Dear RBW Owners Bunch, 

This is my first post here, so hello! I have been struggling with my own 
perception of my interests in bicycles lately, and I thought you might be 
able to help me parse out my thoughts and ease my feelings. 

In the past year, my seemingly unattainable fascination with bicycles 
quickly solidified into a more practical part of my life than I could have 
imagined. It began as I vowed to stop driving and speculated some updates 
to my first bike, which was an old mountain bike I received from a friend 
five years ago. I gave up on the updates when someone at the local bike 
co-op said the changes wouldn't be worthwhile, and I internalized it. A few 
months later, I took the plunge and bought my first big kid bike: a 
new-to-me Velo Orange Polyvalent. During the summer, I embarked on a 
thirty-day-long tour across Montana, where I met brilliant people, saw a 
new part of the world, and shook down my new bike. Soon afterward, I 
departed for a research project to measure the impacts of wildfires on 
trout and stream invertebrates, and I discovered the joys of bike fishing 
in my spare time. In the fall, I began to work as an advocate for 
alternative transportation at my university, but I was disappointed in the 
fact that I was the only student advocate who rode a bicycle. Then, I gave 
my old bike, complete with alternative handlebars and a basket, to my best 
friend, and it is so joyful to hear stories of their adventures. Most 
recently, I read Grant's book *Just Ride*, which clarified my understanding 
of his ideas, and I began to volunteer as a mechanic at my local bike 
co-op. I have been struggling to fulfill my desire to tinker with my own 
bikes, so it is awesome to put my time toward my community and help others 
fall in love with bicycles in the process. 

All this to say, I stumbled across Rivendell during my search for 
alternative handlebars, and I was quickly drawn into the standards of 
optimism, utility, and beauty that you, or we (please interject if I 
missense the collective attitude), embrace in bicycles and the world. 
However, there are a couple of issues I have been struggling with lately.   

My first concern has to do with my own consumer habits, which I often 
excuse as curiosity. My journey into more “serious" cycling has involved a 
number of significant purchases. I don’t see an end in sight because there 
are so many neat things to try. Albatross and Towel Rack bars have been 
calling my name lately (I can’t decide which one to try because their 
suggested stem lengths are inversely proportionate). Don’t get me started 
on all of the bags and tires, bits and bobs. Will it ever end?

The other issue is less immediate, at least in a physical sense. I’m 
relatively young. I just turned 20. If I lean into the unracer's mindset 
now, will I miss out on something? Did I skip my formative bicycle 
experiences and arrive at the ultimate form decades too early? Will I watch 
my athleticism and socially demanded competitive spirit slip away?

Anyway, enough about me. What do you think?

Sincerely,

Brother “the Instagram algorithm made me fall in love with bikes” Bunny

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