That First Taste of Freedom

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That First Taste of Freedom

https://www.ericpetersautos.com/2019/05/02/that-first-taste-of-freedom/#comment-706378

By eric - May 2, 2019

Riding a bicycle has changed – and the change may account for the waning of interest in driving as well as the waxing hostility between cyclists and drivers.

Cycling is mostly an adult activity now. It’s rare to see kids out riding their bicycles – especially by themselves.

They used to.

A bicycle was once upon-a-time a kid’s first taste of real freedom. This appetizer tended to instill a hankering for more. An expectation. An awakening.

Those who grew up before the era of helicopter parenting commenced in the ’90s will remember it because they lived it. Saturday morning came and as soon as you were finished with breakfast, you bolted outside, got on your bike – without putting on a helmet- and took off.

By yourself. To find your friends – or just find adventure.

Popping wheelies whenever the urge hit.

Sometimes, you wrecked. Unless a bone was poking through, you usually kept on riding for the rest of the day. It was no big deal. Certainly no reason to go home.

You’d knock around the neighborhood, check things out. No real plan. Everything on the fly. Maybe take that trail through the woods only the neighborhood kids knew about that took you to the pond, there to throw rocks or look for turtles.

You were maybe eight or nine years old. And you were free. Entirely on your own, for hours – all day – until the sun began to wane and it was time to pedal back home in time for dinner.

This was not illegal or even unusual. Neighbors didn’t call the Hut! Hut! Hut! squad when they saw a kid riding a bike unsupervised and without a helmet. They waved.

It was normal life.

Kids who grew up this untethered way were in a very real sense already drivers years before they were eligible to get a driver’s license. They learned to negotiate traffic, find their way there – and back. It was expected. Kids pedaled to the pool. Or to baseball practice. Or wherever.

Kids who were raised in the America of before-the-1990s had adult liberties before they were even teenagers.

A car was the natural progression from their bicycle. Not much changed, really. They were just able to go farther, faster.

Instead of pedaling over to their friend’s house, they drove over.

Cruising around the neighborhood led to Friday night cruising in the car.

Not buckled up for saaaaaaaaaaaaaafety. But ready for fun!

Contrast this with today’s abrupt transition from being driven everywhere by an adult and almost never out of sight of adults until one is within sight of being an adult himself. Cars are not freedom extrapolated anymore. They are foreign – and scary – things. Millennial and up kids have been conditioned to so regard them, both explicitly and implicitly.

They are strapped into them from earliest memory; never allowed to sit up front much less loose. It isn’t saaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaafe. The tedium of being strapped in – and not free to just get out until unstrapped by an adult – works as a kind of aversion therapy.

There is no fun to be had here. Certainly no association with freedom.

All parents – not just the neurotic – must play neurotic when it comes to saaaaaaaaaaaaaaaafety. This neurosis inevitably rubs off on the kids, who are never free to go anywhere by themselves, on bicycles or otherwise.

Danger lurks, everywhere!

Even to play in the yard without an Adult Authority Figure supervising is warrant enough to bring down a Hut! Hut! Hutting! Most parents helicopter because what choice have they got?

The kids, meanwhile, never learn what freedom means via their bikes and so don’t have the same urge to acquire more of it via a car, as soon as possible. They peck at their cell phones instead.

Under the supervision of their new parent.

Pre-Millennial generations of Americans champed at the bit to get behind the wheel – having already been behind the handlebars for years. They had also already acquired motor skills and muscle memory and habits of mind that prepared them for driving.

Balance, concentration; a sense of spatial relationships. The exercise of judgment and initiative.

Do I have time to turn left in front of that car coming at me? It’s the same on a bike as in a car. Learn how to do it on a bike at 10 and you’re much more prepared to do it in a car at 16.

You learn that grip is less (and it takes longer to stop) in the wet – and how to ride accordingly.

It prepares you to drive accordingly.

Pedaling a bike through the gears also gives you a visceral understanding of leverage; you learn to avoid “stalling” a bicycle by gearing down – just the same as in a car with a manual transmission. There is a reason why pre-Millennials know how to drive stick to a much greater degree than Millennials. If you never shifted a bike, shifting a car is that much more remote.

If today’s youth drive at all (about a third do not) they drive later – and with less skill. They are much more dependent on “safety” features which are really compensatory features – the automotive equivalent of a walker for a cripple.

Except in this case, the crippling is learned – mental rather than physical.

