The severity of a crash exists on two planes, the physical and psychological. The physical is the most obvious and one we busy ourselves with in the immediate vicinity of coming down. Our bodies need time to heal, our kits may need replacing or mending, and our bicycles may need repair work. For weeks and sometimes months, we may carry with us the scars that result when our bodies, bicycles, and tarmac momentarily occupy the same space.
We endeavor to reach a point where the mechanics of bike handling has moved into the subconscious. An experienced Cyclist no longer thinks in terms of steering or pedaling; instead, we exist in a stream of subconscious consciousness where our senses are heightened, yet none of our actions exist on a plane of explicit thought as we make subtle adjustments to our stroke, steering, and balance. As our experience grows, the bicycle becomes an extension of our physical selves; it is through finding this harmony that we are able to live on the razor’s edge between grace and disaster.
When disaster does strike, we are faced with scars beyond the physical that take much longer to recover than do our equipment and flesh. In the space of a single moment, the trust we felt in our machine and our ability to control it evaporates, leaving a hollow sense of betrayal that burrows away deeply into our minds. It stays there, far from view, only to surface during moments when we most rely on our confidence to avoid crashes; the sliding of a tire in a corner or the sudden interference of an object with our path – these situations require complete confidence in our machine and skills, yet during the time that our confidence is being rebuilt we doubt our instincts.
This is particularly true of cornering, where we are most prominently faced with the realities of our confidence, trust, and skills. Normally, we sense a crash approaching some time before it arrives. A problem with our trajectory or a slipping tire will give our minds a moment to react, even if our bodies are unable to. As we reflect on the crash afterwards, we’ll understand what happened, and what might have been done to avoid it; we use this knowledge to tell ourselves it was avoidable and tuck that nagging sense of doubt a bit farther out of reach. But a crash with no warning and no remedy sits naked in our minds and permeates every action and sensation as we struggle to regain our confidence.
This past December, I slipped on some black ice on a cold morning commute to the office. There were no signs of anything going amiss; there was only the crash. In the blink of an eye, I went from happily entering a corner to laying on the tarmac. The impact was so sudden, in fact, that the force of the fall was taken up by my hip and elbow – my hands never left the bars – and the impact so swift that my cleat tore apart as the impossibility of my occupying the same space as my bicycle and the road was resolved by my being separated abruptly from both.
My rides since then have suffered from nagging questions that flood my mind as I enter a corner, particularly in the wet; I no longer trust that I can judge the corner adequately or that my equipment will loyally carry me through. Logically, I know that while statistics suggest that one’s chances of crashing remain constant so long as environmental conditions don’t significantly change, I know shaken confidence ensures that crashes come in clusters as self-doubt overrides intuition cultivated over years of experience.
I must force myself to regain my confidence; the only path to doing so lies through ignoring my doubt and wrapping myself in the craft. Vive la Vie Velominatus.
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Yeah @frank, it's The BIg Country and we're all Gregory Peck. Ride the white horse.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=I8j2ej5jqQw
I got a smashed helmet in the same circumstances last month although I did have time to think "fuck ice".
Proper comedy crash as the rubber side of my bike went higher that the bits you sit on...
Laid Back wrote a song I tried to embed called White Horse but they say don't ride the white horse. What I hoped to convey was not that. One must get back on the horse as soon as possible after a spill and restore the confidence lost. Takes a wee while sometimes, but as you said @frank, one has to push it a little and everything will be back to normal eventually. Thanks.
Rule 81... and most importantly: Was the Bike OK?!?! (Rule 4)
Are your Bonts undefuckable?
'Scrapped carbon and a torn cleat serve as reminders of a sudden crash'
Should read as:
'Scraped carbon and a torn cleat serve as reminders of a sudden crash'
@the Engine
Maybe the carbonator needs to be refuckulated.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pp1e505TBHI
almost half a year later, i still get nervous riding on the street with cars. a deep uncontrollable anxiety fills me soon as i step outside thinking im going to get hit again, and this time wont be so lucky. The situations where you clean the deck out of no real fault of your own are the hardest to overcome...At least for me. 30 mins into riding i can generally calm down enough to enjoy the ride, but you would think i belong on suicide watch if you caught the glint of my eyes.
the slippery as snot looking surface of Hawaii help at all to restore/rebuild your confidence frank?
@TBONE
I think in this case it may very well be 'scrapped carbon' That looks like a pretty large chunk taken out of the outsole.
@VeloVita
If that's the case it should be 'gouged' as the carbon hasn't been scrapped or sent to the scrap heap.