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slightly scared

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Today I did something that I havn't done in 35 years or more and climbed aboard a bicycle and found it slightly scary.
In years gone by I would have set it in motion by hopping alongside it with me left foot on the nearside pedal set on the down stroke, sling me right leg over and be on board whilst moving, today i set it aside the curb, climbed on with it stationary and with the far side pedal set at the high point and set off with a wobble.
I rode at a very slow pace off the estate and whilst it wasn't all plain sailing...having a selection of gears on each grip and no recollection of reading any instructions threw an odd spanner in the works... I made it to the main road. In years past I would have speed around the corner with a frightening lean, to merge with the traffic, before glancing over my shoulder and slinging it in the other direction to cross the road and bump it up the curb outside the shop, today I dismounted, walked to the pelican crossing and waited for the, beep beep, so I could cross safely, on foot, pushing the sleek racing machine by my side.
I know that it will come back to me if I persist, but it was slightly scary. I'm dreading the grand kids wanting grandad to climb a tree with em, or paddle a tractor inner tube across a deep river cos I can see those being slightly scary as well.
Have you done anything of late that you did without thought or worry years ago, but proved to be more nerve racking than you anticipated?
I sympathise, I got back in the saddle about 5 years ago and it was a whole new scary experience. Suprising cos Ive ridden motorbikes regularly since forever.
All I can say is persevere and it gets comfier.
Ive just started a formal academic course of study, my first ever if you dont include remembering bits of books and writing them down 30 years ago. It is blowing my brain into tiny fragments. I am hoping that gets to be second nature too.
I had quite a serious horse riding accident at the age of 15 and wasn't able or allowed to do any kind of sport for 18months afterwards.
By that stage, I was into A Levels and then off to uni. So, my once regular hobby has fallen waaay by the wayside.
I am hoping to take it up again in the summer. I am excited but really nervous - I had ridden since I was 9 and I was good, very good. It is going to be hard relearning something that was once second nature.
I'm going to do it though - I've realised of late that I've lost a little bit of the 'me' I used to be... and I'd like her back! wink
I also think it's good to be scared and challenged sometimes!
Go Dave! :thumbup:
I bought a second hand bike when I moved to cambridge, as it seems to be the most common way of getting around here..
first ride, park it in the square, and cycling back the tyre punctures.
have it repaired, decide to use it to go to the movies, park it in front of a bunch of kids..between several other bikes
when I get back the front tyre is cut.
sod it, I'll keep walking
2 years ago I got back in a canoe after a break of 10 years (I stopped because of injury) It was very scary but I soon picked it back up and plan to get back into doing it regularly
I used to love cycling. It's all powerful king of the road stuff. Move or I will crush you sort of feeling. OK, I would come worse of but I have right of way. Ha.
Anyhooooooooooooo........... I got annoyed cos within a year I had three cycles stolen. All chained up too. Two from outside work! So, I stopped using the cycle only to go for nice rides. Now I can't even do nice rides cos cycling does my back in sad
Erm.... not sure what point I am making, just a few comments about cycling biggrin
oh yes....I can SO relate to this one.......
years ago, in my younger days, I was a HUGE fan of fairgrounds.....the flashing lights, the smell of fried onions, bags of candy floss and toffee apples just waiting to rot the teeth right out of your head.....and of course the 'ultimate' essence of the fairground.....the rides!!
Now bearing in mind, im talking about the travelling fairs and NOT the static amusement parks that dot the country, and this was the early 80's....around about the time that the Corkscrew at Alton Towers was THE pinnacle of a rollercoaster riders wet dreams.....I was around 12 to 16 years of age and nothing scared me!
I happily boarded delights with names like 'The Time Machine' the 'mexican hat', the 'people movers', the 'ski jump', 'the octopus', space invader, orbiter and of course my all time fave....the waltzers!
screaming loudly....."spin me mister, spin me!!" and, belting out a blood curdling screech when the ride operators hollered "scream if ya wanna go faster!"
