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Le Loop: How to Cycle the Tour de France
Le Loop: How to Cycle the Tour de France
Le Loop: How to Cycle the Tour de France
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Le Loop: How to Cycle the Tour de France

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Le Loop is a guidebook for success and exhilarating adventure as one ordinary man tackles the world's toughest bike race.

Ceri Stone is an ordinary guy. He wanted to do something extraordinary just once in his life. This book is the exhilarating story of that adventure. He lays out a template for personal success, garnered from some rich life experience, and he puts his theories to the test by cycling Le Loop. Le Loop is an annual charitable event where riders cycle the route of the Tour de France one week before the pros.

This is an inspiring adventure for athletes of all levels that proves we can achieve our wildest dreams and laugh along the way. Much like the tour itself, there are extreme highs and lows, and Ceri faces them with a searingly honest sense of reflection and a trivial sense of humor. This story is warm, empowering and leaves you itching to get off your sofa - but with a template to succeed at the same time.

Join Ceri in his quest to live a life less ordinary.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateJun 6, 2022
ISBN9781801502757
Le Loop: How to Cycle the Tour de France

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    Le Loop - Ceri Stone

    FALL SEVEN TIMES. GET UP EIGHT– Japanese Proverb

    Prologue

    16 July 2019

    Adversity

    I COULD hear Fatima on the phone. She was a strong rider, great fun and not prone to the overdramatic. I was worried.

    ‘THERE’S BEEN AN ACCIDENT.’ There was panic in her voice.

    ‘We need an ambulance. Ceri is out of the Tour.’

    What? That brought me to my senses and rapidly cleared my lingering fog.

    ‘Shut up Fatima. Fuck’s sake I’m fine. I’m not stopping. Where is my Garmin? Will someone give me my bloody Garmin?’

    I had no right to be so rude to Fatima she was just looking out for me. She was right, I had indeed had an accident. A bad one. I needed help and not just in finding my Garmin. There was a chance that I could be out of the Tour. All the lessons I had ever learned about resilience, overcoming adversity and never, ever giving up needed to be applied. Fast.

    The 16th stage was, on paper, a straightforward parcours. We had endured some really tough days climbing in the Pyrenees, culminating in a very stressful stage 15, from Limoux to Foix, which included the Mur de Péguère with its climb of almost 3.5km and gradients of up to 20 per cent. We then transferred our aching limbs further east for a rest day, before starting over again with a run-of-the-mill stage. If there is such a thing in the Tour de France.

    Stage 16 was an out-and-back, flat 177km route starting and finishing at our hotel in Nîmes. The greatest perils were some potential crosswinds and a lack of concentration, as we coaxed our legs back into a rhythm of churning the pedals over and over. We were lucky that the sun was shining, to the point of baking, and we seemed to avoid the worst of the mightily strong mistral breezes from the day before. It was stunning.

    Nîmes is famous for its Roman monuments, such as the imposing amphitheatre Arena of Nîmes and the Maison Carrée, which is arguably the best-preserved Roman temple in the world. Not that we saw much of them on our rest day given our pressing need to eat, drink and refuel; launder kit; buy fresh supplies; tinker with bikes; receive massages and then eat, drink and refuel some more.

    Early in the stage we did get to ride across the resplendent and iconic viaduct, Pont du Gard. The viaduct was less than a kilometre from feed stop one, which gave us time to fill up on cakes and energy drinks before the real riding started. As we left, we started to fall into our mini pelotons. I was due to be in a group which included my new-found friends Eric, Carmen, Andy and Stuart but as we moved out there was no sign of Carmen. I sent the others on and doubled back for her. It turned out she had punctured and had been left behind. Five minutes and a quick tube change later and we set off again, distanced at the back of a field of 100 or so riders with a lot of time to make up and plenty of kilometres to do it in.

    This was a great day. The lead rider Emily had waited for us and I was fortunate to spend my time riding hard with two inspirational ladies. We were already 20 minutes adrift of the field and eager to make up for lost time. By lunch at feed stop three we had passed three groups of backmarkers and caught up with a team who would share the workload for the final 100km back into Nîmes. Carmen appreciated the support and camaraderie. I reflected as we glided over baking tarmac, with a warm summer haze wafting across our bikes, that you achieve far more working with a team compared to struggling on alone. I have long learned the value of teamwork and we were in unison for the day and rapidly made up lost time. The efforts of 16 days on the road were falling into place.

