• Europes biggest bike selection
    Essential

    How cycling saves lives

    Sophia Willmes
    Sophia Willmes
    Mar 4, 2024 4 min
    How cycling saves lives

    How healthy is cycling?

    The fact that cycling is healthy will not be news to anyone here. Blood circulation, fresh air, exercise—of course, it's good for us and our bodies. But in what way exactly? How can cycling also help us psychologically overcome crises? Today, we're taking a closer, more scientific look at the health benefits of cycling. This doesn't mean there's no room left for the small and very big stories of those for whom cycling was a lifesaver.

    1. Excursion into sports medicine.

    Just two to four hours of cycling a week is enough to improve his/her general health significantly. Diseases such as osteoarthritis or Parkinson's disease can even be alleviated in their course by spending a lot of time on the bike. However, we will spare you now too medical and technical language derivations, but instead work off a short list of health benefits because cycling:

    • It is low-impact.
    • It is a good muscle workout: Pedalists work all the important muscle groups and thus train evenly and effectively. This results in stronger muscles, better endurance, more stretch and flexibility, and better posture.
    • Promotes blood circulation: This, in turn, prevents many cardiovascular diseases and cardiac arrhythmias.
    • It makes us sleep better. This is thanks to a better perfused brain, which also improves our concentration, reduces the likelihood of depression and anxiety disorders, and lowers our stress levels.

    2. Cycling against Alzheimer's

    Speaking of concentration and mental health, cycling is said to have a positive effect on dementia and Alzheimer's disease. On the bike, the brain is challenged; you meander your way through the urban jungle or over rooty forest paths, and you must always have all sensors sharpened to process traffic situations, environments, sounds and all other impressions. And that at an average speed of 23 km/h. Cycling is, therefore, also a performance sport for the brain, and this is a proven preventive force against Alzheimer's disease. A performance sport for the brain. In addition, spending time on the bike also prevents other risk factors of the neurodegenerative disease, such as high blood pressure, obesity, lack of sleep, depression or too little social participation (after all, few things are as inspiring as a group ride).

    Something else changes in our brains when we bike a lot: the fresh air changes our brain structure. Researchers at the German Max Planck Institute found that our brain structure improves the more time we spend in the fresh air, regardless of the level of physical activity or sun exposure. More gray matter, better mood, better short-term memory—all reasons to treat yourself to a little bike ride today.

    3. Therapy on or also with the bike

    For some years, the American family and couples therapist Joey Dolowy has been taking advantage of these psychological benefits. His offer: psychotherapy on the mountain bike. He got the idea from a patient who couldn't sit still. The two walked through a nearby parking lot instead, and Dolowy quickly realized that the fresh air and physical activity got the conversation flowing much better. An avid mountain biker, he decided shortly thereafter to take outdoor therapy one step further, onto the trails.

    One of his patients, a former pro-cyclist, reports that the genius of Dolowy's therapy method is that the routes and the course of the conversation are often coordinated. Thus, a problem or uncertainty is tackled on the way uphill; just before the summit, an attempt is made to reach a realization or solution. The psychic high of this released tension is then further enriched by the great sense of freedom on the downhill jumps: the therapeutic powers of cycling, then, coupled with the therapeutic powers of.... well - a therapist.

    The former can also be a true psychological support for some on its own. There are people like Mark DeLong and his wife, who lost their son to cancer, escaped (and saved) themselves from the pain into triathlon, and met an oncologist at Ironman in Hawaii who would cure Mark himself of his cancer relapse a few years later. There's a young dancer who lost himself in his alcohol addiction and found support in the cycling community that helped him face and overcome his withdrawal.

    A young mother, depressed and addicted to drugs, who for the sake of her daughter at one point forced herself to spend 15 minutes a day on her Peloton coach and through this experience of self-efficacy found the way out of her unhappiness. An orphan whose blue fixie means the world to him to this day as a symbol of his psychological healing, a young cancer patient who was able to recall her strength on a bicycle- the list goes on and on. Whether illnesses, losses or personal low blows, the way back to the bike or onto it for the first time was of transformative importance for many.

    So, the title of this blog post is not as exaggerated as it seems at first glance.

    Cycling improves our blood circulation, our fitness, our concentration, our sleep and sometimes our entire happiness. - Alice Huot @ buycycle.

    We at buycycle believe in this (sorry, it's getting corny one last time) in this power of cycling; after all, it is the passion of all of us! team is always available for you, just look at our blog for more tips, tricks and stories and on our website Until then, we wish you as always: Happy browsing, happy cycling!