All I Need is my Bicycle: Prequel

Andrew Lee • August 7, 2020

Originally published Jul 8, 2020

By the time you're reading this I've already left on a great adventure, riding a bicycle from Whistler, just north of Vancouver, to my hometown of Toronto, a 4400 km distance across the TransCanada Highway.

I decided to go on a cycle touring adventure at this time for several reasons. The seed was planted years ago through traveling and meeting amazing humans combining cycle touring and traveling to exotic countries. One such human travels with a drone and laptop and makes amazing videos through Ratbag Nomads. Another memorable human did it to raise money for cancer research through Cycling 4 Cancer.


The cascade of events this year that led me to my own adventure kicked off with the pandemic. The pandemic turned a one-month layover in a friend's rural community into a three month stay there in a tiny camper van.


This rural community is filled with, in my opinion, the most amazing collection of humans in this part of the world, filling me with so much love and connection. But there's no long term space for me, so in considering my own future, I felt now was the time for adventure before I committed long term to such a community in the future.


Besides, I was out of work due to the pandemic, I couldn't leave the country, and I hadn't seen my family since early 2019. So why not cycle halfway across the country to see them, right? If I needed any more validation, a friend of the community's really wanted in. I offered him my space and he offered me his touring bike - it was a perfect swap!


The way this adventure fell into place also fell snugly into the narrative of my life of the past several years - being open hearted, following my intuition and finding synchronicity. Besides the cascade of events that led me here, the internal motivation for my adventure is to spread love, hope and inspiration in a time the world needs it the most.


On an individual level the pandemic has been a good news story. Over the past several years I have called in an abundance of love and connection, and it culminated in landing in the rural community, allowing that love and connection to blossom even more.


This adventure is not powered by thunder thighs or a focus on cardio. Yes, I do tons of hiking and so my fitness was already in a good place. But I truly feel that this adventure is powered by love. Everything I do is powered by the love I've cultivated in myself and in connection with others, and the purpose of it is to spread that love to those who need it, parlaying that into hope and inspiration.


With that I hope you stay tuned in, and receive love, hope and inspiration from my journey.

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Facebook was recently exposed, when a former employee and whistleblower testified to the US Senate that the company repeatedly faced conflict of interests over profits versus reducing division, and always put profit first. Polarization for Profit How was FB able to do this? Typically if a company was exposed for not serving its customers' best interests, customers would take their business elsewhere. But with social media, there is almost nowhere else to go. FB has cornered the market, and intentionally bought or squashed competitors to cement its dominance in the space. Undermining free market principles has allowed FB to serve its own interests over the interests of its customers. They are maximizing their profit by allowing dishonest science to go viral, and allowing divide and conquer to occur. Facebook isn't the only big tech company guilty of this activity. Google, Microsoft and Apple have been sued for antitrust actions . And big tech isn't the only corporate sector valuing profit over people. Nearly all the largest corporations are guilty of some sort of fraudulent behavior, whether it's big oil, big pharma, big agriculture or big food. Governments are not only complicit in allowing corporate abuse to occur, they are often hand-in-hand with corporations and mainstream media. I've seen this first-hand with my experience at the Fairy Creek Blockade , the largest act of civil disobedience in Canadian history, preventing old growth logging on Vancouver Island. On the ground at Fairy Creek I've witnessed a coming together of some of the most beautiful and inspiring humans, passionately protecting the environment against corrupt political leader Premier Horgan, who went back on his word to stop old growth logging. In the news, however, there's little to no coverage of the events, and what coverage there is, is highly skewed against the protesters. 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Words alone are such a poor quality of communication that they do not properly express the author's full meaning, and are too easily misinterpreted by the reader due to their own biases. This is especially true with words on a screen, transmitted through instant messages or social media posts. And yet it has become the most dominant form of communication due to its convenience. How many times did you misinterpret a text or a social media post, and respond with a critical comment? How often did this needlessly escalate into a full blown conflict? It happened quite a bit in the past with me, and I eventually learned to resolve disagreements with a phone call or meeting face-to-face. Unfortunately, too many people rely on texting because they have gotten too used to it and have lost their ability and initiative to resolve conflicts in person. Humans are still wired for face-to-face communication, and this is particularly necessary when resolving conflicts. 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Showing them disagreeable information will only trigger their fight or flight, and potentially start a vicious cycle of arguing. People living in this way carry a narrowed perspective, focusing only on survival, and are thus unable to see the bigger picture. In order to engage with people on the other side of the coin, social media is not the answer because its low quality medium of communication creates further division. What's needed is the exact opposite . The one antidote in a time of such extreme polarization and division is face-to-face conversations with those we disagree with. This is also exactly what is being discouraged by the pandemic. Mask mandates have undermined our ability to see and read facial gestures. Closures of small businesses and gathering places have prevented the opportunities for holding the gatherings and face-to-face conversations needed to bridge this gap. 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I've had people smile back at me and acknowledge my bravery, and others follow my lead and take off their mask. Unmasked and smiling, you are a shining light, a warrior. You are an inspiration to others who sense something is wrong but are too afraid to act out against the narrative. Even if you have confrontations, smiling and holding your head high, proves to the confronters that you are a compassionate individual. Not only are you disarming the narrative, but you are disarming nervous systems. I certainly have had a few business owners ask me to put on a mask or leave, and obliged their concerns with a smile. If conflicts occur through your social media platforms, engage directly with others through phone calls or voice messages. This has been my most effective tool for deescalating conflicts. However, I choose phone calls and voice messages over texting more and more often these days in general, because my friends and I value the richness of expressing in voice and hearing each other's voices. Polarization is one of the greatest invisible threats to society, preventing people from uniting in action against tangible and urgent threats. It is up to all of us individually to overcome these barriers, through gathering and having face-to-face conversations again, with those we do and do not share views with.
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