I turned 50 this year and I assume I will out live my money so the bike may be my "way out"...
That's a joke. Someone told me that I am more likely to die from heart disease or stroke if I don't bike and my chance of dying on my bike is small. I don't know if that's true but it's what I live by. We are as careful as we can be and try to plan great routes.
We ride all the large charity rides and races so there is a lot of traffic control. We also have our training routes down to about as safe as you can get.
Now the Hotter n' Hell ride scared me as I have never been around 15,000 cyclist starting at the same time. Our normal races are 250 people and our charity rides are around 2,500. 15,000 was crazy. We started about mid pack and my bike moved the first inch around 40 minutes after the start canon went off. There was carnage everywhere you looked for the first 30 miles before it started getting spread out.
BTW, the name of the race was correct. When my wife crossed the finish line it was 107.6. It was only 98 when I crossed and I went and had a couple of sandwhiches and more fluids and a beer and then went to the finish line to wait for her. She looked dang near like she was about to die but she did 60 miles, in that heat and all the people and a 20+ mph headwind the last 22 miles. It was freakin brutal.