Tag: New Year’s Fitness Resolutions

  • NEW YEAR RESOLUTIONS FOR MORE REVOLUTIONS – 2022.

    New Year Resolutions For More Revolutions in 2022

    New Year Resolutions for Cyclists

     
    New Year – time for making fresh starts and turning new leaves.

    Almost half of us make resolutions at New Year, and the goals most of us set are to do with getting in better shape.

    The bad news: only a handful of determined souls keep their resolutions – most are already dropped and forgotten by mid-February*.

    Well, since we’re all about getting more women on bikes, and enjoying it more, how about some resolutions that will propel us toward our goals, and might be easier and more fun to keep?

    In the spirit of promoting more enjoyment of more cycling, we’re leading the way with a few suggestions:

    We asked Terry team members what cycling goals they are setting for themselves this year: more rides, more miles, new bike, new destination? It turns out our cycling ambitions are quite varied.

    Quite a few of us just want to: 

    Ride more! (Ride into work… weather permitting) – I acquired a Cite X Gel saddle this year, to use on my 20+ year old Bianchi Bike. I now no longer have the excuse of an uncomfortable old saddle shortening my rides.  

    Emily, marketing 

    New bike and more commuting 🙂 

    Nik, operations 

    To consistently ride two times per week, instead of one. I love spinning. I finally put a Butterfly Galactic saddle on my spin bike, and the Holster Capri is my favorite bike bottom – highly recommended.  

    Alysia, designer 

    I will be Zwifting (all over the world) this winter with my husband, Georgena and friends!  My goal is to ride 3 times per week. 

    Lisa, customer care 

    This year it’s all about keeping fit with limited time. I plan to get a trainer that works with Zwift, to give me an incentive to ride indoors a few times a week through the winter. Once the ice and snow is gone, my goal is 3 short, hard rides a week for the year, up here in the Champlain Islands. 

    Colin, marketing 

    Some of us just want to get going earlier: 

    My first ride on the season in 2021 was Apr. 3rd. Hoping to get out earlier this year! 

    Shanin, accounting & Q.A. 
    Margaritaville bike, complete with parrot

    Or – an excellent approach – have more fun: 

    Not too much of a resolution, but my cycling resolution is to take my parrot on more weekly rides – I have a Margaritaville bicycle (parrot, horn and basket included). 

    Danielle, accounting 

    While a few of us are setting our sights on big new adventures: 

    Cycling on the Italian Riviera – something to dream about…

    My cycling resolutions for 2022 are many, but at the top – bike trip to Italy. It’s been cancelled twice (thank you Covid) but a go for September…so far. It’s been postponed so many times I doubt it will happen. A girl can dream, though. 

    Paula, marketing 

    My goal with my partner, Annie, is to ride and explore more of the backroads of Vermont on our gravel bikes. We will be planning trips or tours throughout New England to explore the dirt roads in Upstate New York, New Hampshire, and Maine. 

    Dave, sales 

    While attending a family wedding in Cape Cod, I’m looking forward to an extra couple days riding with family to beaches and hopefully make it as far as Provincetown.

    Annie, customer care

    And a couple of the team have bike projects in mind:

    Kelly's project Peugeot mixte, complete with white wall tires, fenders, and dynamo lighting
    New Year’s project bike

    This year, my resolution won’t be based on how many miles I wish to achieve, or destinations I long to ride. This year will be about resolving to restore a vintage bicycle – and with the hopes I haven’t bitten off more than I can chew.

    Found at a recent estate sale hanging from the rafters in the back of a worn out barn was this lovely Peugeot bicycle, and I knew it was coming home. With any luck, maybe it will be complete by the time le Tour rolls around.

    Kelly, merchandising

    My goal is to get the perfect gravel e-bike; top of the line performance design, carbon, drop bars with slimmish 30mm tires, distance assist only battery, hydraulic brakes, Di-2, so I can practice aging off the main road and gracefully. 

    Liz, CEO 

    But this resolution takes the cake – wedding cake that is! 

    I am going to kick-off the new year by riding 300 miles throughout the month of January.  My Fiancé and I will also be mapping a bike route through the Champlain Islands (a cyclist’s dreamscape!) to ride into our wedding in September.  

    Cam, customer care 


     

    How to Keep Your New Year Cycling Resolutions

    Let’s Resolve to Ride More Often

    What will it take to add one more ride a week for you?

    • Can you shuffle your schedule, or drop something that you don’t really need to do? With a health and energy boost from more bike rides, you can get more done than you could by just grinding away without them – certainly you will enjoy life more with more time riding.

    Or ride to work more days out of the month?

    Are there ways you can jump on your bike to run errands instead of jumping in the car?

    • It’s great for your health and wellbeing, and for the environment. Research shows half of all car trips in the US are under three miles, compounding problems with pollution and sedentary lifestyles. Increasing the number of trips made with human power can do more than just about anything else to reduce our collective carbon footprint, and increase our health. See how bike errands can change the world here.

