I
have a lamp in my room that simulates the sun. Apparently it shines with 10,000
lux. I don’t know what that means. It certainly is a big round number! Which
must be why Lumie (the manufacturer) attached the figure to it’s marketing
blah. I know that before I bought the light in early November I was starting to
get somewhat desperate for it. I’d heard about light therapy, I know several
people with Seasonal Affective Disorder and I knew that I tended to get sad in
the winter. Switching it on in my room for the first time was emotional. Like I
was a starving plant suddenly watered on the verge of going parched. Since that
first time the light it makes has been pleasant to have, but no more than that.
Thanks to the Lumie I haven’t gotten so desperate that being bathed in its artificial
blue light could be such a relief again. Artificial is the word though, it’s not
the real thing.
I have an alarm clock that simulates the sunrise and sunset. I got it earlier
this year. I’ve previously fixed my sleeping habits and the sun was already on
the way back by the time I made the purchase. However, it certainly works. I am
woken up naturally by the light around 5 minutes before the alarm starts, this
is easy to recommend. Still, not the real thing. Nothing like feeling the
warmth on your skin. I do like to have both lights on sometimes, the sunrise light
tempers the harsh blue the SAD light.
I imagine the point has gotten through, I do not thrive in winter. I miss the
sun. I’m half sure that maybe I photosynthesise. So the winter turns me into a
sad plant. This winter, however, wasn’t nearly as bad as it might have been.
Partly because I purchased various lux filled aides and artificial sunrises and
partly because I started getting up to see the real thing.
Regents Park is perhaps an unlikely cycling Mecca. It’s flat, the scenery is
fab when you can see into the park, but you mostly can’t. The surface is fine
for English roads but no more than that and although there isn’t too much
traffic there’s still plenty. Nonetheless, it is in the centre of North London,
there is less traffic, the road is wide almost everywhere and the glimpses into
the park are gorgeous, especially at sunrise. It is a home for urban cyclists
we’d be sad to do without. Also, once you build up speed you really can get to
rolling. The top laps of the park are 50kmh plus, large groups whip through in
chain gangs doing mid 40’s. There is an app that tracks “not how fast but how
many” laps you have done, complete with graphs. It can also be a very social
way to cycle. Laps are a blast and there’s nothing quite as nice as sunrise
laps. Some days in the winter, they truly are a privilege.
As the day shortens to nearly nothing in the winter months, just when you want
them least, clouds blanket the sky. The slow to rise and low hanging sun spends
4 months of the year also obscured. Except, occasionally, rarely, when we are
lucky. I learnt to watch for them, I had to become a connoisseur of various
weather websites and they are so very rare. When they came however they
brought, at last the real thing.
Though not at first of course. Not that easy. First force yourself onto your
bike in the darkness. It’s 6.15AM or something ridiculous. In the deep winter
there is barley a hint of Sun’s rise. Wear your warmest, layer up well, protect
your ears, cover your mouth. Hit the park, it’s pitch black in places and lit
under old fashioned yellow street lamps in others. The soundtrack is perfect,
silence and thin tyres pounding tarmac. It’s the worlds quietest roar, it’s
fast people on bikes. Their lights swarm like fireflies as they stream round
the lap. Meet whoever your meeting and get going, you can’t wait around while
it’s this cold and the changing view awaits. As the sun starts gently to colour
the landscape, the lap around the park is slowly coloured in. On crisp winter
days they view inside can take the breath away, golden glowing frosty grass
with rising mist. The sun is coming, head round past the mosque, round the
corner, the sun is round the hedge, THERE IT IS! Low in the sky, hanging over
the fastest, widest part of the lap, orange and smaller in the winter. Not
quite strong enough to warm the skin, but the sight of it is what you need,
warming your soul, the real thing.
Clear winter days are rare and treasured. The secret I’m discovering this
Spring are all the other ways to work your legs in the winter. This year, I’ve
headed out into the mulch under clouds and sweated through my eyeballs on
stationary training bikes. The days are stretching out at last, longer and longer
and I’m ready. More ready than I was last year by a longshot. Last year the
spring arrived and riding my bike felt light pushing through cobwebs, I had to
start small. This year, it’s already time for adventures and time to go
further. So, buy a winter bike or a turbo trainer, push through the winter,
seize what sun there is to be had and when the warmth returns, the real summer
Sun, you’ll be ready to seize it’s welcome.

The secret is out! xx
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