Please pardon my language. Usually, I severely disapprove
 of bad language, especially when it's typed. A sudden verbal outburst 
is one thing, but taking the time to actually type it out and hit send 
in a game - or in this case on a blog, where I've had more than enough 
opportunity to change my mind and delete it - is quite another. But 
right now, it is appropriate and, to a degree, a teensy bit necessary.
   I'll come right out and say it: I can't ride a bike. And I must jump immediately to my parents' defence and state that they did try to teach me, really quite hard, but I
 was the stubborn one. After riding with stabilisers, my parents finally
 took them off when they thought I was ready and took me out to learn 
properly. My dad had a hold of the back of my bike and when I was doing 
well, he let go - like any parent would. He said nothing because 
otherwise I'd panic. Instead, I was going quite fast, looked back in 
excitement, found him a ways back up the path and I panicked. I veered 
off the path, fell and hurt myself. I actually broke my skin - there was
 a bit of blood and it hurt for hours.
   My parents tried to get me back on but I refused. I was about 7 or something. I'm 27 now.
   Now comes the 'learning not to give a f...udge' bit.
   Last
 week while in The Netherlands, we went to the Hoge Veluwe, a nature 
reserve full of wild deer, boar and sheep, as well as smaller critters. 
The Dutch are big on cycling - you'd never guess - so his parents wanted
 us all to go out for a ride there. They know I can't ride, however, so 
they spoke to the bike rental office and were told that, among bikes for
 disabled people, they had one single tricycle - it had a saddle, gears,
 brakes, the lot, with the only difference being two wheels at the 
front. They reserved it for me.
   Now, most people would have 
said "no, I can't ride, I'd rather do something else - perhaps we could 
go but take a walking trail." Others would have declined it all 
together. I did the last time they suggested tandem.
   But this 
time, I didn't. My options were: don't go and miss all the wildlife, go 
and take a hiking trail and get shin splints and cover less ground, go 
and use a tricycle and get laughed at by everyone else, or go and try to
 learn to ride a bike.
   I opted for those last two.
   I
 had my tricycle - you can see me looking really rather epic on it while Seeg and his brother regressed about 20 years and started climbing trees
 - and we rode for about 2-3 hours, stopping three times to go on small 
hiking trails before looping back around to the bikes. I was laughed at 
by kids and adults alike, in a country full of people who are pretty 
much born on bicycles, but I kept going, and we stopped a couple of 
times so that I could have a go on someone else's bike.
   The 
trouble there, though, was that, while these saddles could be adjusted 
ridiculously low (yay), the bikes had no gears, their brakes were 
back-peddling, and they were heavy. But I tried. And everyone helped. 
Seeg held the back of my saddle, Hanke did, Ron did, and gradually I was
 getting better - to the point that Ron was the one who let go of my 
saddle (it's a dad-thing, I think). And for two glorious seconds, I was 
riding a bike.
   Then I wobbled, veered again and leapt off into a bush because there were no brakes and I didn't want to go down with the bike.
   For
 three hours, I rode along popular bicycle trails in a country full of 
cyclists while riding a tricycle. I was laughed at by all kinds of 
people. I ended up with very sore sit 
bones and, the next day, sore glutes. I could have stayed at home or 
just gone walking instead, preserved my dignity and had a very good day.
   Instead, I swallowed my pride and had an amazing day, and one of the most memorable for a long, long while. And now I'm thinking about buying myself a bike and some stabilisers and learning like I'm 5 again. Because I loved the
 sensation of gliding along the road, I loved the burn in my thighs, I 
loved the appreciation for smooth paving and rough gravel, and going 
down hill, at least with three wheels, was so enjoyable.
   Tell me who else my age - 'too old to learn' as I used to say - would be willing to do that? And honestly?
   Nothing
 touched me, no laughing children, no laughing adults, no strange looks 
from the people at the bike shed, because I decided it wasn't going to. I
 used that thing and I had immense fun (until my bum started hurting). 
And we covered enough ground to see loads of deer, and 10 wild boar - two adults and eight piglets.
   Swallowing
 your pride is not easy - but as one old and very wise tea connoisseur 
once said: 'pride is not the opposite of shame, but its source. True 
humility is the only antidote to shame.'
   By severing the 
association between pride and honour and ridding yourself of the former -
 and I am aware how new age-y this sounds - you can really free yourself
 and truly open yourself up to enjoyment. Because what does it mean to 
anyone else if my bike has three wheels instead of two? Everyone I was 
out with that day pinched it and had a go as soon as my bum was off the 
seat, so it can't be that shameful!
 
 


 
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