way more shorts and bibs that cost over $100 than under $100. And many were nearly $200. Man, I could go through a few thousand dollars worth of shorts in a season at those rates.

There was a Specialized McLaren bike there with an $18000 price tag. That is the most expensive bike I’ve personally seen. You can buy a pretty okay car for that price. One with electric windows and probably even heated seats if you looked around enough. I would have a really hard time justifying buying that bike with all the other things available in the world that you could buy for nearly 20K.

Trying to compare any medical costs to regular life stuff is pretty impossible and seems stupid. I was charged $1250 for an x-ray of my collarbone when I tore up my shoulder in January. Or a friend told me about getting charged $1750 for some stitches in his knee. Those numbers are so out of wack that I can’t fathom how they got so screwed up.

Shopping at the market here they had a sale on bottled water. 24 for $1.97. They are 500 ml each. So you could get 219,289.34 bottles of water for the price of the McLaren. That is a lot of water. Around 55,000 gallons of water, bottled and delivered. The water seems like a better deal than the bike.

Also at the store they had these huge apricots. I don’t know the exact price of the apricot, but they were/are really good. I think they would end up costing about $2 each. That seems pretty expensive, being about the same cost as the water, but in the right circumstance, I could see getting one apricot for the 24 bottle case of water.

I’m going to eat Sunday brunch at the Dallas Country Club in a little while. I have no idea how much that is going to be, but it is going to be expensive on any scale. I’m sure I could eat get dozens of Grand Slams at Denny’s for the brunch. But you’re paying for the ambiance here, not the food. That is a hard thing to quantify.

I drove my Honda Insight down here. It gets around 50 miles per gallon. So for that same two dollars, I can travel close to 30 miles in the car. Gasoline seems too cheap to me. Traveling the 30 miles, carrying all my stuff is a much better deal than the apricot.

Anyway, I guess we all decide what we feel is the value of the things and services we purchase. I think it would pretty impossible trying to convince a non-cyclist that most the stuff we purchase to ride is a value. But, having those $200 at the right time can be a value.

This is a deal, for sure, in this day and age.

This is a deal, for sure, in this day and age.

This is an expensive bike.  Deal?  I'm not sure about that.

This is an expensive bike. Deal? I’m not sure about that.

Richardson Bike Mart is dog friendly.  You can't beat that.

Richardson Bike Mart is dog friendly. You can’t beat that.

The huge apricot.  Pretty great.

The huge apricot. Pretty great.

The guy in front of me shopping had this Mt. Dew.  It doesn't have any corn syrup.  It is made with sugar.  I don't know how much it cost, but he said that it wasn't nearly as sweet as normal Mt. Dew.

The guy in front of me shopping had this Mt. Dew. It doesn’t have any corn syrup. It is made with sugar. I don’t know how much it cost, but he said that it wasn’t nearly as sweet as normal Mt. Dew.

What Defines Us?

This entry was posted in Racing on by .

I’ve had the privilege of meeting a ton of very interesting people in my lifetime. Many people I would have had no opportunity to run in to if I wouldn’t have been a cyclist/athlete.

Really, most people are special. It doesn’t take fame or money or accomplishment to make a person interesting. But for some reason, we humans seems to have a fixation on meeting or following people we consider to be “famous”.

People become famous for a multitude of reasons. Accomplishments, money, looks, and a million more reasons. I’m not sure the exact reason, but we tend to become attracted to this people. Maybe attracted isn’t the right word, interested might better. Whatever the description, we tend to pay more attention to people we deem special.

I find if sort of weird we do this, even though I take part in it somewhat.

I remember watching the Madonna video Truth or Dare. It was pretty much a documentary of Madonna doing the Blond Ambition Tour. It really doesn’t matter what you think of Madonna as a singer or person. It shows you what the daily life is of Madonna. What I got out of it was that you couldn’t pay me enough or give me enough to trade places with her. Her life was a complete hassle.

I think that is one of the reasons that movie stars and musicians tend to always marry each other. They both live similar lives and have to deal with the same problems, so they have something in common right up front. I don’t think unless you are in their situations you realize how much it changes you and your mentality of life. I think it would be impossible to really know the feeling unless you lived it daily.

Anyway, I’m straying here. I think a lot of the reasons that I feel accomplishment in life is doing things that I thought were going to be very difficult to achieve. Not only in athletics but in all sorts of things. Even small tasks that have been in the back of my mind feel like a accomplishment when I finally get around to doing them.

Doing a job as best as possible should always bring out a feeling of pride/accomplishment. It shouldn’t matter if the job was as simple as washing your windows or as huge as overhauling your engine. Obviously, there are different levels of accomplishment, but doing either of these as best as possible should make you feel good.

For me, the struggle is a big part of the accomplishment. The harder the task at hand, the bigger the reward. I think many people remember their early experiences in life or sport so vividly because they had so little knowledge of what they were doing and thus when their challenges were met, they felt a huge amount of accomplishment. More so than years down the road when they know they have the ability, skills, and thus expectations. When you don’t have expectations, sometimes the accomplishment is that more sweet.

Toil is good for the human spirit. Sports and toil go hand in hand. I sometimes hate it during the Olympics when the media latches on to the personal lives of the athletes. Always a hard luck story. A parent that died, growing up poor, an accident. To me it is just life. We all experience these things.

What is one of the beauties of sports is that it doesn’t matter what the background is. It is the moment. You are there, competing against a bunch of other people and it only matters what you have on that very day, at that very moment. All the other baggage is just that, baggage. It is wonderful.

I don’t think that being an athlete necessarily defines me. We define ourselves I think. I do know that many things I have learned through athletics apply to my life “off the field”. And I don’t know how I would have gathered that information without cycling. It is lucky the sport found me.

think