Every bump, twirl, revolution, up, down, zig and zag made my heart beat faster, my pulse race and adrenaline flood my teenage body........you got off the rides breathless, slightly wobbly and itching to get on the next nausea inducing ride, without so much as a pause for breath between!
I dont know when the balance began to ever so subtly change.....maybe when i first became a mum, and settled for rides such as the tea-cup n saucers, the toytown carousel and the dizzying heights of the helter skelter for years untill my kids were old enough to 'come on' the big rides with me.
I boarded 'the parachutes' a fairly tame (by todays standards) ride, in which you sat in a seat, with feet dangling and were spun round and round and then tipped on an angle high above the rest of the fairground....with the familiar butterflies building in my stomach as they always did 'pre-ride'.....eagerly anticipating that rush of adrenaline that I could at long last share with my kids.
Oh the adrenaline rushed alright, but for an entirely different reason.......previoulsy unheard creaks, groans and mechanical noises.....seemingly much louder than the booming disco music, were, to my parental ears.....a nut and bolt coming loose, a cable threatening to snap at any moment, catapulting us off into oblivion, or severe metal fatigue, heralding the imminenent collapse of the ride.....
i left the ride ashen faced, sweating and feeling sick.....not the fun filled nausea I used to leave a ride with, but the stomach churning horror that I had just put my own kids in mortal danger!!!
nowadays, i can just about stomach the ferris wheel and much prefer to 'hook a duck', throw a wonky dart at a hole studded giant playing card, and wave to my 15 year old as he goes round for the umpteenth time on the 'teacups'
Yes I have some expierience here. After many years of retirement I was foolish enough to enter a rally (Car rally) and scared myself witless
Where did the skill go, did I ever have any biggrin
Its funny but looking back I definately was better than I was at the you understand me it took years to be as good as I was (in my mind) :D :D :D
Anyways I dont think i will try that gain in a hurry
Oh I lived on my bike when I was a kid :bounce: Me and my mate used to cycle about 10 miles into the middle of the New Forest. Borrow a bridle, get on friends horses, belt around the forest on them for a couple of hours. Spend rest of the day jumping (often landing in, cos never been the best jumper) bog, gales of laughter....... not thinking of the future, as in when I got home and walloped for ruining my best drop pocket flares I had badgered mum into buying me from C&As (full of mud and ripped flare that kept getting caught in chain)
Have our sandwiches, bomb around on bikes a bit more, then head off home about dinner time :happy:
Chomp dinner, tell parents that we went bareback in the forest ( :shock: ) back out on bikes to meet up with friends to rally around the forest again. Or 999in or whatever grabbed our fancy. Back home before it got dark.
Didn't have mobile phones in them days, were just allowed to roam the middle of the forest alone all day long :shock:
My bike was a massive ET style one got from a dump or somewhere similar, can't remember - do remember having to go over the whole lot with wire wool when I got it, to get the rust off confused
Then as I got older, drainpipe jeans that I had to use a coat hanger to do the flies up, wouldn't let me sit on a bike....... or sit anywhere actually :undecided: all I could do was stand around trying to look cool (rather than pained and unable to breath out).
A couple of years ago - decided the same as Davej, to get a bit of exercise, take the bikes out into the forest for the day......... only differece was stopping at a pub for refreshment :cool: rather than the warm orange squash I carried back then :?
Me and David got on the bikes full of excitement - David was the first to leap off cos I think he must've sat on his bollocks rotflmao He blamed the seat. Why do they have them seats that are nothing more than a cut bit of stearing wheel place sideways :?
Told him he would get used to it, and off we set again :happy:
By the time I had turned the 4th corner and reached the hill we had to go up, I was already reaching for my water bottle - legs screaming at me to quit, what had they done to deserve this treatment blah blah blah.
