I am “the girl who can’t ride a bike”.
I guess to be accurate, I should
say that I WAS “the girl who can’t ride a bike”. But it was such a big part of my identity
growing up, that the never formalized (but often teased about) nickname stuck
in my psyche.
You know how most kids
love to jump on their bikes and pedal around the neighborhood once they have
figured out how to balance, brake, and GO?
Yeah, that wasn’t me. I wasn’t
that kid.
I am not sure WHAT really
happened. The one thing I do remember is being on a bike in my family’s garage
in Omaha, Nebraska trying to ride my bike.
It must’ve been winter, otherwise, why wouldn’t I have been
outdoors?? But I think my foot slipped
off the pedal and I know for sure my knee hit the handlebar. It hurt.
I remember crying.
But I am guessing that it
hurt my pride more than it hurt my knee.
I think I was already past
the age where kids were “supposed” to ride a bike. But then and there I must’ve secretly made
the decision that I would NOT ride a bike.
Instead, I became “the
girl who can’t ride a bike”. I was very
tiny for my age, and my mom was a good bike rider. So instead of pedaling on my bike, I rode in
a kiddie seat on the back of hers. For YEARS. Well past the age of being able to comfortably
fit in it.
I don’t know if I actually
REMEMBER the feeling, or if I just have heard the story so many times that it
FEELS like a memory. My sisters used to
make fun of me for riding in the kiddie seat.
They joked about how my skinny legs, bent in the too small seat, would make
my knees stick out to the side.
As I got older, I jumped
in on the joking. I would laugh at my
own ineptitude. Mock myself for being
way too old to not know how to ride a bike.
But self-deprecation
sometimes comes at a price. If you say
you are stupid enough times, you start to believe it.
·
Did you know
that even though I am 10, I can’t ride a bike??
Funny, right?
·
Hahaha – I am 12
and I can’t ride a bike!
·
Oh my, isn’t it
funny? I was 16 and I can drive,
but I can’t ride a bike!!
And on and on. I became THE GIRL WHO CAN’T RIDE A BIKE.
I wish I could remember
exactly how it happened, how I learned. I
am surprised I can’t. I must’ve somehow
erased that part of the story in my brain.
But what I DO remember is being 21 years old, living in Paris on a peniche
(barge) on the Seine with my sweetheart, and riding a bike to the laundromat
while carrying bags full of dirty clothes.
We must’ve borrowed our
landlords’ bikes (they lived on the other half of the boat). David must’ve taught me to balance and pedal
on the quay beside the boat – which was made of big stones and had to be very
bumpy to ride on.
But that part is a blur.
All I remember is being 21
years old on a bike with bags of laundry, navigating Parisian streets with David. And being proud of my new-found ability.
That’s been decades
now. I have never really gotten into
biking, but I am happy when we can jump on our cruisers in Florida and pedal
through the neighborhoods on a still warm but not hot evening. Most streets in Florida are flat so there are
no major hills to conquer.
But we very rarely ride
bikes in Arlington. In fact, I don’t
think ours had been touched for the last 3 years. They just sat in the carport getting older
and dirtier.
A friend reached a few
months ago out to say that she and her family were signing up for a bike ride
and inviting us to join them. It was the
DC Bike Ride – 20 miles, no traffic (all streets would be closed) – a chance to
see the city and monuments from a new angle.
Well, that sounded fun, sign us up!
At the time I naively
figured that we would take time to get our bikes out a couple of months before the
event. We would clean off the dirt and
cobwebs, have them checked out for safety, replace any tires that were bad, and
most importantly PRACTICE. We would bike around the area and get in shape for
the 20-mile course.
But instead of that, real
life happened. We worked. We ran huge projects outside of work. We watched tv. We cooked.
And what we DIDN’T do was prepare.
So, it wasn’t until 2 days
before the event that we even really thought about it. David pulled our bikes out and we squirted
them with the hose. We borrowed a bike
pump from a neighbor and filled the tires, which incredibly did not have holes
and still had air the next day.
And this morning, a kind
neighbor showed up at 6:30 am to hook our bikes up to her bike rack and drive
us into DC.
