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Dis-appointment
I’ve been counting down the days and hours until I would get x-rays on my right hand to see if my 5th metacarpal is healed enough to stay out of a cast and have 2 pins pulled, which pins were put in during surgery on September 7 to repair the open fracture I sustained in a slow fall. So after I locked the door to the house this morning but before I got in the car, I got a call that the doctor is out sick and I have to wait another 49 hours. ARRRRGGHH! I want the cast off. I REALLY want the pins out. I never realized this, but I assume the word disappointment comes from how you feel when an appointment is postponed. Instead of pulling what's left of my hair out, I’m venting by posting here.
Since I’m already bothering to type with one hand (the good news is I’m left handed, and I've had 5 1/2 weeks of practice typing one handed), I’ll ask a question that probably has no good answer. What’s the best way for us old, fragile 50+ people to deal with a slow fall? I took a u-turn a little tight on my road bike. Would have been fine except the intersection was kind of gravelly. Realized I was going down to the left, tried to unclip, but realized it wasn’t happening fast enough. Thought, ok, just take it, don’t stick out that left hand and break a collar bone or anything. So I tried to hold on and just take it. Somehow, however, after first hitting the fleshy side of my left shoulder as I was hoping, enough to cause a little redness but nothing worse, my upper body pivoted and my left knee, my left hand, my chin, and my right hand all hit pavement kind of hard. Left knee, a little road rash and a bruised kneecap, nothing I can’t deal with. Left hand, hit the palm, completely protected by the glove, very slightly sore, nothing else. Chin, no blood, no damage beyond mild soreness/bruise that was gone within a few days. I didn’t even realize at first that there was damage to the right hand. Got on the bike, then noticed I couldn’t straighten the right pinky, and then noticed there was throbbing on the side of the hand. Couldn’t get the glove off easily, so went home to do it VERY slowly or cut it off. Got it off slowly. Didn’t notice the little hole in the back of the glove where the bone had come through not only flesh but glove. Fortunately, the bone went back in, so I didn’t have that obvious sign of a problem, but the hand looked deformed enough I knew I was in for it. I must have karate chopped the pavement or something. So, once I knew I was going down, could I have done anything differently to reduce the possibility of damage? Or did I just get unlucky? And if any of you have pull with the powers that be, do what you can so my rescheduled Friday appointment does not get postponed. Thanks. |
I was taught to tuck and roll.
Never let go of your bars,. never stick your arm out. Four crashes and it has worked. |
With my slow-mo dumbs I have held on to the bars and wound up looking like the proverbial road-kill armadillo that we often see here in FL. On back with bike up in air. Another lucky geezer.
Believing in myself is all I need so no connections here, but good luck. |
Balance exercises as well as core strength are your friends. Yoga, dance, cross-country skiing, martial arts (avoid the MMA stuff and any group that is in love with sparring) and lots of abdominal work. When you need to contort a bit to keep the padded parts down, it's a combination of balance and the strength of the central body that comes into play.
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Stepfamily needs to chime in.
#stapfam ^^^I don't know if/how that works. Anyway, IIRC he actually practices falling on occasion. They say you should hold onto the handlebars as you fall, and if you're lucky the bars will absorb at least some of the impact. Fortunately my falls as of late have been on soft surfaces. |
Originally Posted by Dudelsack
(Post 16167031)
Stepfamily needs to chime in.
#stapfam ^^^I don't know if/how that works. Anyway, IIRC he actually practices falling on occasion. They say you should hold onto the handlebars as you fall, and if you're lucky the bars will absorb at least some of the impact. Fortunately my falls as of late have been on soft surfaces. Sure sounds to me like a pretty serious injury to have resulted from such a slow speed fall. Hope your hand is OK. |
Originally Posted by Dudelsack
(Post 16167031)
Stepfamily needs to chime in.
#stapfam ^^^I don't know if/how that works. Anyway, IIRC he actually practices falling on occasion. They say you should hold onto the handlebars as you fall, and if you're lucky the bars will absorb at least some of the impact. Fortunately my falls as of late have been on soft surfaces. For some reason, the owner and builder of this fine machine hung it up on his living room wall that night and hasn't allowed it to be ridden since; that was over twenty years ago. (I did hear a rumor last year that one of his sons was looking into putting it back on the road.) |
Originally Posted by Retro Grouch
(Post 16167336)
I thought the reason you hold onto your handlebars to protect them from skuffing your handlebar tape.
(Laughter is is the best medicine) |
If you know you are going over- Tuck in the head- and keep hands on the bars and feet on the pedals. May bruise a bit and depending on speed- some blood may occur.
Most of my falls- In fact all of them- have been on the mountain bike and mostly at speed downhill. I knew nothing about most of them till I found the bike on top of me and something somewhere hurts. In that situation it has been get out of the pedals and carefully move the bits that hurt. If they don't hurt more then get up and inspect the bike- Helmet and clothing in that order. Gotta Get the priorities right. |
Originally Posted by stapfam
(Post 16167802)
Most of my falls- In fact all of them- have been on the mountain bike and mostly at speed downhill. I knew nothing about most of them till I found the bike on top of me and something somewhere hurts. In that situation it has been get out of the pedals and carefully move the bits that hurt. If they don't hurt more then get up and inspect the bike- Helmet and clothing in that order. Gotta Get the priorities right.
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I've only had a couple of serious falls, and in both cases, it was wholly a matter of instinct and physics. I didn't have time to let go of the handlebars or take any kind of evasive action whatsoever. I was a ballistic particle.
I had a nasty break of my pinky finger playing basketball years ago, and the result was a full hand cast. I was going nuts not being able to ride my bike, until I talked the doc into letting me ride with aerobars. As long as I stayed on the flats and took it easy, I could brake well enough to stop. |
Originally Posted by stapfam
(Post 16167802)
If you know you are going over- Tuck in the head- and keep hands on the bars and feet on the pedals. May bruise a bit and depending on speed- some blood may occur.
Most of my falls- In fact all of them- have been on the mountain bike and mostly at speed downhill. I knew nothing about most of them till I found the bike on top of me and something somewhere hurts. In that situation it has been get out of the pedals and carefully move the bits that hurt. If they don't hurt more then get up and inspect the bike- Helmet and clothing in that order. Gotta Get the priorities right. I pretty much followed your steps, I inspected the bits that hurt, then inspected the bike. Didn't think the helmet was hit (and still don't think it was), probably should have checked it immediately anyway. Didn't notice the one problem with the bike until after I got on it -- the handlebars slightly out of true, but not worth fixing until after the short 2 mile ride back home. Only after seeing handlebars out of true did I notice pain in the broken hand. Since my immediately checking the bits that hurt didn't reveal the serious injury, I would suggest checking even bits that you don't think hurt before inspecting the bike. |
Originally Posted by Biker395
(Post 16167840)
I've only had a couple of serious falls, and in both cases, it was wholly a matter of instinct and physics. I didn't have time to let go of the handlebars or take any kind of evasive action whatsoever. I was a ballistic particle.
I had a nasty break of my pinky finger playing basketball years ago, and the result was a full hand cast. I was going nuts not being able to ride my bike, until I talked the doc into letting me ride with aerobars. As long as I stayed on the flats and took it easy, I could brake well enough to stop. |
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