    On the home stretch into Nîmes, we had the wind at our backs and a strong group of ten or so riding in perfect unison. We were strung out in formation with each taking a turn of 90 seconds on the front before drifting to the back of the group to draft in the wheels. The pace was rapid and the warm sun helped us glide along the smooth, almost empty roads through the tranquil fields of southern France.

    The efficiency of the team was idyllic. We rode within inches of the rear wheel in front, hiding from the breeze, while Eric kept his eyes fervently peeled for somewhere to buy an ice cream. He was on a mission and we just had to maintain concentration and effort. I was in nirvana. The ease with which we were covering a vast terrain was almost euphoric. We were emulating the feats of our heroes who would be riding the Tour for real a week after us.

    Stopping!’ the rider in front called out. He was six inches from my front wheel. He had punctured. He hit the brakes. I pulled back on mine. We were travelling at close to 30kph and I had nowhere to go. Riding on the right-hand side of the road I looked at swerving left but I was trapped inside him. As he stopped, he turned right and pulled into the side of the road. I hit the wing of his bike and went over the top of my mine. I tried desperately to cling to my bike and keep it upright.

    I failed. I remember putting my hands out in a vain attempt to break my fall. I failed again. I hit my head. I smashed my right shoulder and right hip before my mate came to rest, landing on top of my left hip. The sound of my carbon frame scraping against concrete grated through me, but not as much as the impact of my helmet hitting the ground and smashing into my forehead. My Garmin computer went flying ahead of us and my prescription sunglasses shattered. My shorts were ripped to pieces and blood was on the concrete underneath our bikes.

    I lay back and tried to feel my feet, my arms and my body. I dared not move my head. I was angry. I was frustrated. I was confused. I was embarrassed and above all I was frightened of failure. I had set out a year earlier with two big goals that I had set for myself, one of which was to cycle the Tour de France, and here I was, in pieces on some inanimate French concrete.

    I heard Fatima tell the organisers I was out of the Tour.

    FEEL THE FEAR AND DO IT

    ANYWAY – Susan Jeffers

    Chapter 1

    Make Your Mind Up Time

    I AM an unremarkable human being. I have no special skills, talents or abilities. I am an ordinary guy. I desperately wanted to do something remarkable, just once in this ordinary life.

    I would love to state with great bluster and confidence that this book will change your life – if I am able to complete this book. If I can fulfil a goal and accomplish something worthy of note, it will prove wholeheartedly that you too can achieve whatever you put your mind to. Maybe then, your life could also change for the better.

    While you read this book, you should start asking yourself what exactly it is that you want to do or want out of life. What would you like to be remembered for when your time is finally up? Do you want to climb a mountain? Start and run a successful business? Become a millionaire? Write a book? Whatever you dream of in life, I want to help you by first putting myself out there and trying to prove that I can achieve something that I had dreamed of, for a long, long while. If I fail then the odds are this book will not change your life because it will not be worthy of being published in the first place. But if you read on, let my deeds inspire you to reach for the stars. Or at the very least let my failings entertain you.

    As I will frequently remind you, I am an ordinary guy. I am average height, average build, balding, pot-bellied, lazy and far from being an intellect. I do not possess one outstanding skill that sets me apart. I am not strong. I have no speed, power or any form of great athletic ability. Okay I am fit and relatively healthy. I have common sense and I guess some charm or charisma (you can be the judge of that), but I am not everyone’s cup of tea.

    My demeanour can be misconstrued as arrogance when in fact I am rather shy and masking a lack of confidence. I can polarise opinions. I have a generally positive outlook and see the best in everyone, but man do I like a good moan and woe betide the fool who crosses me. I have made many mistakes in my life and I have only learned from a handful of them.

    I do not consider myself lucky, yet I am fortunate to have lived a great life and I have experienced some moderate successes as the years have passed by. I genuinely like myself (sorry all you pop psychologists) but I worry myself to sleep over what someone I don’t know, or care about, thinks about me. If only you could like me as much as I do.

    Where I am fortunate is that I have learned a great deal over the years. I have lived and worked with some amazing people and I have absorbed some very valuable lessons from all of them. I have read dozens upon dozens of self-help, success, goal-setting, sales, leadership and communication books and manuals. Some of them are nonsense. Some are plain common sense and there are others which hold nuggets of truth and encouragement that I have tried to remember over time. This is not one of those books.