Today’s ride was billed as something that anyone with 2 wheels could do - even a 3-year-old. Now come on… If a 3-year-old could do it…
It was a lovely experience. There were what seemed like thousands of riders at the start. We were grouped into the skill level that we had registered for (with me SQUARLY IN BEGINNER, thank you very much). They had a work-out led by some peppy people, music blasting, balloon art, and I got my first ever face painting (that wasn’t a thing when I was a kid).
Then finally it was time
for the beginners to hit the roads! We got
separated from our friends before we even got on the actual course but found
our way back to them before eventually reaching the starting line. And off we went!!
It was a great way to tour
the city. We passed monuments, rode over
bridges, saw the sights.
I was keenly aware that I
didn’t want to be the person to pull our group back. I didn’t want to slow the rest of them
down. (Full transparency, the only other
organized ride I have ever done I did with our nephews when they were
young. I had worked an overnight shift
the night before, didn’t get much sleep, once again did nothing to prepare for the
event, and was NOT a good bike rider. It
was a sunset ride and by the end, I was literally the LAST rider in the
event. I kept pedaling through the dark,
my sweetheart slowing down and riding by my side, as the police trailed me in
the dark with their red and blue lights flashing. I cried and cried, but kept pedaling.)
That event was
subconsciously on my mind today. I didn’t
want to hold our team up. I wanted them
to pedal fast, ride like the wind, have fun!
And if I fell behind, I would try to keep going (and hope to not be last
among the thousands of participants).
One thing I learned today –
DC feels flat when you are in a car. When
you are on a bike, not as much! There
ARE hills in DC. Not big ones, but hills
nonetheless. And by mile 10 and 11 and 12,
the hills feel bigger.
I was sweaty. My butt hurt.
And my legs were tired.
I let myself get off my
bike and walk it up 3 or 4 hills.
I wasn’t alone in walking,
but the walkers were the minority. As we
went up the hills by foot, the “stronger” bikers rode by. At first, I was embarrassed. I mean, what an obvious sign of weakness and
failure. I couldn’t even pedal up these
relatively small inclines.
But I kept going.
At one point I was riding
with the 2 kids in our group. I hadn’t
seen the SHORTCUT TO THE FINISH LINE sign yet, but they did. “SHORTCUT?? NO WAY!
WE ARE RIDING THE WHOLE COURSE!!” one of them shouted. Well, I couldn’t make the shortcut turn to
the finish line after THAT comment…
So, I kept going.
I was getting further and
further behind the pack. My sweetheart
stayed with me. And then I saw it – the truck
picking up the cones that marked the course…
That was the signal that, not that far behind me, the organizers were
drawing the line of who would be allowed to finish and who would be picked up
in a vehicle (or, if they kept riding, would no longer be on car free
streets).
Flashback to the sunset
ride… I started to tear up. No! Not
again. Failure. The girl who can’t ride a bike.
I didn’t know how
ingrained that self-hatred about my lack of ability was. I hadn’t unpacked it from my psyche.
I kept riding.
I was exhausted. Another hill was in front of me – the 2nd
half of a bridge (So. Many. Bridges….).
But a team ahead of me found an out…
They cut through some barriers to the other side of the bridge – a shortcut.
I knew I had to do
it. Yes, this was a ride “a 3-year-old
could do”. But I was done. I told the 2 teammates that were with me that
I was going to cheat and took the shortcut.
There were still a couple
of miles to pedal after that. I pedaled
alone, which was just what I needed.
And when I finally saw the
finish line coming up, I cried. The fear
of smudging my face paint had long since subsided (I figured I had sweat it off
by then). But if it was still there, I knew
it would now be stained with tear marks down my cheeks. I didn’t care. The volunteers cheering finishers on probably
didn’t know what to make of me – a grown woman crying at the end of what was to
most a leisurely ride.
But I finished.
I cheated – probably cut
1.5 miles off the course.
I walked my bike up some hills.
But I rode.
I was no longer “the girl
who can’t ride a bike”.
FINISHED |
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