Daily affirmations of a word mercenary
Today while I was waiting for The Beloved Scabby One to come pick me up on the way to his stitch-removal appointment, I noticed a bike messenger. I’d seen this kid once already earlier in the day and been struck by the fact that, well, he wasn’t wearing a helmet. When I saw him a second time locking up his bike before heading into the building where I work, I just couldn’t help myself.
When he came back from making his delivery, I approached.
“So, are you really a messenger who doesn’t wear a helmet?” I said. He gave me a whithering look and a fuck off “yeah.”
Then I started rambling. “Obviously you know what you’re doing but it’s really dangerous not to wear a helmet and my husband got in this really awful bike accident this weekend and his helmet was the only thing that saved him and all I can picture is his bloody helmet and you know you have to be careful and if you’d seen his face you might change your mind and, and,” (here I started to realize I sounded like a crazy person) “and, well, obviously it’s your choice.”
“I suppose it is,” the messenger said with the perfectly honed combination of sarcasm and dismissiveness. Then he said, “Um, I’m going to go get some samples? From those people standing on that corner?” like he was a senator talking to a special needs three-year-old and biked off as fast as he could.
As I stood there on the sidewalk I had the realization that holy fuck. I just became that woman. The one who hysterically makes you wear your coat even though it’s 50 degrees out because YOU’LL CATCH YOUR DEATH OF COLD and didn’t you know that if you don’t hold onto the hand rail you could FALL DOWN THE STAIRS AND DIE? The worst part was that I was actually thinking of pulling out my Sidekick and shoving a picture of Andreas’ bloody, swollen face under the (unbroken) nose of this 20 year old kid. If he thought I was crazy before, he would have REALLY thought I was nuts at that point.
I just couldn’t help myself, though. I see visions of brains smeared on asphalt everywhere I go. Meanwhile, Andreas is totally fine, other than the fact that he’s been spacey about taking his pain killers regularly so he goes through waves of hurting. But he’s totally fine. His scabs are shedding, his stitches are out, and his swollen lip is much less Angelina Jolie-like. I, meanwhile, read comments like the last one to this post and almost fall out of my chair from the freaking out and feel the need to accost innocent bike messengers on the street.
Hey there. I'm Ariel Meadow Stallings, a native Seattleite who's written my way up and down the Left Coast. Electrolicious is where I post daily randomata, but I also write for a living. My first book, Offbeat Bride, was published last year.
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lily
July 21st, 2006 at 6:23 am
no, you’re not THAT woman.
but i am…
maybe we should be sitting on the front porch in rocking chair screaming at the “whippersnappers” making all “that racket”.
while cleaning our shotguns & drinking mint juleps…
for the love of God.
WEAR YOUR HELMET, PEOPLE!
Cara
July 21st, 2006 at 7:39 am
I noticed that I’ve become that woman as well! You know the one who clucks at the young girls for lollygagging out in front of the corner store with really trashy clothes smoking cigarettes. Where are their MOTHERS!
Oh did I just say lollygagging?….I must be getting old lol
Sara
July 21st, 2006 at 8:14 am
I was never a helmet-wearer either, until my best friend told me he’d broken his collarbone on a bike…he said if not for the helmet, he would’ve cracked his skull too.
Kudos to you for CARING about the messenger’s head.
I see bike couriers not wearing helmets all the time, and I can only just shake my head, and sigh.
yelahneb
July 21st, 2006 at 9:49 am
eh - your heart was in the right place. as for the surly messenger, he’ll eventually learn his lesson - under the harsh tutelage of the sisters Probability and Evolution.
DOUG.
July 21st, 2006 at 9:55 am
I believe helmets weren’t required on the Tour de France until just a few years ago, because, you know, they slow you down. And so does a coffin.
Esther
July 21st, 2006 at 10:05 am
Glad to hear things are proceeding well with Dre’s recovery. As for bike messengers, most of them are cocky assholes who show off their road rash with pride. It’s just another facet of the macho reckless culture that pervades the age 13-26 male demographic…
DOUG.
July 21st, 2006 at 10:09 am
Also, as of 2003 it is illegal to ride a bike in Seattle without a helmet. I’m not a big fan of the law (I prefer Darwin’s Laws in this case) but the kid could be slapped with a $30 fine. I would think that messenger services would require them for their riders.
Melissa (oddharmonic)
July 21st, 2006 at 10:50 am
I am that woman about safety things like car seats, seat belts, and sport safety gear.
I grew up around military bases, where anyone on a bicycle on base is required to wear a helmet.
It didn’t occur to me that people didn’t wear helmets until I moved to Dallas, where helmets are currently only mandatory for cyclists under 18, and I saw children riding in the parking lot of our complex without helmets. *cringes*
I knew the necessity of helmets really stuck with my then five-year-old daughter when she spotted a neighbor’s child riding without a helmet and asked me if we could give them her toddler helmet.
I’m seriously considering buying an assortment of children’s sized Bell helmets since they’re available at a discount — $6.99 per helmet with a minimum order of one dozen — through the Texas Bicycle Coalition.
jenna
July 21st, 2006 at 1:50 pm
So what if you were that “woman” which I doubt you really were, cause you are obviously too cool to be, but anyways. That woman, as annoying as she can be sometimes, usually has a good point. Don’t forget to breathe!
Mary
July 21st, 2006 at 2:26 pm
I would have stuck that sidelkick right in his face!!!
And I am “that woman,” too, constantly horrifying the 18-y-o version of myself. For all the years I spent smoking, drinking and generally acting like a ‘ho, I’m now embarking on even more years spent lecturing those who did the same stuff I did. Help!
Blair Peters
July 21st, 2006 at 5:46 pm
He is lucky to have been wearing a helmet! You are speaking out because you care -maybe those crazy women know something afterall.