Two Crashes

April 30th, 2010

Two important things happened this week in the way of “getting back on the horse.” Horses.

[1]

We rode our bike again.

I have a great kid-seat on our bike, and I started taking Vibble for rides in bicycle-friendly Santa Monica at about 6 mos. old. When she was a year-ish, we had an accident. It was actually pretty hard to talk about, and I hadn’t been on the bike since, but here’s what happened that day:

I put Vibble in her seat in the garage and mounted the bike. It was very dark in the garage. I rode out into the extremely bright sunlight and was momentarily blinded, and in that moment, I misjudged the location of a pretty high curb in front of our building. We toppled over the curb into the busy street. The first thing to hit the road was my knee (after months of physical therapy, it’s kind of ok now, heh). Second thing was my arm. Third, my precious kid’s helmet. As in, her head, on 26th Street. Cars whooshing by within centimeters.

She was fine within, I would say, 45 seconds. The helmet did its job, and I limped over to the front steps and held her, and she was smiling and laughing in no time.

I was not fine. Aside from my physical injuries, I had just come a little too close to Bad Things. I shook and sobbed, and while the sobbing eventually abated (after hours), the shaking lasted almost three days. And we didn’t ride the bike again, I couldn’t.

The other person who was not fine—perhaps the person least fine—was Stevel. This was a family bike ride, so he was on our other bike behind me, and witnessed the whole thing. I think for him, watching Violet’s tiny helmetted head hit the street was the very thing his anxiety is constantly assuming might happen: Complete horror. He still doesn’t understand how I drove that bike so that it went over sideways into the street.

I don’t need to tell you how awful this all was. We sort of agreed I wouldn’t blog about it, and that wasn’t going to be a problem, since I could barely choke out a one-sentence version of what had happened to tell the doctor when I went in about my knee. But I’ve since told the story to friends and family, and I wanted to record it here and report that we got back on that bike this week. I knew I needed to do it. It was a trembly ride for me, but by the end, I’d hit my stride again, and OH MAN, does this kid love to ride. Holy crap. She chattered the entire way to the library. Twice, drivers got honked at from behind, because a light turned green and they were still talking to Violet: “Look at you! Goin’ for a BIKE RIDE? You like your bike?”

It was all very smooth from her perspective, I think. She was enthusiastic about getting in the seat—she clearly remembered and was eager to ride. She had a new helmet (I was told after any accident you should replace the helmet), which she has since put on in the house a few times and worn around, as if to say, ‘When are we going on that bike again, Mom?’

Soon, Vibble, and often.

[2]

The other horse I will abbreviate, as it is still kind of fresh in my mind (and the bruises are still green).

I had some things mounted in the kitchen, a tiny cabinet up high with our liquor in it being the highest, screwed in as instructed to the thick wood (actually, it’s double-cabinet thickness) side of the cupboard bank over the sink. It was on there good and sound, trust me. BUT then I mounted a Can Crusher on the side of it and proceeded to release all of my frustrations on Diet Pepsi cans, with the force of all of this going into the side of the cabinet and rocking it slightly on its screws. I knew this was a bad idea. KNEW. And yet …

So one day I’m crushin’ some cans, and BA-BOOM!!!!!!!! The cabinet comes OFF the wall, on its way down taking out a nearby wine rack, the medicine cabinet that serves as Vibble’s play kitchen fridge, a piece of the cupboard, some chunks of the floor, and oh, a little bit of my leg.

Fortunate thing of fortunate things: Vibble is not playing in her kitchen, although she is pretty eager to get into the middle of the mess, and Dad has to keep her from trudging through glass and wine and booze and fractured wood and Diet Pepsi cans and laughing-weeping Mom (I felt momentarily insane).

OK, so back on the horse: This week, I had a professional handyman come in to do some things in the house, and I had HIM re-hang all of these things—liquor cabinet, wine rack, kid-fridge, Can Crusher (in a new spot, of course). He put billions of heavy duty screws into everything. I don’t know if you could get these things down with a sledgehammer. He also mounted some other things onto walls where I had been considering hanging them myself. His instructions were: “On there good enough so if she hangs off of it, it’s not coming down.”

