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anthony
Founder
Who knew... that stacking a pushbike could end so violently! :eek:
I remember two traumatic instances quite vividly as a child, one was me stacking my bike coming down the hill towards our house, trying to jump the gutter into the driveway, stacking it, and it just so happens that the peddle had actually fallen apart and was just an axle, well... that went through my leg. As in... entry and exit, through my calf. I still remember my dad trying to get the bike off of me, as he pulled it my leg would go with. I found that the amusing part considering the pain I was in. Someone held down my leg, someone pulled the peddle axle out, then wrapped it and in the car to the hospital we went. I remember I couldn't walk for weeks, then it took lots more to learn how to walk properly again.
Then I was there for my sisters turn. We were racing down another hill, close to home, all was clear and away we went. A truck decided to turn out of a street and she swerved, I swerved and was ok... she got wobbly, then over she went. We were going fast, fast enough that when she came off it took about 60% of her skin off her body. I remember carrying home the two pushbikes, hers and mine, and my sister tried to help her home. Tough as nails kids... none of this mobile phone nonsense... you got injured, you got yourself to help, simple as that. So away we went, got home and I remember my mother freaking out. I though it helped her looks a bit... a bit of blood never hurt nobody, but WOW did she really do some damage.
Amazing how you think as a kid vs. adult. Retrospect... who knew. :wideeyed:
These are two childhood memories I have that I still today remember, and snap... both obviously quite traumatic. It really is true that we remember things that have a highly emotional value attached, the rest we forget mainly.
I remember two traumatic instances quite vividly as a child, one was me stacking my bike coming down the hill towards our house, trying to jump the gutter into the driveway, stacking it, and it just so happens that the peddle had actually fallen apart and was just an axle, well... that went through my leg. As in... entry and exit, through my calf. I still remember my dad trying to get the bike off of me, as he pulled it my leg would go with. I found that the amusing part considering the pain I was in. Someone held down my leg, someone pulled the peddle axle out, then wrapped it and in the car to the hospital we went. I remember I couldn't walk for weeks, then it took lots more to learn how to walk properly again.
Then I was there for my sisters turn. We were racing down another hill, close to home, all was clear and away we went. A truck decided to turn out of a street and she swerved, I swerved and was ok... she got wobbly, then over she went. We were going fast, fast enough that when she came off it took about 60% of her skin off her body. I remember carrying home the two pushbikes, hers and mine, and my sister tried to help her home. Tough as nails kids... none of this mobile phone nonsense... you got injured, you got yourself to help, simple as that. So away we went, got home and I remember my mother freaking out. I though it helped her looks a bit... a bit of blood never hurt nobody, but WOW did she really do some damage.
Amazing how you think as a kid vs. adult. Retrospect... who knew. :wideeyed:
These are two childhood memories I have that I still today remember, and snap... both obviously quite traumatic. It really is true that we remember things that have a highly emotional value attached, the rest we forget mainly.