Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sorry cycling is not really what I would call a dangerous hobby. Get the viara radar from garmin that will notify you if a car is approaching from the rear. Watch the rider in front of you and lookout for drivers opening their doors
Spoken like someone who has never ridden on a country road. That radar is only as good as the driver’s behavior before they are directly adjacent to you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Motorcycle.
I thought rock climbing. 🧗♀️
Please. It’s obviously cycling
Cycling as in bicycle? That is not a dangerous hobby and is actually a great workout.
Motorcycles on the other hand are dangerous and only douches would ride them when married with children.
Both are dangerous. Motorcycle more likely to result in organ donation. Cycling more likely to result in a broken clavicle. Since it’s an injury and her DH isn’t yet pushing up daisies, my money is on cycling.
I am a woman, a mother and have cycled 2-3x a week for years now. It is not more dangerous than running.
Anonymous wrote:Hi everyone - it's OP again.
For those of you who are absolutely dying to know, yes, it's road cycling, and by extension, he dabbles in triathlons (olympic + half ironman), so he has 3 time consuming sports to train for. So the time spent away from the family for training + events is annoying enough, but it's the road biking that gets to me the most. Not to mention the $$$$ for all of the latest high end gear + bikes + travel.
Several of his riding buddies have gotten scraped up pretty badly over the years, and it's not unheard if you follow the sport to hear of people gravely injured or killed as well. I'm sorry but whoever said it is just as safe as running is just plain wrong - any sport where you are riding at high speeds (30-40+ mph) along with people driving 4000lb SUVs while texting is a serious risk. Even if you follow all of the rules and do everything "right", you will never win an argument against a car (or a pothole on a sharp downhill turn).
And yes, he is also into all of the indoor biking options, but in the warmer months prefers to be outside. But right now he is dealing with multiple broken bones and a head injury with short-term memory and cognition issues, so I need to accompany him to all of his doctors appointments.
I guess I'm not really sure what I'm asking here. Just venting. Thank you to those of you who have shared similar stories and can relate![]()
Anonymous wrote:Sorry cycling is not really what I would call a dangerous hobby. Get the viara radar from garmin that will notify you if a car is approaching from the rear. Watch the rider in front of you and lookout for drivers opening their doors
Anonymous wrote:Hi everyone - it's OP again.
For those of you who are absolutely dying to know, yes, it's road cycling, and by extension, he dabbles in triathlons (olympic + half ironman), so he has 3 time consuming sports to train for. So the time spent away from the family for training + events is annoying enough, but it's the road biking that gets to me the most. Not to mention the $$$$ for all of the latest high end gear + bikes + travel.
Several of his riding buddies have gotten scraped up pretty badly over the years, and it's not unheard if you follow the sport to hear of people gravely injured or killed as well. I'm sorry but whoever said it is just as safe as running is just plain wrong - any sport where you are riding at high speeds (30-40+ mph) along with people driving 4000lb SUVs while texting is a serious risk. Even if you follow all of the rules and do everything "right", you will never win an argument against a car (or a pothole on a sharp downhill turn).
And yes, he is also into all of the indoor biking options, but in the warmer months prefers to be outside. But right now he is dealing with multiple broken bones and a head injury with short-term memory and cognition issues, so I need to accompany him to all of his doctors appointments.
I guess I'm not really sure what I'm asking here. Just venting. Thank you to those of you who have shared similar stories and can relate![]()
Anonymous wrote:Hi everyone - it's OP again.
For those of you who are absolutely dying to know, yes, it's road cycling, and by extension, he dabbles in triathlons (olympic + half ironman), so he has 3 time consuming sports to train for. So the time spent away from the family for training + events is annoying enough, but it's the road biking that gets to me the most. Not to mention the $$$$ for all of the latest high end gear + bikes + travel.
Several of his riding buddies have gotten scraped up pretty badly over the years, and it's not unheard if you follow the sport to hear of people gravely injured or killed as well. I'm sorry but whoever said it is just as safe as running is just plain wrong - any sport where you are riding at high speeds (30-40+ mph) along with people driving 4000lb SUVs while texting is a serious risk. Even if you follow all of the rules and do everything "right", you will never win an argument against a car (or a pothole on a sharp downhill turn).
And yes, he is also into all of the indoor biking options, but in the warmer months prefers to be outside. But right now he is dealing with multiple broken bones and a head injury with short-term memory and cognition issues, so I need to accompany him to all of his doctors appointments.
I guess I'm not really sure what I'm asking here. Just venting. Thank you to those of you who have shared similar stories and can relate![]()
Anonymous wrote:I am so sorry, OP. Cycling certainly is dangerous but not to the level to make it reckless, at least in my mind. Setting that side, DH and I have both greatly reduced our times spent on separate and joint hobbies since having kids. Most parents do. I was just talking to a guy who said he went from golfing "pretty much every weekend" when he was single, to golfing once a month after he got married, to golfing a couple of times per year when the kids were little, and then increasing a little bit as they got older. That's life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP can any of his buddies from this activity share the load in taking him to appts? That would be how I would try to reduce my workload. Is he the kind of person who would fully step up for you if this were flipped? If so, this is a blip in the overall scheme of things but yes, still sucks.
Would love to know the answer to this but honestly- just telling us what the sport is would help. You haven't stated anything here that is identifying or could come back on you negatively. There is a lot of range between base jumping and curling.
NP. Why would it "help" other than to satisfy your curiosity? OP is right not to identify the sport because once she does, the thread will derail into a debate about whether people here think that sport is or isn't dangerous, OP will be told she's "overreacting" and "controlling," OP will get utterly useless anecdotes about how someone's spouse or friend does this sport and has never so much as bruised a toe, blah blah.
None of that helps OP in any way. If you have some ideas about how she can improve the logistics of dealing with DH/kids/work/chores/appointments, do weigh in. The nature of the sport has no impact on those logistics. I get it -- you're riffing off a question asking if the DH's buddies from the activity or sport would pitch in. But how does the specific sport many any difference in answering whether any friends who do the sport with him would or would not help? Answer: It doesn't make a difference. You just want to know because you want to know. Like others here saying they "need" to know.
OP, don't name it. You'll just fuel a thread of "But it's not that bad" or "It's horrible and here's why" posts about the sport -- not posts about your situation right now.
I realize this anger is not productive and I need to find ways to channel it into something more productive/positive. I am hoping to speak with a therapist soon, but looking for any advice or perspective in the meantime.