Featured ride
101.02 km in 4:59:56
The recent sub-5-hour 100 km ride that felt like the clearest single snapshot of what I enjoy about cycling: pacing well, staying composed, and finishing something substantial cleanly.
Coursework and project work reward focus in bursts. Cycling rewards patience, pacing, and the willingness to keep going when a long effort stops feeling comfortable. That is part of why I keep it here.
I keep it here because it reflects the same habits that matter in technical work: discipline, composure, and progress built through repetition rather than shortcuts.
Night rides, longer efforts, and learning to pace them better over time.
Cycling hero
Here's my current bike, bought in Feb 2026. It was a nice upgrade, made riding more enjoyable, and made it easier to stay consistent with cycling.
I keep the live part focused: one ride and one smaller window into the consistency behind it.
Featured ride
The recent sub-5-hour 100 km ride that felt like the clearest single snapshot of what I enjoy about cycling: pacing well, staying composed, and finishing something substantial cleanly.
Recent rides
A live snapshot of the sessions around the bigger efforts. That matters because most progress happens in the ordinary rides, not only in the best-looking one.
Cycling fits here because it reflects the same habits I value in good technical work: showing up consistently, responding to feedback, and staying composed when progress is slow.
Progress becomes obvious only after enough repeated effort.
Long rides reward pacing, restraint, and comfort with slow gains.
Plans change, energy fades, conditions shift. The useful skill is staying steady anyway.