#16
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(It's a thing) I hope OP finds that article and reads it too. |
#17
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#18
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Cycling is good for the body the mind and the spirit
Cheers to all
__________________
Life is perfect when you Ride your bike on back roads |
#19
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I read somewhere depression hit a significant number of cycling specialty climbers.
Cycling may keep depression at bay but it´s not a treatment. In the long term it should be treated. Depression is dangerous and a waste of life. |
#20
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I was never diagnosed, but I think I had some mild intermittent depression in my teens and into my late twenties.
Cycling and running helped immensely. Even just the commitment to get out the door and train / do something helped. In academic work (and most white-collar office work), it can be very difficult to see the results of your work on a day-to-day basis. Whether a bike ride, a run, or an episode wrenching, it can be very helpful to be able to point out that I accomplished this thing at the end of the day. Carpentry or other hands-on work can help as well for the same reason: there's something concrete to point to. |
#21
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i like the way on an afternoon ride your forced to focus on the ride, especially if it isn't a straight out and back. it reduces the inner noises, turmoil. Lets my mine relax and then the resulting calm when i'm eating dinner. I have to do something, and riding is it.
__________________
Cuando era joven |
#22
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__________________
🏻* |
#23
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i dont know anything about depression, but i have always said that at then end of the day, when your head is ready to hit the pillow, it is always best to be more physically tired than mentally tired.
particularly for people with "desk jobs" i think it's hugely important to have some outlet to make the body work hard regularly, that's what our bodies are meant for. put another way: a tired dog is a good dog.
__________________
http://less-than-epic.blogspot.com/ |
#24
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__________________
http://arcycles.weebly.com/ |
#25
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Cycling is a good complement to other forms of therapy but it is not a substitute for them and is not something that one who is suffering from depression should rely on to get through the day. Flat tires and broken bodies happen - and if you are predicating your ability to cope with life on your ability to be active, that is a recipe for ending up in an even deeper darker place. Ultimately if one is struggling with clinical depression, the way out is to seek qualified help, seek connection with people who will understand and support you, and seek to build a new way of being in the world that fits your unique needs.
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#26
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I can relate.
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#27
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This is what I also say
Especially since I always ride solo. Those hours most days alone with thoughts or no thoughts is definitely meditative |
#28
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Cycling has to be one of the greatest antidepressants.
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#29
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I realized I was clinically depressed and needed to seek help when over the course of a month a couple of years ago I noticed that I was still really unhappy even while I was on the bike. It just didn't make any sense at all, and I thought--this is what it means for there to be something wrong in your brain that you can't just fix by thinking differently.
And I sought help. And it worked. Still, biking (and xc skiing) are crucial ways of raising my spirits. |
#30
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It is not about the "black dog" but i found Matt Seatons "The Escape Artist" an interesting read about cycling as a means to deal with mental stress.
__________________
Jeremy Clarksons bike-riding cousin |
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