From Kansas

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I’ve never thought much about being from Kansas. When I first started racing, no one I raced with had ever been or even considered going to Kansas. I convinced a bunch of other juniors that here in Kansas we only had 2 paved roads and one stop light where they intersected. I also convinced them that the showed the Wizard of Oz every Friday night and most of the people watched it.

A couple years later, I got good enough to ride the Red Zinger/Coor’s Classic. It was thought of as a mountainous stage race by most everyone including the fans. Usually the prologue was a short climbing time trial. When they would call me up to the line and announce my name and hometown, the crowd would instantly get loud, mainly laughing. I guess it was amusing to them, thinking that I was from a place, where they presumed, was the flattest place on the planet.

Flash forward am a bit, I started racing the full time MTB circuit. If I thought the response I received at the Coor’s race from the spectators was loud, it was nothing compared to being announced as the first Mountain Bike National Champion from Kansas. After many races, strangers would come up to me, saying the weirdest things. Like, “We only stopped by to see what was going on, but when they announced you were from Kansas, we stayed to the finish to see if you could finish.”

I’ve heard it all. Driving back through the border control from Canada, the woman asked me where I was from and I said Topeka, Kansas. She said, “Oh, I’m sorry.” That was about the worst I’ve heard.

I once asked some friends, I had known for a long time, if they thought it was strange I lived in Kansas. There was a hesitation, like they were thinking about whether it would hurt my feeling, but then they all said yes. It surprised me. I thought it would have come up in conversation sometime previously. I sort of understood, though. I don’t know many people from Alabama or Dakota and haven’t really spent much time in either place, so if I hung out with someone from either of those states, I’d have some questions.

Kansas isn’t all that flat. At least Eastern Kansas isn’t. Western Kansas that morphs into Eastern Colorado is long and flat. Eastern Kansas has glacial deposits, so it is pretty hilly. All big ring climbs, but lots of hills. Just check out Strava for some of my rides. We usually get about 500-800 feet of climbing every 10 miles. That isn’t flat.

And Kansas doesn’t have the winters of Minnesota. The coldest day of the year is January 10th and the average daily high is 37. Don’t get me wrong, it could be -10 that day also, but our winters are fairly mild compared to many states North of us. There are normally only a handful of days in the winter that I can’t ride my road bike. And for that matter, the summers aren’t like Texas. It is hot here, but nothing like Texas that can easily get over 100 days of 100 degree temperatures.

I got thinking about all this because of my trip to Seattle. I travel a lot. And get to go to really great places all over the country and world. And I look at these places as a visitor. I only see the great aspects of the area and ignore the downsides. Off course I recognize obvious “problems” like huge amounts of traffic, etc. But, in general, I tend to overlook the bad sides of an area and soak up the differences that seem extraordinary.

But when I went up to Seattle and Catherine was staying there, I looked at the area much differently. Of course I saw the beauty and appreciated the diversity of restaruants, etc. But, I paid way more attention to the downside of being there permanently, exactly the opposite of how I observe an area when I’m just travelling through. I’d never really done this before. It makes me wonder if I’ve been unfair to other places I’ve been, judging them by the short term beauty and fun and not by the livability of the area.

Livability is what is important for a permanent residence. And that is up to each one of us to decide what is important to help make that decision.

The riding around Eastern Kansas is great. Lots of roads, no traffic to speak of. The weather is great too. The prices of houses and most everything is dirt cheap compared to the rest of the country. Locally, in Topeka, we are lacking choices of good food. Our grocery stores are run of the mill compared to those from Seattle or California. Our restaurants suck on a major sucking scale. But, it is very livable. At least for me.

I heard a few years ago some guy say, “Kansas is a great place to live, but I wouldn’t want to visit.” I couldn’t have said it better.

You don't always need water or mountains for beauty.

You don’t always need water or mountains for beauty.

We have some of the best sunsets in the world.

We have some of the best sunsets in the world.

I took this yesterday on the ride.

I took this yesterday on the ride.

This is the only flat area around Topeka, the river bottom .

This is the only flat area around Topeka, the river bottom .

Some Representation ???

This entry was posted in Important Life Stories on by .

I hate doing this little micro rant on a nice Sunday morning, but the frustration has just been festering and I want to move on. Yesterday I was listening to NPR in the morning and decided to participate in the system and write to my representatives in Washington to tell them how I feel about what is happening currently with the government shutdown and the debt limit problem.

I have rarely done this. Maybe two times in my life. The first time was when smoking on airplanes was allowed and I wrote all the Senators and Representatives in Kansas, plus Jesse Helms, a Senator from North Carolina that was heading some committee that was involved with the legislation. I got a form-ish type response from Jesse telling me that he represented the State of North Carolina and that he had no intention of supporting the legislation to ban smoking on planes. I wrote him back, thru the US mail, telling him my view, that he was one of 100 people in the Senate that represented the whole United States and that he needed to be looking out for the health of our nation, not only citizens of North Carolina.

And that is my issue here. I attempted to email both Senators from Kansas, which I did, along with all four members of the House. The reason I am so worked up is that only one House of Representative member would accept an email from me. The other 3, after entering my zip code, informed me that they only accept email from people from their districts.

What a crock of shit. Do these elected people thing they only represent people that live in their districts? I hope not. Because I think that the majority of people of any given state, believe that the people they elect represent all citizens of that state. I personally believe, all these people that all the states elect to work in Washington D.C. represent all the people of the United States, not only people from their state.

These people work in Washington D.C., not in Kansas. They were elected by people from the State of Kansas, to represent the State of Kansas, not just a specific district or area of the state.

I’m wondering if they only accepted financial donations for their elections from people and companies of their districts? I really, honestly don’t know how this all works, but I’d bet about anything that they all accepted money from about anyone that could legally give it to them. And probably from others too. So if they can and did accept money to be elected from other entities not in their districts, then I believe, they have an obligation to, at the minimum, allow any person from the State of Kansas contact them and give them their opinion on any given subject that is pertinent to the State. Actually, I think they should have to receive contact from any citizen of the United States.

There are only 100 Senators and 435 House of Represetatives members. I don’t have a beef with “my” Kansas Senators. But I do with 3 of the Representatives. The major power of the House is to pass federal legislation that affects the entire country, not just their specific districts. This legislation has to be passed by the Senate and then signed by the President. This legislation affects the ENTIRE COUNTRY. I wonder if they missed that in their election cliff notes.

The government shutdown and debt limit crisis issues are critical to our country’s stability. They need to address the issue, quit posturing and do what is in the best interest of our country. Everyone knows that we have to extend the debt limit and eventually fund the government. If not, our country can not function and the world would go into a financial crisis that would make the housing crisis look like a skinned knee. So I can’t understand why we let this get to this point, the 11th hour. But, that isn’t the point of this rant.

I’d bet that many House and Senate members from many other states have the same filtering systems on their websites. These people are elected by us to do things for us that look out for our best interests. And they have an obligation to listen to us when we feel the need to express our views. And by listening, I mean something as simple as accepting our emails. It is an insult to all Americans when our elected officials deny us the chance to participate in the system. And it is just plain wrong.

howtoparticipate

voicebeheard

Sham on you Tim Huelskamp.  And shame on you Kevin Yoder and Mike Pompeo.

Sham on you Tim Huelskamp. And shame on you Kevin Yoder and Mike Pompeo.