    I would not dare to devise some notion or ideal that I could market as my own. I do not possess the intellectual prowess for such a thing. I must also state that I am not a self-help guru, I am not a coach and I do not pretend to be Anthony Robbins or anyone of that ilk. I am not looking to sell out a huge seminar hall to tell my story. I do not wish to entice you to part with all of your savings on a critical training course which will change your life. You would be poorer for it and I suspect that is not the change you would have been looking for. I know who I am. I know my limitations. I am not greedy, but I do hope that just one person who reads these pages is motivated to cast off their shackles and give their lifelong dream a shot.

    What I can do is take all of the finest gems of inspiration that have helped me down the years and apply these into a real-life scenario and prove that with the right motivation we are able to achieve anything we want.

    Yes, we can achieve anything we want. Within reason. Swansea City keep telling me that at 52 I am too old to play for them. Seriously? I am exactly what they need right now.

    Within this book you will find three key elements to help you in your quest for personal glory.

    1. A very simple section of theory, based on what has worked for me over the years.

    2. A practical application of that theory as I recount my tale and use all of those tools in my own personal challenge.

    3. Some whimsical quotes that have amused and inspired me down the years.

    As I mentioned, I am unremarkable. I wanted to do something remarkable and prove that any old fool can achieve something extraordinary. Are you with me?

    If I am to recount my tale of eternal dream-chasing for your entertainment then this begs the following questions:

    1. What is it that I want to do?

    2. How can I achieve this dream?

    Let’s start with the second question first. Back to front I know but there is logic in my disorder and it creates a frisson of dramatic suspense.

    How can I achieve success?

    Let’s get one thing straight from the start. There is no shortcut to success. This book will not provide an easy fix or a simple solution. It will not wave a magic wand where all of our dreams instantly materialise. I have tried that constantly and it has failed to deliver constantly. Success comes through hard work.

    It needs dedication, commitment and resilience and it takes effort. This does not mean that it cannot be fun along the way because it should be. One simple thing I learned from a young age is that the journey is the destination. If you do not enjoy the training sessions you will not become a better player and you will not gain the satisfaction of performing at your peak in a match. But I digress. The aim of this book is to apply the lessons I have learned over the years, to put them into simple steps and prove that they do indeed work.

    These are not inexhaustible but they are what work for me. I may not apply all of them throughout my journey but they form the gist of what it takes for me to succeed along the way.

    If you were to do a quick search on the internet with the words ‘Steps to Success’ you would find hundreds of books, blogs, seminars, journals and even more training companies with websites, plus page upon page of straightforward lists, varying from three steps to success to 12 steps to success and more. The list of sources is endless and it is hard to know where to begin. Some titles claim to have a unique solution, others lay out common sense in a really logical way. Some provide a quick fix where others waffle without saying anything, in the hope of enticing us to sign up for a timeshare in the Balearics.

    I have taken the best from all of these solutions, many ideas of which are repeated with varying headings down the years, and applied them to my own personal ambition. They are as follows:

    Ceri’s 7 (and a bit) rungs on the ladder to success

    1. Dream Big and Commit

    2. Preparation. Preparation. Preparation

    3. Live and Love

    4. Hard Work and Resilience

    5. Motivation

    a. Focus on Success

    b. INIOP – My own personal motivating gimmick

    c. Love and Rage

    6. Include and Inspire

    7. Celebrate Hard

    Again, I feel the overwhelming urge to insert the caveat that I am no expert in the field of life-coaching or motivating those in need. I have no science behind my theories and I have no qualifications in psychology or the life sciences. There have been no double-blind studies testing my logic so please understand that my seven (and a bit) steps are purely based on common sense and what has worked for me in the past.

    I have a modicum of life experience to draw upon and I have tasted moderate success. I have successfully motivated and managed teams who have worked for me and I have achieved most dreams that I have chased. My goals have frequently been modest and not grand enough for what the human body and mind are capable of. I failed catastrophically as a young adult during one memorable period of my life, from which I learned more about myself than at any other stage since.

    I learned that failure is inevitable and how you react to it is how you measure your character and achievements. I may one day confront this disaster or I may conveniently keep it buried in the dark recesses of the memory labelled ‘Stupid Bloody Idiot Grow Up’. I have also never come to terms with the fact that Swansea City keep telling me that I am not good enough for them, even though my boots are in the back of my car for every game I go to watch.

    If my logic is similar to anything else that you may have read or that has been published then I apologise. I have read countless books over the years and some of the greatness must have sunk in somewhere along the line. I have also learned from great people and taken on board every lesson they have taught. If I state the obvious, I apologise. This book is designed to be a ‘proof is in the pudding’ of all the encouragement I have received. In no way is it intended to be a plagiaristic homage to every coach who is out there. It is for this reason that my theory and definitions are kept deliberately succinct.

