Memorial Day Weekend 2026
Before the bags were packed,
before the pedals turned,
there were forecasts showing rain,
maps open on our phones,
texts sent late into the night—
Should we leave earlier?
Book somewhere else?
Maybe change the route?
And somehow,
without ceremony,
we kept turning toward each other
instead of toward the stress.
Like we always do.
Late that morning
the tandem bike carried us west to east,
Sparta to Elroy,
Sixty seven "6-7" miles of rhythm and trust.
Two riders.
One machine.
One steady motion.
Your breath matching mine,
legs circling in unison
through tunnels cool as memory,
past fields unfolding green beneath May skies,
past strangers who became companions
for half a mile and a story.
Then came the rain—
brief, steady, somewhere west of Elroy—
just enough to darken the trail
and bead across our jackets.
We could have stopped longer.
Could have turned cautious,
waited it out beneath some overhang
watching the weather make decisions for us.
But we didn’t.
We kept riding.
Past wet gravel and dripping trees,
past the little voice that wonders
if comfort is easier than continuing.
And somewhere in that rain
we laughed again,
because even soaked sleeves and muddy tires
felt strangely beautiful together.
Another story to carry home.
Another reminder
that joy is rarely ruined by inconvenience.
One plan bent into another.
Reservations disappeared.
Roads rerouted us.
A last-minute hotel appeared
somewhere outside La Crosse
like luck waiting at the edge of dusk.
Then a college bar—
sticky floors, loud music,
young laughter ricocheting off brick walls—
and there we were,
not trying to be younger,
but suddenly feeling it anyway.
The next day, Decorah—
more miles, more laughter,
embraces that lasted longer than usual,
the kind that say
I know exactly who I’m riding through life with.
Because the tandem was never just the tandem.
It was us.
Balancing together through curves,
leaning when needed,
pulling harder when the hills arrived,
trusting the other person
even when the path disappeared ahead.
And somewhere between Sparta, Elroy,
La Crosse, and Decorah,
between rerouted plans and variable weather,
between exhaustion and joy,
we made yet another beautiful memory—
the kind built not from flawless plans,
but from continuing forward together.
And maybe that was the whole weekend.
Not perfection from the beginning,
but perfection assembled gently
from pivots, patience,
shared glances,
and choosing each other again and again.
Because the best weekends are not the ones
that go exactly as planned.
They are the ones
where love keeps adapting,
keeps laughing,
keeps pedaling—
side by side,
mile after mile.
© 2026 Shawn Oen. All rights reserved.
7d ago
May 27, 2026 at 2:40 PM UTC
Memorial Day Weekend 2026
Before the bags were packed,
before the pedals turned,
there were forecasts showing rain,
maps open on our phones,
texts sent late into the night—
Should we leave earlier?
Book somewhere else?
Maybe change the route?
And somehow,
without ceremony,
we kept turning toward each other
instead of toward the stress.
Like we always do.
Late that morning
the tandem bike carried us west to east,
Sparta to Elroy,
Sixty seven "6-7" miles of rhythm and trust.
Two riders.
One machine.
One steady motion.
Your breath matching mine,
legs circling in unison
through tunnels cool as memory,
past fields unfolding green beneath May skies,
past strangers who became companions
for half a mile and a story.
Then came the rain—
brief, steady, somewhere west of Elroy—
just enough to darken the trail
and bead across our jackets.
We could have stopped longer.
Could have turned cautious,
waited it out beneath some overhang
watching the weather make decisions for us.
But we didn’t.
We kept riding.
Past wet gravel and dripping trees,
past the little voice that wonders
if comfort is easier than continuing.
And somewhere in that rain
we laughed again,
because even soaked sleeves and muddy tires
felt strangely beautiful together.
Another story to carry home.
Another reminder
that joy is rarely ruined by inconvenience.
One plan bent into another.
Reservations disappeared.
Roads rerouted us.
A last-minute hotel appeared
somewhere outside La Crosse
like luck waiting at the edge of dusk.
Then a college bar—
sticky floors, loud music,
young laughter ricocheting off brick walls—
and there we were,
not trying to be younger,
but suddenly feeling it anyway.
The next day, Decorah—
more miles, more laughter,
embraces that lasted longer than usual,
the kind that say
I know exactly who I’m riding through life with.
Because the tandem was never just the tandem.
It was us.
Balancing together through curves,
leaning when needed,
pulling harder when the hills arrived,
trusting the other person
even when the path disappeared ahead.
And somewhere between Sparta, Elroy,
La Crosse, and Decorah,
between rerouted plans and variable weather,
between exhaustion and joy,
we made yet another beautiful memory—
the kind built not from flawless plans,
but from continuing forward together.
And maybe that was the whole weekend.
Not perfection from the beginning,
but perfection assembled gently
from pivots, patience,
shared glances,
and choosing each other again and again.
Because the best weekends are not the ones
that go exactly as planned.
They are the ones
where love keeps adapting,
keeps laughing,
keeps pedaling—
side by side,
mile after mile.
© 2026 Shawn Oen. All rights reserved.