The lesson here is, Kristan and her cordless drill: Too ambitious. I wouldn’t say this was a “close call,” since it was clearly the can crushing that caused the disaster, and I never crushed cans while Violet was in the kitchen. It made me RIGHTLY nervous to have her anywhere near that action. But what if … ?

OK, put the helmet back on, Vibb, if you’re going into the rooms where Mom has screwed random cabinetry into the walls herself.

That wasn’t as abbreviated as promised, sorry. And yes, both of these fallen-off-horses were my fault. I blew it. I’m learning from it, still.

[C]

And now I need to try and get myself back to sleep. I’ve got some awesome friends coming into town today, and I want to be ready to PLAY! Bridgey comes in around 3, and Cindy around 10, and with Cindy coming I’m thinking we will likely grocery shop right away, since I don’t know the first thing about buying bacon. Or foie gras.

7 Responses to “Two Crashes”

  1. Cindy Says:

    Oh, K, I wish I’d known about the bike accident. My mom and I had a similar one when I was a kid. She, or I, could have helped calm your nerves about it.

    Please note that I became a fairly avid mountain biker in my twenties armed with the knowledge that most accidents can be survived, even with a lot of bruising. I also used to commute on bicycle in New York City, with an acute awareness of my surroundings. Chances are, your little accident might be a good thing for Vibble as she grows up.

    Is there a place to go grocery shopping at 10:00? I don’t really know anything about foie gras but I do know a lot about bacon. Woo hoo!

  2. dad Says:

    Lucy..you got some splainin to do! And you are a redhead too!

    You just need to post a sign at the door. Hard hat area. Hard hats required at all times in this house.

  3. Nana Says:

    We all have those close call stories that remain as big, dark secrets. Stevel was 6 months old and I had him sittiing (!) on the kitchen counter while I was talking on the phone. He took a dive onto the kitchen floor. No broken bones, but also no helmet. And this was my third child. Yours was an accident, minr was stupidity.

    Good for you to get back on the horse. I do remember your writing about a bike ride in which Vibble kept looking at you and smiling during the ride.

    Now, you need to put an earthquake strap around your hot water heater!! That does exist. We had to put one on the hot water heater when we listed the house in Corvallis.

  4. Megan Says:

    Good for you for getting back on the bike! Some day soon I’ll get my seat mounted (I’ve only had it sitting in the living room for about a month now), and then we can meet up for a bike ride somewhere!

  5. Cindy Says:

    OH MY GOD! How am I supposed to sit still all day at work and then all night on a plane?!??!

  6. groundhog Says:

    I remember the time that I accidently locked you in the car at the mall. You were less than a year old and I threw my purse up on the front seat so I could fasten you in your car seat, then pushed the button down on the door and closed it.

    I was a hot summer day. The car was already about a hundred degrees inside because it had been sitting out in the sun all afternoon while we were in the mall. You were already pretty unhappy about being put in the hot car and you were yelling.

    No cell phones back then. No way to call 911. I didn’t know what to do! I had to leave you alone there in that boiling hot sun in that oven! It was one of the hardest things I’ve ever had to do.

    I ran back into the mall looking frantically for someone who could help me. For some reason, there was a little locksmith shop in that mall, just inside the door we were parked near. (Have you ever seen a locksmith in a mall? Me neither. But there was one there that day for me.) I ran right up to the guy behind the counter and told him what had happened. He closed up his shop, brought his tools out and had my door open in just a few minutes. I pulled you out of the car and ran back into the mall with you. You were so hot and your face was beet red! The locksmith guy wouldn’t take any money – said he was just glad that you were OK.

    The thought of losing you was more than I could handle. I didn’t stop shaking for quite a while either.

  7. Christina Says:

    Oh honey. Even when it feels like you (and the world around you) is falling apart, even then, Vibble is blessed to have you.

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