Back on bike to start the hill climb, bluddy long hill it is too. About 10 minutes later (or it felt like it) I just had to get off my bike - it wasn't going anywhere no matter what bluddy shimano gear I was in :? My legs were screaming, my heart going so fast it was more like a vibrate than a beat :?
Climbed off, drank more water bottle, looked back to see how much hill I had got up....... I was still practically at the bottom :shock: It had barely changed from the straight bit to the up bit :shock:
Decided to push bike up the hill. Bad enough walking up the thing, let alone push a bike along, shimano gears even more redundant :? Halfway up hill, David ahead of me (by a long shot) also gets off. Nearly up the hill and a little old lady comes cycling past me at speed :shock: And with shopping in her basket :shock:
Told her to stop showing off, she laughed, I didn't!!!
Anyway, finally got to top of hill, still a mile or so away from the start of the forest - Cycling wasn't being fun any more, my legs and bum just wanted the sofa sad
Decided to stop there at the pub for a quick wine before carrying on.
Sank that drink before the sides of the glass was wet, had another :cool:
One more and then we're off
Ok final drink and thats that!! :?
3 Hours later, a couple more final drinks..... and the realisation neither of us had to drive, decided it was far too late to go to forest :?
So back down hill - as Davej said, back yonder I would of belted down the hill, head down bum up for aerodynamics....... No bluddy way :scared: Sure the roads have more bumps in than the middle of the forest :? So brake brake brake down the hill it was.
Finally got home, put bikes away, congratulated each other on our 1 and a half mile bike journey in 4 hours (at least it will be an easy time to beat next time! :uhoh: ). Felt v. fit :cool:
Ordered takeaway, put telly on and had a couple more drinks :?
Haven't been out since :rotflmao: Far too scary!! :shock:
Plus the fact Dave, when we were kids, I'm sure cars didn't go more than about 30 mph tops!! The speed they belt past now :shock: Doesn't even cause a back wind to help me on my way - more of a side wind to help me into the kerb :?
What a nice post Missy I've been able to run that as a video type of thingy in my head.
Your right about the saddles, useless poxy things, they look about right for them as ride around in purpose made lycra and matching head gear. Well defined muscles being enhanced by the tight fitting garments and the ardour of the task. Faces taught with determination and sinew, but for someone wearing comfort fit jeans, flip flops, a Fruit of the Loom sweat top and a ruddy complexion with a fag dangling outa the corner of his mouth, summint along the lines of the old fashioned bucket seats found on tractors would be more suitable.
Dunno about the cars getting faster, on account of me getting slower, can't work it out see, I mean if I'm 50% slower than I was, then it figures the cars are gonna seem as though they are 50% faster dunno. I'm pretty sure that I'm going slower cos whilst I did pass my neighbour pushing her kid in it's buggy, I was still able to exchange enough words with her as to be counted as a conversation.
OMG Missy I'm crying with laughter here rotflmao :rotflmao: :rotflmao:
rotflmao :rotflmao: :rotflmao:
Oh Dave :rotflmao:
Great story Missy.
Quote by noladreams
I had quite a serious horse riding accident at the age of 15 and wasn't able or allowed to do any kind of sport for 18months afterwards.
By that stage, I was into A Levels and then off to uni. So, my once regular hobby has fallen waaay by the wayside.
I am hoping to take it up again in the summer. I am excited but really nervous - I had ridden since I was 9 and I was good, very good. It is going to be hard relearning something that was once second nature.
I'm going to do it though - I've realised of late that I've lost a little bit of the 'me' I used to be... and I'd like her back! wink
I also think it's good to be scared and challenged sometimes!
Go Dave! :thumbup:

Get it done, I have booked a lesson for next week and can't wait (but I am also as nervous as hell). I have not rode since I was 18, and up then I had four horses, competed at county level and rode every single day (even when I should have been in school)
So if I can do it, you can lol
Cheers Ms Whips and NWC kiss
Am sure I will!