    1. Dream Big and Commit

    ‘Setting goals is the first step in turning the invisible into the visible.’ – Tony Robbins

    As Captain Sensible once sang in the early eighties, ‘You’ve got to have a dream, if you don’t have a dream, how you gonna make a dream come true?’ Brilliant song ‘Happy Talk’ and the punk sell-out was correct. The first step to achieving any form of success or realising your goals is to have that goal in the first place.

    So, dig deep and ask yourself what is it that you really want? What are your core values? What are you passionate about and what gets you out of bed in the morning? What do you love doing that helps others? If money wasn’t an object, what would you do with your life? Spend some time looking at what it is that you really want and what you have an overwhelming passion for. Then make a decision.

    The first rung on the ladder is making your mind up. Be passionate. Dream big and make a damned decision.

    Once that goal is set, write it down. In fact, write it down and set a deadline. This means you cannot let the joy of procrastination overtake your progress. Then commit to it and commit to doing something daily that will help you win in the long term.

    I will let you into a secret. As I write I am starting to re-evaluate my whole life and career so there is a chance I may go on a little journey within a journey. I have my great goal decided upon but that brings far more passion to my life than my current successful run-of-the-mill career. Let’s see where this takes us.

    Now that the decision is made and cast in stone, we need to work out how on earth we are going to complete the whole thing.

    2. Preparation. Preparation. Preparation

    ‘Our goals can be reached through a vehicle of a plan, in which we must fervently believe, and upon which we must vigorously act. There is no other route to success.’ – Pablo Picasso

    I love a good plan. And to paraphrase the A-Team I love it even more when a plan comes together.

    The planning stage is the most essential aspect of attaining any form of success. Herein lie the building blocks and foundations for everything that will follow. There are many great quotes and lessons that will drive this point home and when you work in any form of corporate structure you will hear them all. They may be clichés but they are no less true and they certainly add value.

    An old manager in my first career incarnation in insurance repeatedly told us: ‘People don’t plan to fail they fail to plan.’ We heard this way too often but it has never left me, so thank you David ‘Beaker’ Goodman. I then achieved a dream of living and working overseas where we were repeatedly taught that the three keys to success are: Preparation. Preparation. Preparation. When you have to stand up and give a presentation to 300 angry tourists who have been overbooked, you need to know your stuff and that only comes with preparation.

    The start of a good plan is to write it down. Take your overall goal and break it down into small daily, bite-sized chunks. Most people look at their grand dream and become overwhelmed at the sheer scale of it and they are defeated before they have begun. The way to make this easy and attainable is to ‘Keep It Simple Stupid’. Another travel industry acronym.

    A good example is something I used to do with my sales team when I worked in publishing. Each sales rep would have their individual pre-set target for the year. When you looked at a goal of generating a total of let’s say £100k per annum, this could be overwhelming and borderline frightening at first glance. But if you break it down to the point that the average sale is £500 this means that the salesman has to make 200 individual sales per year, though that is still daunting and a long way off.

    Let’s say that he/she works for just 40 weeks of the year and takes an extended summer and Christmas break: this then equates to five sales per week, which in turn breaks down to one sale per day. If we say that on average the sales rep needs to attend two appointments to get one sale and has to make four phone calls to get one appointment, this means that the rep needs to make eight phone calls per day to get two appointments, which breaks down even further to making just one phone call per hour.

    By breaking down the whole process and forming a daily plan, the sales rep could achieve their £100k target if they make just one phone call at 9am, each day. It is that simple.

    Write your plan down. It could be a simple daily list or a detailed spreadsheet but simplify it into daily, easily achievable chunks. There are many great tools available, from training plans for a marathon to goal-setting journals which do exactly this.

    Once your plan is written down, complete a journal or a log of what you have done each day. This not only helps you maintain some epic habits, it also serves as motivation when you have a wobble down the line. For instance, if you are training for a marathon over a period of four months and after ten weeks you feel that you are stalling in your progress and going nowhere, take a look at your log. As you look back you might just see that you have completed four sessions per week, or an average of 6–8 hours training per week; your average speed and distance will have increased gradually without you noticing and, overall, you will have covered more than 200 miles. That would already be some achievement in itself which means you can afford to pat yourself on the back and move on with the plan.

    Break your goal down into daily epic habits. Write it down and keep a log of what you do. This allows you to live your dream.

    3. Live and Love

    ‘Do what you love. Love what you do.’

