He should feel lucky.
Lucky that it wasn’t someone who didn’t grow up with the high score on
Frogger, someone new to cycling out for their first sunny sixty degree ride
after months of dreadful Cincinnati weather, someone without years of
experience deftly picking their way through packs of drunken Chicagoans at
Milwaukee’s Summerfest, someone who hasn’t been racing and riding long enough
to count a Breezer Thunder among the bikes in the man cave, someone who didn’t
just get back from a week of mountain descending in Georgia, someone who
doesn’t burn a Sven Nys Prayer Candle.
It would’ve been different then, bloody limbless Walking Dead different
I’m sure.
There would’ve been Easter leftovers all over the car and shrieks
and screams and a ceremonial reading of the RoadID and sirens and backboards and
stuffed animals knocked off the rear window shelf and endless calls to the
geniuses in medical billing departments and physical therapy and lawsuits and
insurance premiums that would make a wee-wee pig choke on a gecko. Instead, up in the air was the back of my Italian
hand and a shout, “What are you trying to F-ing kill me!?”
I almost got hit by a car yesterday. Of course he wasn’t trying to kill me. Of course I couldn’t think of anything more
clever to say like, “didn’t they teach you to love thy neighbor in church this
morning?” However, he should feel lucky
it wasn’t someone else. It would’ve been
much more than a close call and a blog full of theatrical language and long
sentences strung together with the word “and.”
Please don’t take this as being cocky. If you know me, I’m not one to brag and I
don’t make wiener jokes. I still have a
lot to learn on a bike, like being able to farmer blow my nose. I simply had control. My hands, fingers wrapped around the bars,
gripped the drops. Hips slightly back, my
thighs held the saddle. Sorry if that
sounded too 50 Shades of Grey for you. Erie
Avenue in Cincinnati is a very popular thoroughfare for cyclists, a main road
taking riders east from the city to the rolling hills and scenic Little Miami River
Valley. The bike-lane header photo on
the main page of this blog is from Erie Avenue.
It’s about a 1.5 mile hill. I was
headed down. The light was green.
There was a woman with light reddish-brown curly hair in the
passenger seat. With thinning unkempt
hair, he was driving a green older model boxy Dodge sedan. So yeah, a slightly younger version of Mr. and Mrs. Costanza were about to run me down sit-com style in a car very similar to one on Seinfeld.
Or, at least that’s what it appeared to me in the span of less than 3
seconds and an ish-timated speed of 28-ish mph.
Across from the bar and bistro, I was about to pass the dry
cleaner on the right. It could’ve been
the sunshine or my sunglasses, but the Costanza car windows seemed tinted
yellow. I’m guessing he didn’t see me or misjudged my
speed. Either way, his speed never
changed as he turned left in front of me.
Recalling pretty much everything aside from whether or not there was a
hula girl on the dash, I don’t remember seeing a blinker.
Very Similar to Kramer's Ford LTD |
It’s amazing how fast the brain and body work together, like
they’re connected with nerves or something.
Immediately, at the speed Mr. Costanza started his turn, I knew I wasn’t
going to eek past on my current line. I
like to read the foll-oh-ing in a slow-mo-shun-voice and use robot hand
gestures. I threw my weight back and squeezed
the brake levers, slowing as fast as possible.
I remember focusing quickly, then looking away from, his shiny green chrome
trimmed wheel well and passenger side quarter panel, the point of impact I
later judged. Still too fast to cut a
quick hard right turn, I eased to the right, aiming roughly for the far corner
of the intersection, a wheel chair curb ramp, between him and a car on the
cross street stopped at the light.
It still didn’t look good, like Elaine dancing. I threw the bike harder right and grabbed more brake. The rear end kicked left toward his car, slightly skidding. Looking back, the change of direction maybe bought me a fraction of a second and/or caught his attention. Mr. Costanza slammed on the brakes. I corrected and, with a few feet to spare on either side, skated through the gap untouched and on the main road. I didn’t need to exit via the wheel chair ramp. It was real and spectacular.
I was calm and collected until I was safe. That’s when I looked back, the hand came up
and the colorful Easter language came out.
With his window down, I know he saw and heard it, (so did the people in
the black car stopped at the light) then they were gone out of sight up the
side street. I continued down the
hill.
I remember thinking I should be freaked out, but not a
single goosebumb popped up. The Garmin
confirmed my heart rate wasn’t jacked. In
recollection, the incident seemed oddly calculated and clinical, like when
soldiers train through a mock urban ambush on TV. Shoot the pop-up bad guys, don’t shoot the
kid. With squirrels, trees, rocks,
holes, other bikes, dogs, deer, and cars, I’ve been in situations like this
dozens, if not a hundred times before. I’ve
been riding bikes long enough to have the confidence that I’ll save it, or at
least do everything I can to save it, until I don’t. For me, it wasn’t luck at all.
He’s lucky it wasn’t a less experienced rider, someone who
freaks out in crowded elevator, a rider that may have panicked and slammed on
the brakes and straight skidded into the car or tried to turn too abruptly and comically
top-sided with too much speed. He’s lucky I maintain my bike and brush it’s
hair. It has new cables and tires. It’s routinely cleaned and lubed, including
checking the brakes, tire pressure and scrubbing the rims of grit. He’s lucky I treat parked cars and
intersections with more respect than a skier slicing up gates on a Super-G
downhill and had the sense to keep my speed in check on a busy descent where a
rider could easily top 35mph. He’s lucky
I ride with my eyes up, take descents in the drops, always keep my fingers wrapped
about the bars and saw his car long enough to describe his passenger’s uncanny
resemblance to Mrs. Costanza before he saw me.
Oh Georgie! As I write, I hope Frank’s
sharing my thoughts, it’s a miracle he didn’t hit someone with his car on Easter
Sunday.
2 comments:
Don't know what I'd do without my TBBBE. Seriously, glad you're ok!
I've had the same thing happen with a mini-van, and it sounds like i reacted exactly the same way; slammed on brakes, skidding back tire to the left, veered slightly right. I'm glad you missed them too - it's such a common situation that it has it's own name. Called a 'Left Hook' in Traffic Skills 101 terms.
Post a Comment