Find What You Love And Let It Kill You

A dead man, but a dead man of his word

“My dear,
Find what you love and let it kill you.
Let it drain you of your all. Let it cling onto your back and weigh you down into eventual nothingness.
Let it kill you and let it devour your remains.
For all things will kill you, both slowly and fastly, but it’s much better to be killed by a lover.
~ Falsely yours”

“• Charles Bukowski

It’s Guy Fawkes night tonight. Outside my window, the sky is lit not only by the usual flickering streetlights and myriad houses dotting the hill opposite, but with spiralling, falling colours accompanied by whistles, cracks and bangs. I feel only a slight compulsion to do more than look out the window every now and then, to pay more than idle attention to the kaleidoscopic pageant, to garner the same joy I felt as a child when that one night of the year came around, when we’d build a giant bonfire behind the back fence and let off a big bag of fireworks. Somewhere along the way, ‘crackers’ were banned, and they haven’t really been missed since. In this country though, it’s still possible to walk into the corner store and purchase your own personal pyrotechnics display. I’m not sure how I feel about that, maybe if I was 15, or 25, I’d be exploding things with the youthful enthusiasm of the best of them, but now it just doesn’t register on the scale of cool shit to do for fun.

Riding a bike still registers, mostly. It comes and goes, but because it’s been a constant for a lifetime, it will always be welcome. And because of its constance, I’ve retained at least some sense of what it’s like to feel 13 again. Even though I ache like a 50 year old, and get frustrated and agitated by the sheer fuckedness of the world presented to me, riding a bike seems to extinguish any negativity. Today, as I lay on some sort of padded rack contraption, contrast dye coursing through my veins, while I was inserted lengthwise into a giant tube that took photos of my insides, thoughts of death, or more so the mechanics of trying to prevent it, were running through my mind at breakneck speed. I don’t know if it’s increased since I’ve knocked up my half ton of years or not, but I’m noticing that I think about mortality a lot (more) these days.

Strangely though, there’s little concern that the thing that makes me happiest also has the most potential to take my life. Or, more accurately, the potential for my life to be taken whilst I’m doing the thing I love most. It never really clouds a ride with thoughts that at any given moment I am mere centimetres or seconds from death, yet my instincts are no doubt doing their best to subconsciously keep me one step ahead of peril. The bike and the act of riding it has kept me alive while simultaneously putting me in grave danger. Bandaging up my wounds, giving me CPR then pushing me back out onto the frontline.

There is a kind of melancholy, muted relief now I have been given a warrant of fitness; the warm liquid that made me feel like I’d had lukewarm coffee pumped directly into my blood showing that, despite years of extraneous abuse, things are still in good working fettle. Thoughts of an impending expiry failed to foment any real fear, just a realisation that we’re not able to live forever after all, and that’s not a bad thing in any sense.

That one constant, the bike and the act of riding it, has probably staved off a fate far worse than death; being alive but not living. And death, to me, is not being able to ride a bike.

Ride to live, live to ride.

Brett

Don't blame me

View Comments

  • @Owen

    Just got back from six days in the Grand Canyon back country to find a lot of introspection here.

    It's the off season and we haven't got round to arguing about helmets or sheep yet.

  • @brett Love the photo. That truly looks like a no frills establishment for hard drinking. Until you look at the wine glasses.

    I rarely think about the dangers whilst out on the bike but I've found myself thinking about them more off the bike than I used to.

  • Nice work Brett - great article!

    I read about a study done on TDF particpants through the years that looked at life expectancy.  The bottom line was that even when you take into account the gentlemen whose lives were cut short in pursuit of their sport in accidents and the like, average life expectancy was still considerably greater than the general population.

    Love the picture that you chose for the article too!  I enjoy photography and have been doing some reading about a composition theory called the Fibonacci spiral.  There's some sort of mathematical equation behind the spiral that follows the Fibonacci sequence.  The spiral itself looks like this...

    This image is a reasonable example of this composition, where your eye just sort of flows along from the gentleman up front and then carries on from person to person in a very comfortable way.  Love it!

  • Well played. Possibly some of your finest artistic work since your brief cameo as the hardcore of the Welly White Boys.  Glad the CT went ok.

  • You Dick! There goes my article about handle bar tape for Friday.

    That's one of the better photos of Bukowski, a scary looking man. And yes, nothing like some quality time in a giant scanner looking deep inside your body to bring on long morose daydreams of one's immanent death. Well done on that too, bullet dodged.

    For my friends that are sure I'll get killed while riding my bike, what am I supposed to do? Stop riding so I won't die that way? Screw that, everything has its associated risk and cycling is a risk I'll always take.

    Ride to Live; Live to Ride. Well done Brett.

  • @kixsand " There's some sort of mathematical equation behind the spiral that follows the Fibonacci sequence "

    Agree, similar I assume to the way Aston Martin use the two thirds one third rule for all their car designs

    @brett - great read and very timely for me also in all the things you spoke of.  Better to die living.

    My daughter can tell if I havnt been for a ride as my "attitude" changes towards the downward spiral that is the world today.

    She then proceeds to tell me to go for a ride "to get my dolphins " going !  I assume dolphins is her way of saying endorphins !

  • @brett

    @minion

    Could be worse, you could be a racehorse.

    Yep, or a cow, or pig, or woman... strangely these three things seem to morph into one at Melbourne Cup time.

    DAMN Man, with a statement like that you had better hope that Chrissy is not visiting your town (or house) anytime soon.

  • @freddy

    @Buck Rogers might want to read this one.

    Indeed.  I truly believe that one never feels more alive than when they are closest to being killed.

    And when my time comes, I hope I can go gracefully.  But until then, Fuck it, squeezing everything that I can out of this ride!

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