You know the moment - it's the one between between slicing your hand and the gush of blood, slamming the door and realizing you've left a finger behind, the mis-step and the fall. It's the moment when things are still okay, but not for long.
We were prepping for a short bike ride. I'd hit the garage door button, dashing out from under the closing door, stepping carefully over the beam of light that stops the process when he said "oh, I left my helmet inside."
No problem, I thought, waving my foot across the beam. The door kept closing. No problem, I thought, thinking of the way elevators won't shut on your hand and will bounce back from the least resistance. So I put my shoe under the descending door.
Which descended anyway. Without bounce. Without give. A powered heavy metal door coming down on my shoe, my toes, which was now clearly a really bad idea. I tried to pull my foot out. No way. I realized that not only was I stuck, but my toes were feeling quite a bit of pressure.
It's a special moment. It's when you realize that things might not be okay, and very soon.
I jammed my fingers under the door, pulled up with all my strength. Nothing moved. Then the pain began.
My friend had the presence of mind to run into the house and around to the garage and pull the quick release on the garage door -- a red handle, which makes so much sense now. The door released, came up.
I took another moment to survey the damage. It was my lucky day: the toes were insulted but not broken, annoyed but not crushed. Now, hours later, they are mumbling about my lack of good sense, but are ready to consider forgiving me.
Even so, the moment is limned in my memory, framed with all the intensity that an active, alert, and not-quite-panicking mind can create.
Such moments can change us, if we let them. They remind us that we are one slip, one poor decision, one moment's bad luck away from being mangled or killed. Or, in my case, bruised, embarrassed, and feeling lucky.
And in more practical terms: garage doors are unforgiving masses of driving metal completely unlike sensitive elevator doors. Soft toes will not stop them.
Showing posts with label bicycle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bicycle. Show all posts
Wednesday, February 9, 2011
Sunday, June 13, 2010
One-one
So I bought a bike the other day. Test rode it and discovered to my annoyance (but, alas, not my surprise) that my bike-riding condition is not what I imagined it to be. Man, this stuff is hard. I'm assured by men with big smiles that it'll get easier with time.
When I bought my first bike, it had ten speeds on one side, and two on the other, and I was very confused but pretended to know what I was doing. Now I'm mature enough to not need to pretend any more.
"So one is the easiest?"
"Yep."
"And if I'm going up a steep hill and it's too hard for me, one ought to do it?"
"Yep."
"And for the other thingie on the other side, one again?"
"Yep."
"And what if that's still too hard?"
He didn't seem to have an answer for that. Turns out the answer is you walk the bike, and for someone who's walked a 90 pound occasionally resistant dog, walking a thing with wheels and no resistance is no big deal, no matter how steep the hill.
And mostly, I did ride. One-one a lot of the time, but ride I did.
When I bought my first bike, it had ten speeds on one side, and two on the other, and I was very confused but pretended to know what I was doing. Now I'm mature enough to not need to pretend any more.
"So one is the easiest?"
"Yep."
"And if I'm going up a steep hill and it's too hard for me, one ought to do it?"
"Yep."
"And for the other thingie on the other side, one again?"
"Yep."
"And what if that's still too hard?"
He didn't seem to have an answer for that. Turns out the answer is you walk the bike, and for someone who's walked a 90 pound occasionally resistant dog, walking a thing with wheels and no resistance is no big deal, no matter how steep the hill.
And mostly, I did ride. One-one a lot of the time, but ride I did.
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