4.22.2006

 

A Near Fatality As A Learning Experience



Getting hit by an oversized pickup truck while using a sidewalk is a great learning experience. You’ll soon learn how many real friends you have.

Keep in mind that I have done favors for friends in the past, from listening to their problems to giving them a ride somewhere when I owned a car.

After surviving the torture chamber masquerading as an emergency room at the hospital, I’m kinda limited in what I can do. The day after the accident I left a couple of messages on a friend’s machine. I just said I needed a favor.

That evening I was able to get the friend on the phone, around 7:30 PM. I asked her if she could give me a quick lift somewhere if she wasn’t busy. It would only take half-an-hour, if that, including travel and waiting time. She said she couldn’t help me: she was preoccupied with ironing her clothes for work tomorrow.

Today I spoke with someone at a downtown café who also doesn’t get around town by car; he walks everywhere. I wanted to let him know about my accident, in part because he passes through the same area where I was hit and thrown. He immediately launched into the latest news about himself, apparently not noticing my stiffness and discomfort. He went on about stuff I had already heard about five times before, his latest published work, what it was, where it was published, how many words it was, etc., etc., to the nth degree.

I got up from the table, telling him I had to leave because my back was tightening up from sitting too long. (One of the pleasurable aftereffects from being almost crushed under a truck.) I briefly mentioned to him my accident. He acted as if I was leaving because I had a slight cold. I suspect he was upset that I didn’t let him finish repeating his same routine ad nauseam.

Apparently telling “friends” that you have survived a potentially crippling/fatal accident involving a truck driving straight into you doesn’t mean anything nowadays. It’s just part of society’s changing mores.

So how many “friends” do you have?

Comments:
Great to see the A-P blogging! Our burgh is not the most friendly of places for those on foot or bike. Wishing you a quick recovery.
 
tourpro--

Thanks for your comment. I'm getting grouchier each day, so that must mean I'm getting better.

Too many drivers are unaware that there's any difference between pedestrians and cyclists. They're too comfortable ruling over the road in their oversized gas-guzzlers. Then again, a driver might tell the difference. If he sees mangled metal wrapped around road kill, then he knows it's a cyclist, not a pedestrian.

Stan
 
Post a Comment



<< Home

This page is powered by Blogger. Isn't yours?