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leather coach handbags want to be strong enough to keep training hours on end, for years on end has rewards anybody but cyclists can understand?I searched my mind for an answer and found, not surprisingly, a line from a poem lodged in the upper part of my brain, near where my bike helmet has fused permanently to my skull.In "The Moon and The Yew Tree," Sylvia Plath writes "I simply cannot see where there is to get to."Most people who read Sylvia Plath consider that arresting line to be incredibly bleak and hopeless, but to me, this line doesn't seem bleak. If we don't know the answer, if we don't know where we're going, or why, does this prevent us from moving forward? I believe that line is honest and not despairing at all.In cycling, according to everything we read about training and equipment and mindset, et cetera, we are expected to be specific about our goals. We are supposed to know exactly where in the hell we expect to get to.But what if we don't want to know? What if we don't want to set the bar of our expectations too high, only to set ourselves up for failure and disappointment?I have to be honest. I have been training for nearly two months now for the Bone Ride 158 miles of two wheeled happiness in one day and the day of pathetic reckoning is only a few weeks away. I will likely fail in this endeavor. True, I can crank out 50 miles on a mellow, daily basis. True, I feel better about my riding than I have in years. True, when I'm plundering on my bicycle through the afternoon air no matter how cold the temperature and how raw the wind I thank God I ride bikes instead of playing first base on the