
When I think about the possibility of Spring — like actual Spring, and not the False Spring I wrote about yesterday — one of the things I’m most excited about is getting back on my e-bike. I’ve become an avid cyclist, but I have to put it away for nearly half the year.
The weather makes me do this, but for the record, I am also remarkably good at delayed gratification. I can wait. Even more than that, I can set a goal and work at it consistently over a long period of time. I would crush that marshmallow test.
I’m not sure how I became like this, but when I want to try something, I will do it for a very long stretch of time. And if a goal falls apart, I’m flexible enough to pivot — but I will try again repeatedly over time. I’ll adapt where I need to, but I know how to play the long game. I know how to delay gratification.
I was thinking about this on my way home from work. I saw a bike leaning up against a tree, and I found myself thinking about my very first bike. I really only started biking seriously in my forties, but when I was seven years old, I bought a bike that cost over $100 with my allowance money.
For a long while, I received $1 a week, and I think when I set that goal for a bike, I started getting $2 per week. That means I waited for more than a year to buy that bike.
It was hot pink. I loved it.
I remember riding around the block oodles of times in a row and imagining that one day I’d end up in the Olympics doing distance riding. Well, that’s not true.
See, I can pivot!
But I have biked more than 3,000 miles in my own town. And that’s a long-term goal, too. In fact, I set what might be the most absurd goal of all — riding to every street in my town in alphabetical order.
I’m on the Fs. I average about 2.5 alphabetical letters per year, so I doubt I’ll even live here long enough to finish. But I’m going to go as far as I can.
Maybe my seven-year-old self would be impressed.
—Renee Roederer