    Ever since I started working overseas in the early nineties, I have had a poster on my wall which says ‘The Journey is the Destination’. People frequently tend to get caught up in their end goal and it is easy to forget to stop and smell the roses along the way. Yes, commitment and dedication are a minimum to achieving any worthwhile goal but you need to enjoy the process to allow you to live it to the best of your ability. Living and loving the process is essential to prevailing in whatever you do. If you take a half-hearted approach, you will only achieve half of what you want. That to me is failure, whereas living a life filled with passion is success.

    To live your dream, you need to adopt what I refer to as ‘epic habits’. Every moment of every day, make your dream your focus and make decisions based around or including your end goal. Granted, daily life and careers will no doubt be a priority, so they either need to be included or worked around.

    Success is never easy; it takes a special kind of dedication. When making decisions ask yourself does this benefit your goal? If not, then why are you doing it? Or what can you alter to make it beneficial?

    In 2013 I ran my first Ironman race (yes, I have run more than one, which I will no doubt brag about down the line) and this transformed my life for the better. I started going to bed one hour earlier each night because the rest was beneficial to me. I went swimming before work and I overhauled my diet and made sure I ate at consistent times during the day. If I was at a function for work, I would choose the healthy meal options. If I was on the road for a couple of days, I would always book a hotel with either a gym, a pool or one near to a park where I could go for a run. My shower at home takes one minute to heat up so every morning I would do a plank for 60 seconds to make the best use of that time while I was waiting. When brushing my teeth, I would do it standing on one foot to strengthen my core muscles.

    ‘If you want to change the world, start off by making your bed.’ –

    William H. McRaven

    Like this awe-inspiring Navy SEAL, every day I started by making my bed. I adopted lots of small epic habits and made every decision include the process of training for an Ironman. I also trained for 15 hours per week as part of my training plan. All part of my epic habits.

    Invest in yourself. This is supposed to be enjoyable and rewarding, it is not meant to be a thankless and soulless slog. You need to look after yourself and continually see improvement to be able to stay committed.

    Reward yourself for small victories. Sit back and savour your achievements or growth so far and look after your health and well-being. If you are passionate about your goal then this will come naturally.

    Believe in what you are doing, both overall and on a daily basis and act as if you have already achieved your goal. If you are a salesman, act as if you own the company and take responsibility for everything. If you want to run a marathon, train as if you are racing to compete with Mo Farah. If you want to write a book, write as if your book is already on the shelves. What the mind can perceive to believe it will achieve. Another gem from my insurance days. I learned so much from a career I hated.

    Tell people about your goal. Get friends, family and like-minded people onside and involved in what you are doing. Before long they will start helping you and providing support, especially if you act as if this is happening. You will attract like-minded people or those with a similar interest and this provides a support network and further opportunities for learning.

    Keep learning and improving. Maintain those epic habits and look for every opportunity to improve your knowledge, processes and outcome. Sir Dave Brailsford constantly talks about the aggregation of marginal gains. This is simply making small improvements of 1 per cent here and half a per cent there, which added together could make a 5 per cent difference, which in cycling terms is huge. Keep looking at your process and be flexible as you maintain great daily routines.

    Another cycling legend, Sir Chris Hoy, frequently refers to the process when he talks on TV. I have tried to apply this in my daily life and it makes so much sense. Focus on the process on a daily basis and prioritise the process over the outcome. Make the process an epic habit. Live for it, love it and keep on learning.

    If you focus on the process and ensure that you give complete attention to your training plan, your product knowledge, your target audience or sales technique, then the art of crossing that finish line, or getting people to sign on the dotted line, becomes automatic. Focus on, and love, the process, and the outcome will take care of itself.

    If you live it and love it you will succeed. This in turn allows you to work hard towards this success.

    4. Hard Work and Resilience

    ‘Success is one per cent inspiration and ninety-nine per cent perspiration.’ – Thomas Edison

    There is no shortcut to success. If you want financial gain it has to be earned and worked for and there is always a price to pay. Warranted, you could win the National Lottery, but what are the odds on that? One in 60 million? One in 100 million? Those are your odds of success with no discernible effort. Jarvis Cocker once remarked that his band Pulp were an overnight success; it just took ten years of hard graft to get there. This applies to any goal or ambition.

    There is no easy way to say this but if you want to achieve anything in life you need to put in the effort. Once you have set your goal, be prepared to work harder than anyone else in the room and if you think that preparation, training and effort is hard, try failing.

    Something I learned whilst working overseas in the travel industry is that it is very easy to sit back, soak up the sun and live the easy life. But remember

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