Tick tick tick tick tick...
Every time I leave the house on a bike, I press ’Start’ on the mental stopwatch. It doesn’t matter which bike I’m on; road, gravel, mountain, cyclo-cross or town hack, that second hand begins its sweep as soon as I click in my second foot.
Whether it’s a trip to the shops a couple of miles away, riding over to a friend's or out for a good few hours in the countryside, the timer is running as soon as I scoot off the garden path and bump onto the road.
Tick tick tick tick tick...
Anyone that spends regular time pedalling regular routes will have sections of road where spidey senses start to tingle and fingers will subconsciously cover brake levers, because they’re where 'something' always happens.
Everyone that rides a bike has a mental rolodex of these. Whether they just commute to and from work or are out all day on roads they know, it’s those places where there’s a strong likelihood of there being some kind of interaction with a car. A close pass, a squeeze through, a 'SMIDSY' or just the usual normal low-level driving ineptitude and dickery. Something that could merely warrant a muttered "FFS" under the breath, or be a contretemps that is a little more life threatening, but something. There's always something.
Tick tick tick tick tick...
I could list all the places where I start to operate on high alert, my fight-or-flight reflexes beginning to hum. It would take me a while to write them all down; in fact it would probably just be easier to get a map out and scribble all over it in red pen.
It starts for me if I head down my street and turn left; watch out for a car that might be parked right there after the junction, and keep alert as the road kinks round. Drivers like to cut the corner at speed here, and a short while later the road narrows considerably as there’s an immobile stream of cars and vans parked both sides for quite a while. This is a full vigilance situation, as drivers like to think they can force their way through the gap.
In this high incidence area, there’s a brief breather before approaching a mini-roundabout where it’s always a relief if a car doesn’t just breeze on through after not bothering to look. I could go on in this vein for a while, but while I feel every cyclist would sympathise it would get predictably boring, and that was just one mile.
Tick tick tick tick tick...
I don’t even live in a big city where you’d expect traffic friction to occur almost continuously, and I don’t even have a daily commute to deal with that racks up the odds. I live in sleepy suburbia and I’m just going about my day to day business, yet any time I go anywhere by bike there’s little time to be complacent.
In decades of accumulated anecdotal evidence, it doesn’t matter one iota what I’m riding or wearing as to the frequency of incident: helmet or no helmet, taking primary, stealth black or Italian Pro technicolour clothing, blinky lights or not, riding assertively, full lycra or pub casual, I’ve yet to find the incident free formula. My favourite was when I was on large electric blue cargo bike and somebody pulled straight out on me, and instantly spewed out a loud tirade of arm waving excuses in response to my shrugged shoulders of disbelief and sighed resignation. That was a record stopping of the mental stopwatch at about five seconds. It was only ten doors from my house on a quiet cul-de-sac, which made it all the more comically ridiculous.
Tick tick tick tick tick...
Knowing that a moment of driver twattery is going to happen at some point at least once every time I pedal away from the house has made it easier to deal with. I don’t get angry about it any more, because I just don’t have that much energy; it’s a sadly unavoidable and inevitable consequence of being behind a set of handlebars.
I’m mostly just tired with the tedious "not-when-but-if" predictability of it all, so now all I can manage is an eyeroll, a check on that ticking stopwatch, a Gallic shrug in an “I have no idea what you were trying to do there” fashion, or a visibly disappointed shake of the head. Strangely enough the latter has had some quite volatile results.
Tick tick tick tick tick...
A lot of the Near Miss Of The Day clickbait on this site doesn’t even make me wince. Maybe I’ve just become immune to it over the years, or my expectations for acceptable driving standards are too low. Maybe avoiding getting knocked off and not heading home via the hospital I consider a small win these days.
There have been a few times when I think I might have got away with it, and the last few miles home after a long day out on the lanes are always a time of building anticipation of a small celebration that nothing actually happened; but I’ve been minutes from making it back to the front door and there it is, it was just teasing.
Tick tick tick tick tick...
This isn’t about bike lanes, or proper segregated infrastructure, or new codes, or road tax, or running red lights, or riding on pavements, or deaths per day, or any of the whataboutery that spits and infects all this when you discuss cars and bicycles. It’s none of that, it’s a lot lot simpler.
It’s about being treated like a normal human being just going about their business in a totally normal and harmless way.
I do not want to fear for my life just going to the shops. I do not want to be bullied, I will not ever be bullied, I do not have to quietly prepare for the worst every time I leave the house. I don’t want someone to have to make an awkward phone call to the last number on my phone, just because I popped out for milk and a few bits for supper. I just want to get to where I want to get to in peace, in one piece, and alive.
Tick tick tick tick tick...
So, if I’m screaming at you through your windscreen and you’re looking at me incredulous, that’s because it’s not just you. It’s the tens, hundreds, thousands of other near misses, close calls, day-to-day driver shittery and nonchalant "sorry-I-nearly-killed-you" hand waves that I’ve let pass previously, and unfortunately you’re the one that cut the wrong wire connected to the ticking clock.
