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What dreadful hot weather we have. It keeps me in a continual state of inelegance.”


Jane Austen: Letters, September 18, 1796

It was quite hot and humid this afternoon, and I somewhat regretted that I had decided to resume bike riding today. Following my plan, I rode to the LRT station, paid my fare, and then took my bike on the train.

It was really quite crowded, which made me rather tense. I wasn't able to get near the racks for hanging up the bike, so until the second station, I stood awkwardly in the middle of the row, with my bike raised up on the hind wheel, trying to keep it out of everyone's way. Eventually, I got it into the rack and waited until my stop. I eased it out and walked it up on the rear wheel toward the door, taking pains, as I always do to avoid brushing against anyone (and, say, getting bicycle grease on anyone's clothing).

Just as I was rolling out the door, a man standing there said with heavy sarcasm, "Next time, try riding that bike all the way."

I was initially speechless, and then furious. I wanted to fly back onto the train and have it out with the jerk, but the door was already closing. All I could manage, in that split second, was to call back to him, "I just had surgery, you ____," adding there at the last, to my regret, something truly unprintable.

I brooded angrily about it all the way home, and I'm still a little upset about it. Unexpected rudeness from a total stranger always does that to me, I guess. Mostly I regretted how I responded. Not just the unladylike language, I mean, but the fact that I offered him some kind of excuse for being on the train, as if I somehow owed him an explanation for my presence. There was no reason for me to have to justify my presence to him. Metro Transit has made it clear that bikes are welcome: that's why they put in the bike racks on the trains in the first place. I was taking the train so that I wouldn't be another car on the road. I paid the same damn fare he did. I know that I didn't brush against him, I didn't do anything to him. How dare he imply that I didn't belong there? I am primarily surprised to encounter the attitude, I suppose. You may find me absurdly naive, but it had never occurred to me that my fellow passengers might resent me for taking my bike on the train. Eventually, I had to turn my attention from rudeness on the LRT to my lousy physical condition (I had to stop for a spell, gasping for breath, at a stop sign a block from my home).

Altogether, it was a very sour welcome back to biking.

(no subject)

Date: 2007-06-27 12:16 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] johnridley.livejournal.com
Meh, people are idiots, and some think it's great fun to twist your tail. The only good response is to smile and wave. Last year, last time someone flipped me the bird while passing, I smiled and waved. He flipped me off again. This repeated FOUR TIMES, he got more demonstrative each time despite him being about 1/4 mile in front of me by the end. By the last time, I was laughing, and he was so angry he was starting to drive erratically. I stopped before either I fell off the bike or he drove into a post.

The drivers around here are actually wonderful, I get only a minor thing like this happening maybe once a year, and it's always some phallus-brained 19-year-old.

(no subject)

Date: 2007-06-27 12:25 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dd-b.livejournal.com
Hey, if somebody *can* be annoyed into driving into a post by smiling and waving at them, they *should* be, I say. I suppose they might have hit another car, pedestrian, or something, though.

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