Tuesday, June 14, 2011

What it takes

The race officially got underway today with the start of the Women's Solo and Men's Solo 60+ divisions. In fact, some of the folks we spoke to just the other day- Dex Tooke, David Jones, and Debbie Tirrito- are already out there cranking along. As I post this they're about 10 hours into the race, probably somewhere out near the Salton Sea basin. And if they're smart they're putting as many miles up as they can overnight, because once the sun comes up in the morning they'll find themselves right in the heart of the Mojave Desert- the hottest, driest, most intimidating place to ride in the entire race. We'll catch up with them in a day or two, assuming they're all still chugging along.

But back here in Oceanside we spent another day talking to riders as their starting times quickly approach, and there were a couple themes that just kept coming up among everyone we talked to. One of my stock questions in our pre-race interviews is what it would mean to them if they had to drop out and couldn't finish the race. And every last person we've talked to gave essentially the answer: failure is something they have never even considered.

That sort of confidence in the face of something so daunting really struck me the first time I heard it. But when you think about it, there's just no other way to do this race. RAAM is such huge challenge and takes such a massive commitment of time and resources that a person would never even enter this race unless he or she knew with 100% certainty that this was something they could finish. Tim Case from the 4-person Team RAAM used the word "audacity" to describe that feeling. And he's exactly right: it takes a ridiculous amount of sheer audacity to show up in Oceanside, knowing you've got thousands of miles to go and there's going to be pain, there's going to be sleep deprivation, there's going to be a million little things every day telling you to just get off the bike and go home, and yet when they call your name at the starting line, you step up and start pedaling anyway.

That's the sort of feeling you get from folks here at the starting line, and it really is an amazing thing to be a part of.

talk to you soon.
-Andy

1 comment:

  1. Good summary. This is what I would like to know about - what is common about people about to take on such a huge challenge.

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