That’s why I’m shouting as you’re squinting into my front light, saying you didn’t see me and your kids in the back seat are starting to cry. That’s why I’ve punched your car, because you’re just close enough to punch it. That’s why you jumped when I tapped on your window after you pulled out in front of me without looking; but I knew you were going to do it, so reacted accordingly because it always happens and I’d like a word about it, please.
That’s why we’re front wheel to front bumper, yelling at each other and everyone’s looking. Because today and just now... I’ve fucking had enough.
Tick tick tick tick tick... boom.
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59 comments
Yeah sorry I'm just joking, I should have made that more clear
Ah, sorry, I was whooshed. I thought our Nige had found a new ally!
or a new alias
How to prevent being rear-ended by tri-bars? Asking for a slow friend... although where there's risk of Pidcock that detail's probably irrelevant.
We already have a troll post from GAL. Impressive in some ways.
Welcome! You seem to be new round here... As a vampire you'll also be aware that some folks never seem to die but merely continue in another form.
Well Nosferatu, now we know why they post so much - they're frightened to go outside & cannot knit!
How do you know that? Rumour has it Garage en Liberté has not wasted the lockdown years. This may explain the "courteous interactions" with motorists too:
Rubber knitting needles?
Carbon fibre.
If there were one last remaining posibility that you could function as a person at some level, that's now gone.
Please road.cc admins, can I give this post 100 likes?
I'd gladly give up sprinkling the other 99 around the many other constructive comments I wiould like to upvote (and I hope those posters, fine folks all, would forgive me for it).
Oh. My. F-ing god. Please, please, just go sit on the naughty step for a bit, m'kay, Nige.
They are just sapping your energy ( a bit vampirish even !)
It's a mythological cross-over! A monster mash-up maybe?
So on the one hand, TT bikers are such daredevils that you want to ban the bikes they use for their own safety. On the other hand, road bikers are such pussies that they shouldn't be allowed to ride at all if they're not happy being cut up left right and centre by careless or aggressive or just plain dangerous drivers.
Once again, have a word with yourself, you sociopathic troll.
Surely that should be SOCIOPATHETIC...
No. He's just fed up with all the rubbish out there. Obviously you only go out on empty, rural roads and have never used a bike for normal day to day journeys so have no idea what daily utility cyclists have to endure. I've told you before why I cycle. That still stands. I've been knocked down and seriously injured by a h&r driver. Was put off the bike for 9 months. Whoever it was might have won by escaping justice. They were not though going to beat me by stopping me cycling. And before you say it. I was not cycling like a pratt. I only want to get from A to B in one piece without injury or trauma. I don't get this when I drive. Why should I be on the receiving end of dangerous and irresponsible driving.
I'm new here - is this a parody account?
No, that is the resident troll.
Banned once and changed their username 5 or 6 times.
MO is to bait people.
Most ignore them.
And when the ones that normally ignore respond you know he's really out of order.
I really did laugh out loud, many thanks.
"In decades of accumulated anecdotal evidence, it doesn’t matter one iota what I’m riding or wearing as to the frequency of incident: helmet or no helmet, taking primary, stealth black or Italian Pro technicolour clothing, blinky lights or not, riding assertively, full lycra or pub casual, I’ve yet to find the incident free formula"
This. Though I've noticed slower riders in London get more abuse and close passes than those aggressively sprinting away from the lights and so on (like me).
I also have a pretty high tolerance of this crap. The only exception are those times when someone has almost killed you while breaking the HC/law yet instead of apologising and defusing the situation (people make mistakes and the fact they acknowledge it helps me calm down pretty quickly in most situations), they start ranting at you as if it's your own fault. That's when I go nuclear. Ruins my day. Stays on my mind for...well I remember all the occasions going back 10 years. I try to avoid that at all costs.
Luckily, although it doesn't feel like it...especially on those parts of your route...most people are not out to kill or hurt you. But of course it's hard not to be influenced by the small minority that really should be in prison.
This is so true
thst close pass on a 50mph where they juuuust cross the unbroken white lines so "it's an ok pass" from their view...etc. Some get me, thing I try to let it go.
I've always felt theres kind of a speed around 13mph-14mph that's like prime close pass/near miss territory, that's to me the danger zone when I get most incidents as when I'm above or below that speed I tend to get alot less grief for some reason.
And i know people dont intend to hurt you,physically at least, mentally the scars take alot of time to heal or allow you to move on from it, but I dont think people realise actually what it's like to be nearly hit by a car, let alone how it feels when it does finally happen.
Anecdata I know but the times when I have felt almost all drivers have behaved badly towards me, rather than just a few, is when I've been on the road with my son and so the speed has been much slower. If I am pottling to work etc at 15-20 mph i still get the odd close pass, but at 7-8 mph everyone wants to kill you it seems to me.
Ride slower, spend more time on the bike, have more cars overtake you on that journey, and have the ones who are behind be more desperate to overtake.
I've tried cycling to work casually, it's too unpleasant for thos ereasons, so lycra and road bike it is.
Then drivers wonder why all cyclists are "lycra warriors". It's because they've scared the scared everyone else off the roads, or trained them to ride flat out all the time.
Well bl***y said.
Abso-bl***y-lutely
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