As soon as I heard that Harbor View Hotel, the place where I’d be staying in Martha’s Vineyard, made bicycles available to its guests, I started to research cycling routes, which seemed a most pleasant way to explore the island.
I read about Edgartown’s many paved bike paths. I imagined myself pedaling to check out the town of Oak Bluff, or heading out for an afternoon on Katama Beach.
The only problem: I really didn’t know how to ride a bike.
Yep. There I was, in my early thirties, and while I had just bought a bike of my own and was making slow, oh so slow, progress, the fact of the matter was that as my trip to the Vineyard drew near, I could not reliably start, stop, steer, or go more than a few yards at a time without planting my feet firmly on the ground. Certainly I would not be up for narrow, rural roads, no matter how charming, nor would I have had the slightest notion of how to heed advice to “ride defensively’.
But you never know, I reasoned, and so I used my upcoming trip as motivation to practice all the more.
I’m sure I’m not the only one who has used travel as an inspiration to learn a new physical skill, although I’d hazard the guess that it’s more common to use travel as a way to learn new activity. Sometimes this is just plain logistics: you need a mountain, an ocean, a cave for your intended new sport and you don’t happen to live anywhere near the desired geographical feature.
And sometimes it’s just one of those traveling things: you’re already immersed in new surroundings, and open to the new, you spot a flyer for a beginner’s class, the what-the-hell instinct kicks in and before you know it, you’re standing on the edge of a boat about to jump in to the water with a scuba tank on your back for the very first time.
Reduced inhibitions when traveling – a circumstance that does not absolutely require alcohol.
The downside of using travel as either an inspiration or an opportunity to learn a new physical skill is one that plagues adults trying to learn a new skill anywhere: impatience.
For various reasons, both physical and psychological, it takes adults longer to pick up a new skill, but our minds are still calibrated to how quickly we were able to learn as agile children. I discuss this in my recently released Like Riding a Bike: On Learning as an Adult, which recounts my own (rather rocky) path to two-wheeled triumph, and the psychology that affect all adults learning something new. The key to outwitting impatience lies in calibrating your expectations correctly: to realistically assess what you might be able to learn in whatever time you’ve got on your vacation — and whatever happens, not to beat yourself up if you don’t even make it to there.
Or, if you’re using travel as an inspiration to learn a new activity, whether it’s to sign up for a marathon or just to pedal yourself towards a New England clam roll, to allow yourself more than enough time to learn what you need to know before departure.
This, I did not do. On my last biking practice session at home before I left for Martha’s Vineyard, I regretfully realized that it would not be wise for me to borrow one of the Harbor View’s bikes. (Know your limits: also good advice regarding alcohol.) The closest I came to cycling was snapping this picture:
The photo was something of a promise to myself — of how much more I’d be able to do on a future visit to Martha’s Vineyard.
Photos by Alison Stein Wellner. Learn more about Like Riding a Bike: On Learning as an Adult.
What a great idea. I admit it, sometimes I get trapped in the travel for travel sake and I think when I do that, I miss the point. It’s always better to be doing something, learning something, and doing something. Thanks for a great post.
Thanks, Vago!
I’d never thought about learning to ride a bike as an adult, and how our very adult-like aversion to taking a fall from a moving object is probably a significant impediment to learning that tricky bike balance. 🙂
Yep Sheila — plus, my previously mentioned general clutziness. 🙂