    Let’s Resolve to Ride Safer

    • Join in or support your local bike advocacy group; take a course to brush up on safe cycling practices.

    Let’s Resolve to Ride More Comfortably

    Consider a new saddle, new bike bottoms, or a new top.

    • An upgrade can pay off if it delivers greater comfort: warm, silky, moisture-managing fabrics, and supportive, “just-right” cushioning can help you ride further and more often, simply by making your time on the bike more enjoyable. Get some help choosing a new saddle, cycling bottoms, cycling tops.

    Try a bike fitting session at your local bike shop

    • Some simple adjustments may help you get more smiles from your miles. Our bodies change as we age of course, so a set up from a few years ago may need a tweak or two for optimum comfort this year.

    Notice something here? Most of these suggestions make your resolutions easier to keep by making one change up front – new wardrobe item, new saddle, new routine, new training – then it’s just a matter of using it through the year. No need for a year’s supply of extra willpower. Sweet success!

    What cycling resolutions are you making for 2022? Let us know in the comments.

    However you move into the bright shiny New Year, enjoy the ride!

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    *New Year Resolution facts backed up by actual internet research.

  • NEW YEAR, NEW INDOOR CYCLING ROUTINE.

    I’m kind of an “every day is a gift, make it great” kind of a person. That said, this New Year came with a need to personally kick-start the year and make more time to ride…perhaps I could call it a resolution. Since I have a lot on my plate (and it’s cold and snowy) I cleared out my home office and made room for new riding equipment…the closer the equipment the better!

    Lisa's indoor cycling setup, with bike on stationery stand in her office, and shelves of bike gear near at hand
    Lisa’s indoor cycling setup, with bike on a stationary stand in her office, and shelves of bike gear near at hand

    Using my road bike as a trainer, I added a rear wheel power unit, downloaded and set up a Zwift cycling account, and used screen mirroring on my cell phone to project my rides onto my TV.

    My riding gear had been stowed away since the weather turned frosty and I wanted easy access to all of my favorite gear and apparel, so I built a shelving unit, added bins, and loaded them with my favorite shorts, tops and accessories. Easy access, for a quick ride anytime!

    While many spinner friends like minimal padding, I prefer a bit more, especially during the first few tender rides. My Holster Hi Rise Knickers are best for good knee warmth, a great chamois and a very comfy hi-rise waistband.

    Since I am definitely feeling out of shape, I prefer riding in Terry relaxed fit jerseys and the colorful prints keep things fun. I usually grab a Soleil Flow top or Tech Flow Tee, both are easy wash and wear options!

    Spin towels with a pink flamingo theme to protect Lisa's indoor bike setup.
    Keeping it fun with spin towels to match the cycling gear.

    For visual incentives, I bought a few fun spin towels, complete with pink flamingos, they are my favorite vibe of the season! Also along the incentive line, I’ve decided that a new spring kit will make the perfect reward for a winter of good personal care and fun!

    To track my progress, I’ve downloaded a single page calendar, and to stay true to my goals of riding 6 days a week, I will note each ride with a red dot. At the end of May, I hope this page is a polka dot plastered page of joy!

    I am committed to my plan and I know that every day I will get stronger and each ride will get better. Cheers to 2021 and doing what makes you happy and healthy!

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    What is your plan? Have you been riding more than ever, are you a steady rider year round, or are you looking to get going again? Feel free to share your stories, we can all learn and motivate each other for a great year ahead…

  • ARE YOUR RESOLUTIONS ON CLEARANCE YET?

    TURNING NEW YEAR’S RESOLUTIONS FROM FICTION TO NONFICTION.

    Resolutions Sale

    As I walked into a major book retailer, I was assaulted with reminders that it was the end of December, which means resolution time, and that our new year’s resolutions often “go on sale or clearance”. Books titled Rid Yourself of Doubt, or Should You?”, “Tremble Your Way to Fitness”, or “Reorganizing Your Pockets” serve as great fuel for change and promise solutions to become the person your dog thinks you are. As millions of Americans make decisions to “Change” their behavior through resolutions, it should delight me as a “Derailleur” that so many are willing to face a toleration, a behavior or thought pattern they would like to change. But what dampens my spirits are the unkept resolutions that plague us all. These unfulfilled resolutions then become the fuel for the thoughts like “I can’t do anything right, I’ll never change, etc…” and for me, that is the head-trash-talk that needs to end!

    New Year’s resolutions are often put on “clearance” like a retailer puts products on sale when they have gone past their shelf life or are deemed “unsuccessful”. Personal resolutions get kicked to the curb because they are “too hard”. Fear of failure, fear of the unknown, fear of change, fear of how to get started…these are all reasons resolutions wind up in the trashcan instead of implemented into your life. A resolution involves change and change, although inevitable, fights us every step of the way. So what can make a resolution “stick” instead of becoming something you throw away two weeks? Call in Environmental Design.

