I’m not against people. I mingle with them regularly with barely any ill effects. Some of my best friends, in fact, are people. I’m pro-people. I’m a fan.
Having said that, I like my own company and always have. I can while away many an hour doing very little other than passing the time. I’m a man of simple pleasures. A book, maybe a nice sandwich, and I’m happy.
I haven’t been bored since 1985.
I haven’t been lonely since 2002 (I was living alone and reading too much about the Bush administration and the Iraq war…a tricky combo).
These days, my idea of heaven is a solo bike ride through empty countryside punctuated by the occasional farm animal and dotted, every thirty miles or so, with a coffee shop capable of producing a passably artisan flat white and a slab of rustic flap-jack.
I like riding with other people, as long as I’m getting my recommended weekly dose of riding solo.
So it was that I headed north recently, alone, for a seventy-mile circuit taking in corners of Lancashire, Yorkshire, and Cumbria. Pedalling north-easterly up the climb of Barbondale – silent and uncompetitive, the wind at my back, and “Midnight Rider” by the Allman Brothers on a mental loop in my head – I was content.
A fellow rider passed in the opposite direction. A nodded hello. Followed by another. Then a group of five more. There were Team Sky jerseys in abundance. Numbers pinned to handlebars. Another gaggle passed by, underdressed in shorts and short sleeves. Each one nodding a hi, hello, alright mate, hiya, grunt, scowl, smile, wave.
A friendly lot, riding a sportive, the route of which appeared to be the reverse of mine. As is their right, of course. To each their own.
But playing havoc with my solitude.
I traversed along the valley to Sedbergh, the town of books, with its cobbles and its five-hundred year old boarding school, where I would’ve stopped to drink coffee and contemplate the passing of time. Would’ve. My plans dashed by the fussy infrastructure of an amateur event.
I pedalled on. Following the “cycle route ↓” signs in reverse and obliged to greet each rosy-cheeked rider on their communal day out.
Did they feel sorry for me?
Maybe they assumed I was lost?
Or wondered if I was lonely?
I should be so lucky.
Love the line “playing havoc with my solitude”. I feel this way often.
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Sedbergh, isn’t it?
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It is indeed…thanks Fred, updated now
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Hmmm, I’m not sure. I recon I’m anti-people sometimes! 😉
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