When these conditioned cripples encounter a cyclist on the road, they get flustered. They lack the skill – and the initiative – to just pass the cyclist. Instead, they sulk angrily behind the cyclist. They never learned to deal with situations like this; indeed, have been conditioned to regard dealing with any unscripted situation using their own best judgment as unsaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaafe.

They are accustomed to waiting to be told what to do by a supervisory adult authority figure.

Adult cycling, meanwhile, seems to have become a much more scripted/organized thing. Special outfits. Competitive. It’s true that many adults cycle for just the fun of it – and there’s nothing wrong with the special outfits or being competitive. But it is a very different thing than a bunch of kids just riding wherever, wearing whatever, on whatever – getting their very first taste of being free adults.
 
I never actually learned how to ride a bike. It was one of those things that never interested me.

Same here. I spent my childhood learning how to program the VCR to record shows I didn't want to miss.

I think I finally have it figured out.
 
Seriously, when I read the thread title, the first thing I thought of was riding my pink Huffy down the middle of the street - like a boss. :cool: The best feeling in the world.
 
I'll never forget my first bike. A pink schwinn. My mom saved up her tips for a long time and totally surprised me on my birthday. I took it out and learned to ride it at the bottom of our driveway in about 2 hours. No helmet, no training wheels and I was barefoot. After my mom died (I was a teen), I lost all of my belongings. That bike was the thing that upset me the most that I lost it. My mom sacrificed for that bike just to make me happy and I always appreciated that. So years later, I found one just like it on ebay and bought it. Why am i telling you guys this stuff..?

http
schwinn-1980-8.jpg
 
My first bike did not have any breaks , way later then when I was 14 or so it was like me learning to ski . I could do well but really never figured out how to stop too good so I was a bit beat up afterwards .
 
Once I was mid teens though I really felt free , speeding down a gravel farm lane on a Sat night in a pickup with a case of cold beer , a shotgun and rifle in the back . It was like running around the farm barefoot at four in my boxers before I had to wear shoes or go to school only better.
 
I'll never forget my first bike. A pink schwinn. My mom saved up her tips for a long time and totally surprised me on my birthday. I took it out and learned to ride it at the bottom of our driveway in about 2 hours. No helmet, no training wheels and I was barefoot. After my mom died (I was a teen), I lost all of my belongings. That bike was the thing that upset me the most that I lost it. My mom sacrificed for that bike just to make me happy and I always appreciated that. So years later, I found one just like it on ebay and bought it. Why am i telling you guys this stuff..?

http
schwinn-1980-8.jpg

I had this one, from about 10 to 15 years old, then I moved on to scooters and motorcycles.

01+1974+Raleigh+Supurbe.JPG


That was a British Raleigh Superbe.

One of the cool things about that bike was this nifty, low drag, easy to pedal "hub" generator for the lights.

02+1974+Raleigh+Supurbe.JPG
 
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Title nearly says it all. Its a kids real first taste of Freedom. And that meant independence and self reliance. As kids you pretty much learned your own limits on just how much stupid shit you can do. Sure, you could do anything you really wanted, but, if you did something excessively stupid and dangerous you would get hurt. Thus, both sides of Freedom were bestowed upon people in their youths, both independence, and personal responsibility. Riding a bike and hurting yourself were a major part of growing up because it taught that if you did hurt yourself, even though there wasnt a law against what you were doing, maybe you ought to apply some Common Sense before doing it!
 
Pity on kids who don't learn to ride bikes. :( Great fun and epic way to go adventurin'. I'm old enough to have been able to do it helmet-free. :D :cool: #goodolddays #freedom
 
Seriously, when I read the thread title, the first thing I thought of was riding my pink Huffy down the middle of the street - like a boss. :cool: The best feeling in the world.

My lil sis had one of those. She didn't ride it like a boss, tho. lol :D
 
Now that's cool.

That was the neatest thing. It would light the lights at the slowest of speeds, with almost no drag at all.

They were far ahead of the alternative.

Anybody from the era is familiar with the "rub the tire" generators...

joroutens_005.jpg


That worked like this in real life...

 
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We use to get a 5 gallon bucket and a scrap board, which trained us to stay right in the middle every time.... we weren't picky.
 
I did ride my bicycle all around with freedom. The big rule was to be home at a certain time. When gone from home I could have been anywhere and the funny thing now that I think of it was that I was never asked where I went or what I did.

Another extremely fond memory from very early life was tree climbing. I grew up in Connecticut and there were massive trees and me and my friend would climb them all the way to the top without any safety equipment or training.
 
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