    Environmental Design might be one factor in your success or failure in keeping to your resolutions this year. And by Environmental Design, I don’t mean the spatial design show on HGTV or in a gardening article in Better Homes and Gardens. Environmental Design is the process of addressing surrounding environmental parameters when devising plans, programs, policies, buildings, or products…and in this case, even behaviors. Often used in Architecture, Urban Planning, Landscape Design, Interior Design, and in this case, Environmental Design is the skill at addressing surrounding environmental factors when devising a desired behavior change.

    Ok, so what does this have to do with a new year’s resolution? Often, when we have decided to make a behavior or thought pattern change, we forget to scan our environment to see if it is designed to support us or derail us. And Environmental Design is the choice to have your environment support you and removing obstacles or draining factors that ensure failure. In fact, by creating a supportive environment, your environment does most of the heavy “lifting” allowing you to reduce your energy output and save it for celebrating your success.

    Environmental Design is made up of 9 surrounding environments including your relationship, network, financial, memetic, self, spiritual, nature, body, and of course, your physical environment. If one of these environments challenges one of the others, disharmony is created and thus an obstacle is created and basically dead in the water. Why? One of the theories of Environmental Design is based on “your environment always wins”. Sheer will, determination and stubbornness have a finite tank. Eventually, you will run out of will-power fuel. If your environment does not support you or creates obstacles, your determination and will power are spent fighting the challenges and you lose energy…fast. If however, the environment is designed to support you, you have to use much less willpower fuel (if any) and you flow through the change feeling supported and successful. With designed environments, will power and commitment become optional.

    So, back to taking your resolutions “off sale” and designing an environment to keep them this year.Consider perhaps taking the following steps:

    1.  Awareness is the first key. How does one know if their environment is supporting or impairing them? First, look around you and ask yourself, “What excuse have I made around my resolution?” From behind the excuse hides an environmental design flaw. Scan your 9 environments for obstacles that are getting in your way of succeeding. For example, if your resolution is to start eating a clean diet, are you surrounding yourself with processed, gluten filled food? Look in your car for chip remnants, smells, etc. that remind you of life before eating Paleo. Scanning your environment for factors that slow you down or even stop you from your efforts.

    2.  Design your 9 environments to support you. For example, share with your network or relationship environment (often called your “peeps” or your “inner circle” depending on your age) for support in your quest to kick the sugar habit. Make them aware of your resolution and request their support in achieving your goals. That might mean not inhaling a candy bar in front of you or perhaps congratulating you when you hit a milestone in your resolution.

    3.  Deliberately practice your new behavior pattern. And by practice, I mean give it mindful, aware-based effort. This is one step we often forget. How does a bad habit occur? We do something over and over again and it sticks. So how do you create a good habit? Do something different over and over again until it sticks….and ultimately overshadows the bad habit. And by deliberate, I mean practice as if it was “game day” not just a scrimmage. We so often sleep through our actions – allowing our bodies to go on auto pilot, but with any behavior change, deliberate, mindful actions create a deeper of performance than if you just “went through the motions”.

    4.  Continuously scan your environments for roadblocks or tolerations that keep you from succeeding. Deliberate practice also requires feedback and self-observation and reflection. Great time to bring your relationship and network environment back into the picture – if you are doing something over and over again and you aren’t seeing change…ask for feedback. Am I doing this right?What are you seeing? Be prepared to look for and accept feedback.If you don’t know where you are, how can you know how far you have to go?

    5.  Finally, celebrate your successes! This one is hard for many of us as we forget to do the “victory lap” when we have success.Instead of saying, “Wow, that took a lot of support, effort and deliberate practice to take that baby step, I should be very proud of myself” we say, “I can see some movement, but I must try harder.” So right at the moment when we should celebrate how far we come, we sabotage ourselves not being able to see what it took to get us there. Becoming aware of what got us there, keeps us from forgetting what it took if we get derailed. So do a victory lap – call a friend to celebrate, take time for yourself, eat something nourishing – whatever it is that makes you feel good. And while you are celebrating, remember what you are celebrating….your efforts, your environmental design and your deliberate practice.

    So this year, before you put your resolutions “on sale”, try something new – design your environment to support your resolution and with deliberate practice watch your resolutions become exactly what they are suppose to be, a resolution to an issue you have faced but face no more! Happy New Year!

     

    Amy Magyar is a Derailleur.  She helps her clients across North America change their gears, their pace, and their direction.  She is the essential piece of equipment to get you where you need to move forward at a different pace and with a different power.  As an industry veteran and a Certified Performance Coach, Amy works with individuals who are athletes, were athletes, or wish to be athletes, on navigating change.