"SEND ME YOUR POOR,UNWASHED,SLOW RIDERS" Over the years I've enjoyed introducing many riders to the fun and beauty of the "Hill Country". If you come upon such wretches send them on a Monday ride w me!GJ
(I think this post might have fit into that locked (deleted?) thread about "forcing" others to ride a certain way.)I was thinking on my ride into work today about the "Ride Your Own Ride" mantra and the recent discussion about organizers and/or fellow group members being too outspoken or judgemental about others in the group, people being scared to make a honest mistake or two in a full day of riding, etc... It seems to me that the forum's current "understanding" of "Ride Your Own Ride" is very "me"-centric (duh). Let's say "follower-centric", since that's the spirit of what has been stated by Ray and others who have the most support. It's subtle (which means you should read that paragraph again and make sure you get it before getting bent out of shape below), but I think this highlights a very important gap that I think Lloyd is working to close.How does this follower-centric attitude work for the organizer? Can followers judge people who organize rides and in effect (via public complaints) force their version of Ride Your Own Ride onto group events? Too long, too short, too fast, too slow, too many stops, not enough stops, not enough socializing, too easy, too hard, etc. etc. etc. If so, essentially, I think we're putting the burden and "control" on the wrong parties. People that join an organizer's ride should be prepared to ride that organizer's ride, or something very close to it, or be willing and able to leave the ride clearly understanding that it was not the organizer's "fault" that they couldn't complete it. Some rides are going to be not well-suited for certain riders, and that is really nobody's fault and actually not even a problem; until people complain that some organizer wouldn't let them "ride my own ride". Ray made this point clearly in the opening post of this thread before it wandered off the rails into a game of "what if" and being surprised that Lloyd speaks his mind.One other point that some people may miss is that "you" riding your own ride never automatically means that an organizer want you to do that on their ride. If "your ride" sucks, or differs from the stated goals in the organizer's or really anyone else's estimation and you therefore are affecting anyone else's ride, of course there will be tension. People judge, that's how we survive, and that's not the problem. Join rides you fit in with, figure out what to change to fit in and make it happen if you don't, organize your own rides, or ride solo -- it's not rocket science.So, I really want to know what recourse does the forum grant the organizer and/or concerned followers when a person riding their own ride doesn't fit with the assembled group? We know Lloyd will throw you out, others might leave you at a turn you missed or broke down/in a ditch if you're not hurt and most of us will suck it up and live with you to the end of the ride. What about when people don't get the message and keep joining groups they don't fit into?This might be a bit "deep" (or more likely poorly communicated), take some time to think about it... then try a few groups out while keeping most (all?) of your ideas to yourself and see if you can find a group you like. If you hit a ride that REALLY doesn't suit you (or an organizer that REALLY doesn't like your riding), act like an adult, inform the group that you are leaving and take off. If you find a group that's a near-fit and enjoy their company, spend some time getting to know the people in real life and maybe there will be a chance for you to suggest a tweak or two to the way the rides are run, or even better, invite them on a ride you run.a.s.p.s. that Tension could be avoided by exactly what many people have been talking about recently; accurate ride postings by leaders, accurate self-assesment by potential followers, new leaders stepping up with new types of rides/routes, extending and accepting constructive criticism as needed, etc., things I hope the forum as a whole is moving forward on. Also of note, in spite of what we say online, it appears that we basically all agree on all of these points that everyone has been trying to make in various posts / threads, etc.
Am curious as to what you mean by "POOR,UNWASHED,SLOW RIDERS"?Quote from: GUZZI JOHN on April 02, 2012, 09:00:52 PM "SEND ME YOUR POOR,UNWASHED,SLOW RIDERS" Over the years I've enjoyed introducing many riders to the fun and beauty of the "Hill Country". If you come upon such wretches send them on a Monday ride w me!GJ