The
Psychology of Mountain Biking
Michael
J. Vandeman, Ph.D.
January
24, 2000
“Violence
does not live alone and is not capable of living alone: I is
necessarily interwoven with falsehood. Between them lies the most intimate, the
deepest of natural bonds. Violence finds its only refuge in falsehood. … Any
man who has once acclaimed violence as his method must inexorably choose
falsehood as his principle.” Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
For
a psychologist, mountain biking is a fascinating phenomenon.
Lying
The first thing one notices
about mountain bikers is that they lie continually! For someone from my
generation, raised to tell the truth at all times, this is puzzling. Surely,
they must know that everyone, at least all those who aren't mountain bikers,
can easily see through them! For example, Oakland Councilwoman Nancy Nadel caught Eric Muhler,
President of the Bicycle Trails Council of the
Their favorite lie, of course, is that land
managers who ban off-road biking are banning mountain bikers. Actually,
it is only their bikes that are banned! It would be impossible to ban
mountain bikers even if we wanted to, since they don't look different from
anyone else.
And
they aren't doing their already rotten image much good. Since none of them ever
admit lying, we can only guess at their motivation. The best that I have been
able to come up with is that they don't believe that they can justify their
selfish, destructive sport except by lying. Well, …
yes, of course! Since mountain biking destroys wildlife habitat, drives
away wildlife and other trail users, and benefits only the mountain bikers, it
is hard to see how anyone can justify allowing mountain biking in any natural
area.
Similarly,
it is hard to explain why land managers lie so frequently, when asked why they
allow mountain biking. For example, a ranger at
Mountain
Biking as an Addiction
Recently I suddenly realized why this
pattern seemed so familiar: they act exactly like the drug addicts that I
knew when I worked with Synanon Foundation! They
demonstrate the same willingness to take enormous risks, just to continue their
"habit". They risk their image, their job, their relationships, their
freedom, even their life, just to continue seeking the ultimate
"high". Many subscribe to mountain biking mailing lists at work,
risking losing their job. Thousands risk arrest and fines for riding illegally
or even building illegal trails on public and private land. The "Sedona
Five" took advantage of a temporary closure of
When caught riding on trails closed to
bikes, in my experience, they lie ("I didn't know it is closed" --
but they don't offer to leave!), threaten ("I'm going to bust your
head"), and even physically attack whoever tells them to leave the closed
area (one biker rode back up the trail, turned around, and then rode into the
guy who had told him the trail is closed, as fast as he could, knocking him
bloody). That is a lot of risk to take, just in order to ride one trail
illegally! And a good sign that they are addicted. Indeed, many of them, in
their discussions on the Internet, describe mountain biking as an
"addiction".
Mountain
Biking as an Image Enhancer
Another psychological factor, of course, is
the image boost that the sport and its accoutrements give to rebellious young
people, just as racing bikes did for an earlier generation (hardly any of whom
actually raced!). The knobby tires and "hardened" frames clearly say
"I'm tough. Don't cross me!" The names attached to the bikes and
tires ("Velociraptor",
"Omega-Bite", "Incisor") reinforce that image, as do the
photos in mountain bike magazines of bikers flying through the air (getting
"big air"). These bikes are clearly intended to indicate that they
will help you "conquer nature" (while, ironically, actually insuring
that you will have even less contact with that nature, due to their speed, lack
of contact with the ground, and suspension systems!).
Narcissism
Closely related to image is their
narcissism: they apparently have no awareness of, or interest in, the welfare
or feelings of the wildlife and people around them. Hikers who are young or
elderly, and are afraid of being hit, are ignored or termed
"unreasonable". People who say that they go
to parks to experience peace and tranquility, and to get away from all signs of
civilization, are called "selfish". Mountain bikers want to ride on
trails that are as narrow as possible -- exactly the trails that are too narrow
to accommodate both bikers and other trail users!
Cognitive
Dissonance
Yet another factor explaining their
insistence on biking at all costs, even at the risk of getting arrested, is
embodied in the psychological term "Cognitive Dissonance": after
spending often more than $3000 for their bike, it would be very embarrassing
and
upsetting if they had nowhere to ride it!
Perhaps this explains why, after years of
talking about how they are going to put an end to the erosion damage, illegal
riding, and illegal trail building in Joaquin Miller Park, the mountain bikers
are continuing all of those activities unabated.
Monomania
All land management plans are evaluated by
a single criterion: do they provide "sweet" (attractive),
"technical" (difficult to ride) "singletrack"
(narrow trails)? The President could be about to designate a million acres of
new wilderness, but they don't care. All they care about is "will I be
allowed to mountain bike there?" (in wilderness,
no).
Laziness
Why
ride a bike, when you can walk? Only because you can get to
your destination a lot faster and with a lot less energy. In spite of
their muscular, "hard-body" appearance, mountain bikers are lazy!
Bad Role
Modelling
Mountain biking also
provides very bad role modeling for our children. Whether or not a bike is ever
ridden off-road, any child looking at one will get the impression that it is
used to tear up wildlife habitat, and that this is okay.
Paradox
Mountain
bikers claim to want just what we all want -- the experience of nature in all
her pristine glory. However, the very fact that they ride on a bike denies them
that experience! They move too fast to truly experience what they are seeing.
They have to pay attention to their "driving", to avoid crashing.
They are insulated from feeling the ground by distance, tires, and expensive
suspension systems. And they (in common with other trail users, of course,
although to a much greater degree) destroy nature in the very act of
"appreciating" it.