Originally Posted by thdave
I don't have any interest in the helmet debate, but the thread has evolved some and I'd like to add to comments made earlier regarding general safety.
I talked to my sister last night. We were just catching up on things and she asked what we've been up to. I told her that we went skiing/snowboarding several times and that I've been bike riding through the winter.
She went into this Debbie Downer thing about how a young snowboarder in the Detroit area (where she lives) died and another one was seriously injured. It turns out a ski patrol person drove a snowmobile up the mountain and collided with a 7 yr. old snowboarder. Clearly, that's a freak thing. Then she tells me about another couple of stories, one regarding a cyclist who's a newscaster and hasn't been the same since she was hit.
I phased out and didn't even want to stay on the phone.
She stays inside a lot and weighs about 220 pounds (which is what I might weigh if I didn't cycle). I just can't live a sedentary lifestyle and don't begin to understand her point. I'm sure it's safer on a treadmill or other hampster-type machine but I'm not interested. I won't even talk about this with my wife. Bottom line--my kids and I will get out and live life.
It's just important to get your excersize, doing your own thing, while being reasonably safe.
Like your sister, I think some overweight and/or sedentary people focus on accident and injury reports and use them as justifications for their sedentary lifestyles ("it's too dangerous out there").
Hell, I'd rather take the risks than be a fat couch potato...at least I'll die knowing I've ridden over the Continental Divide in Colorado 12 times, to the top of the highest paved road in the US (Mt. Evans, 14,000+ feet), and more.
What do the couch potatoes die thinking about...all the Nascar races they watched? The video games they played? The food they ate?