Prison On The Saddle -final- -shimizuan- May 2026
She pointed up the hill and said something in a dialect I couldn’t fully catch. But I caught the last word: Shimizuan. Then she made a drinking motion with her gnarled hand. Tea. Rest.
By hour six, the prison walls were up. My back was a single knot of complaint. My hands, numb from the vibration of cracked asphalt, couldn’t feel the brake levers anymore. I was running on nothing but the echo of a playlist I’d turned off two hours ago. Prison on the Saddle -Final- -Shimizuan-
An old woman, maybe seventy or eighty, bent over a patch of mountain vegetables by the side of the road. She wasn’t gardening. She was just there , watching the road. She looked at me—sweating, swaying, a moving pile of lycra and bad decisions—and she laughed. She pointed up the hill and said something
I called this series “Prison on the Saddle” not because I hate the bike. I don’t. I love the bike the way a sailor loves a leaky ship—because it’s the only thing between you and the deep. No, the prison is the having to continue . The rule you set for yourself that morning, over coffee and a stale biscuit: No shortcuts. No vans. No mercy. My back was a single knot of complaint
Shimizuan appears like a held breath. One moment, forest. The next, steam rising from a wooden trough at the side of the road. The guesthouse has no sign, just a blue noren curtain flapping in the dusk.