It's Not About the Bike: Obligation of the Cured
The Obligation of the Cured Lance Armstrong was determined to win the Tour de France as a way of proving to himself and the world that he had truly defeated cancer. After his ordeal with cancer, Armstrong resumed his life with renewed appreciation and perspective. When he mustered the courage to begin racing again, he was viewed as a has-been. He had grown up being told that he would never amount to anything, and at the time he was back to square one. However, Armstrong had done it before and he was determined to prove to the world that he could accomplish more than ever before. Armstrong says in It’s Not About the Bike that overcoming cancer was the most difficult, and one of the most substantial task he had ever undertaken. "The truth is cancer was the best thing that ever happened to me. I don’t know why I got the illness, but it did wonders for me, and I wouldn’t want to walk away from it. Why would I want to change even for a day, the most important and shaping events in my life?" (4) After cancer, he was a new man. Gone was the self-important, bullish, young Lance from before the treatment. His body had also changed, the bulk of his former muscle gone. He was now more reserved, and gra
It took him almost a year to work up the courage to begin cycling again. In this time, he had felt helpless, waiting to see if the cancer was to return."I didn't have cancer anymore, but I didn’t not have it, either. I was in a state of anxiety called remission, and I was obsessed with the idea of a relapse."(156) When he finally did decide to make a comeback, almost no one would sponsor him. Every one in the cycling world had no belief that a cancer survivor could go on to race competitively. Confidis was the only team willing to give him a contract, although they had abandoned him after Lance began undertaking cancer treatment. As one can imagine, this initially left Armstrong feeling hopeless. Over time he became defiant and determined. "I was on the verge of giving up. We still had the offer from Confidis, but my resentment had reached the point at which I almost preferred not to race at all rather than race for them." (178) When the US Postal Service team offered him a contract, he saw no other possible choice, except quitting. Quitting, however, was the very last thing he intended to do. Although he certainly would not sign on with Confidis, who had abandoned him when he had needed su
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Approximate Word count = 820
Approximate Pages = 3 (250 words per page double spaced)
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