“Please keep your conversation, your talking, to a minimum.
Respect your fellow riders. You never know what others in the stadium next to
you are going through.”
Flywheel instructor Utley Lee starts each class with this
message. And he’s right.
For over a year, I was showing up at Flywheel with
discipline and heart, four to five days a week, and no one there could have
ever guessed what I went through each day to get out of my house and onto that
bike.
I was suffering with ulcerative colitis, an irritable bowel
disease that I was repeatedly told was not caused by what I was eating, and
could only be controlled by anti-inflammatory medications—which for me had
stopped working. Even after giving myself two hours to leave my house in the
morning, I often had to stop during my drive into the city to use a bathroom. I
got to know all of the temporary parking spots on my route and prayed one would
be available if I needed it. Most days, I would rush into the coffee shop on
the corner before class. I am sure everyone working there got to recognize the
girl in the bright blue Patagonia jacket heading to the restroom each morning
like clockwork. Once, I even stopped at a port-o-potty before dawn in the dead
of winter, terrified to be there alone in the dark, and praying it would be
unlocked and have toilet paper (thankfully it was, and it did).
When I finally arrived at Flywheel, I was greeted with smiles
and hellos and this genuine happiness everyone
had to be there. Every day I would feel the same joy that I had made it, I am here. Even if I started my ride feeling a hint
of discomfort, I would start to breathe as the lights went down and the first
song came on, and everything would just vanish.
Throughout the ride, I would start to find my strength, which I met with sheer
gratitude and awe for what my body was capable of in that moment. When the
instructor told us to push, there was no question I was going for it. Something
about giving it my all made me feel almost invincible, which was a powerful
antidote to the vulnerability and insecurity I had felt just hours before. When
I gave it my all, my heart would open and I would feel like I was actually
flying—euphoric, smiling, laughing even—like I was on top of the world. This is
the feeling that motivated me to get there, no matter what else I was
experiencing in my life, whether physical or emotional. It didn’t have to do
with my results or my ranking on the TorqBoard, it was all about that feeling,
and it still is.
Four months ago, I went to see an acupuncturist who
recommended that I modify my diet by eliminating gluten, soy, legumes and certain
grains. Almost immediately, the symptoms I had been experiencing started to
cease. My body started absorbing nutrients again, and I began to gain weight
and muscle. Today, I feel healthier and stronger than I have ever felt in my
life, and I continue to give all that I have to my Flywheel classes. Because I can. When you face a
debilitating illness, it puts a lot into perspective. And I will never, ever
take for granted what my body can do.
1 comment:
Wow!! What a story. I hope all the best and good health to you!!! 2015 will be greater for you!!! Utley
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