Friday, August 26, 2011

Thank You!


I would like to take this opportunity to sincerely thank the many donors who have supported my ride to raise much-needed funds for the Easter Seals UCP of North Carolina and Virginia. Your generosity will help many children and adults with disabilities live a full and happy life. The ride was originally supposed to happen tomorrow and Sunday; however, hurricane Irene could not time her arrival at a worse possible time. It has started raining here in central NC this evening and will only get worse tomorrow. Thus the ride for tomorrow has been canceled; riding will happen only on Sunday. 

I don’t ride on Sunday and this Sunday is no exception. However, I will ride the 64 miles for the Easter Seals UCP! I plan on doing it next Saturday, weather permitting. There are a few details that I need to work out. An important detail is how I can pull off 64 miles without the support I was looking forward to. After the ride I will post the details on how it went.

Again, I thank you for the support. I never imagined that I’d be able to raise nearly $2000 in ten days. Your generosity is much appreciated. As a person with a disability I know how hard it can be to ask for help but at the same time that help is greatly needed. It makes it easier when people offer the help. You have assisted a great organization that specializes in offering needed help to those who may need it the most.

Thank you,
Bradley

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Cycling for a cause!




As you are all well aware I love to road cycle. As of late I've been riding a lot; 25+ miles three times a week. I also love to help people by getting them to question their own perceived limitations. Last night I found an event that brings these two activities into one. This is a bike ride called 'Ride Without Limits' and takes place in Pittsboro, NC. This ride benefits the Easter Seals UCP North Carolina & Virginia (UCP is United Cerebral Palsy). As a rider I need to raise $250 to ride. BUT I am trying to raise as much money as I can for this great organization. All proceeds will go to help children and adults with disabilities, not just Cerebral Pal
sy. Here is a blurb from UCP:

UCP’s mission is to advance the independence, productivity and full citizenship of people with all types of disabilities, not just cerebral palsy. With a nationwide network of affiliates and help from people like you, UCP is making it happen. One legal battle at a time. One program at a time. One person at a time

I plan to do a 64 mile ride. However, I ride for a purpose!! I am asking that you give $1 (or $0.50, whatever fits your budget) for every mile but ANY amount will help! Please be generous and donate here:




Lets help people find the opportunities to live without limits.

Thank you,

Bradley

Sunday, August 7, 2011

A Cyclist's Confession



My name is Bradley Joel Hintze and I am addicted to road cycling. It all started on September 9, 2006 when my friend, Bryan (a heavy bicycle user), invited me to volunteer at a feed station for a race known as LOTOJA, the longest single-day US cycling federation-sanctioned race. We were stationed a mile or so below the summit of one of the three mountain passes on the course. As we handed food and water bottles to the 1,000 cyclists (facilitating the addicts) I noticed a few tandems. I eagerly turned to Bryan and said, “We should do this next year on a tandem!” Bryan liked the idea and encouraged me further. I was innocently introduced to this behavior but you can see how quickly I was planning to use. A month later I spent a large sum of my savings on my own road bike.

The time spent cycling went down as the bitter Cache Valley winter settled in; however, I did relapse in the middle of the cold season. This is hard to relate but it goes to show how this addiction can screw up your thinking. It was in the deep winter, we had several days in which the temperature struggled to reach freezing. I remember the day well, it was a cold but clear and the roads were dry although snow did cover the ground that wasn’t road. I had had enough holding back and I went and I used my bike. The temperature on my bike computer read 30 degrees! Crazy.

Well the next summer I became a heavy user of bicycles with the help of Bryan. We rode all over town, sometimes on our own bikes other times on the tandem. I remember a few sessions of use that lasted several hours: Logan to Salt Lake, we rode around the Wellsville Mountains, Logan to Bear Lake THRU Idaho… you get the picture. These sessions gave me great highs but nothing can compare to the LOTOJA. A year after I had innocently volunteered at a feed station I was riding the race on a tandem!

The time between then and now is fuzzy at best. There was a time when I moved across the country and left my bike behind. I had eight glorious months where I was clean. Then spring came with its trigger for the addictive behavior, warm weather. I couldn’t take it; I needed to use. So I had my dad mail me my bike and started using quite a bit. It’s been a year and a few months since I’ve had my bike here in NC and it has only gotten worse. I am now a habitual user of bicycle, essentially no soberness. I use three times a week, mostly in the mornings before I start in lab.

So what are the effects? First financial, in order to be a serious user you need money. There is the obvious; you need a bike, not just any though, you need an expensive carbon-fiber frame with the fancy components. Then there is the attire that users adopt, spandex with special padding. I am talking cycling shorts and they are not cheap. Then there is the maintenance; a heavy user will, out of necessity, maintain their bike. This is not free either. Second, the time factor; using takes a lot of time. For recreational users a quick ride around the neighborhood will suffice. The hard user, like myself, will literally dedicate several hours a week using. Third, psychological; certain ideas that are totally irrational to a healthy individual start sounding rational to the addict. Case in point, LOTOJA, riding 206 miles in one day. Spending a couple hours in a day where your average heart beat is greater then 170 bpm. Do this three or four times a week. Spend $80-$100 on one pair of shorts. Burn so many calories such that food intake becomes a chore. Does any of this sound rational in the slightest? Finally, as with other addictions, continuous bicycle use leads to longer, more intense use to achieve the same high. For a few months I was content with my 18.3 mile loop three times a week; no longer does that do the trick. I now have to do a 25.4 mile loop three times a week to get the same high. I’m sure I missing some of the unseen effects.

So there you have it, full disclosure. I am addicted to bicycle use with some pretty dire effects to my physical and emotional health. How do I feel about my addiction? I wouldn’t change a thing!