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[Closed] In trouble

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[#906902]

I have fractured two ribs, nothing major but all a bit sore. My wife and various others have been going on at me about acting my age, growing up, taking silly risks etc etc etc.

Any ideas how to counter all this, I'm only 39 and feel I'm quite careful mostly. I do like the odd jump, drop off etc..


 
Posted : 29/09/2009 10:16 am
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you are probably more likely to fall over in the shower and break something


 
Posted : 29/09/2009 10:17 am
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Tell them that instead of getting out on your bike you'll be spending all your spare time and money in your local, leading to weight gain and liver damage?


 
Posted : 29/09/2009 10:19 am
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I broke a rib leaning across the arm of a chair to reach the tv remote.

I broke my hip trying to jump.

I don't lean across arms of chairs any more and I don't try to jump.

It's not so much about acting your age it's more about acceptign the limitations of your skills/body and the possible consequences of injury to those around you.


 
Posted : 29/09/2009 10:19 am
 jedi
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you only truly grow old when you stop


 
Posted : 29/09/2009 10:21 am
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I will not stop anything, sadly my body is self destructing around me without actually falling off.. 😮


 
Posted : 29/09/2009 10:28 am
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I severed my a-c knee ligament bringing in the washing off the line. A botched repair op means I no longer have enough strength to lift my foot off the floor while lying down.

Cycling and mx injuries are trivial in comparison.


 
Posted : 29/09/2009 10:29 am
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I also an 39 and while I take some risks, they are not "silly". Fun is a serious business. So you cracked some ribs - it's a fairly common injury in many sports.

Of course they are concerned about your well being. But it seems like they are asking you to conform to society image of sedentary 39 year old men. You have already decided you don't want to. You may have to adapt to deal with your body's emerging limitations, but why should you stop enjoying life?


 
Posted : 29/09/2009 10:31 am
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I'm 56 and still fall off a lot - I'm not actually very good at this biking lark. Your body is designed to be used.

You may have to adapt to deal with your body's emerging limitations

I believe they are mostly a matter of expectation. Don't expect to be a crumbling basket case and you won't 🙂


 
Posted : 29/09/2009 10:35 am
 jedi
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im 41 in december and this year i have learned to air big quarters on my bmx 🙂

[img] http://images.fotopic.net/?iid=1yhdeq&outx=800&quality=70 [/img]


 
Posted : 29/09/2009 10:35 am
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Yes, act your age.

But 39 means going out and having as much fun as you can.

I broke my cheekbone and eye socket last year, riding too fast down an unfamiliar trail at night, but 3 weeks later I was out again and seeing how fast I could get down the beast (well, trying to tyre buzz a guy in front, actually). 56 here.


 
Posted : 29/09/2009 10:38 am
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Our mate Old John came a bit of a cropper a couple of months ago, he rode off the end of the big red mound on Cannock Chase, not realising it had eroded since he last did it. Spent the afternoon in A&E.

But he's coming out with us on Friday for a whiz up the Long Mynd and down Minton Batch etc.

At 75 he manages pretty well.


 
Posted : 29/09/2009 10:46 am
 jedi
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high5 old john!!!


 
Posted : 29/09/2009 10:47 am
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Tell thm you've decided to grow old and not grow up...then stick your tongue out at them and run upstairs and hid in your room...


 
Posted : 29/09/2009 10:52 am
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I

4

friend....... (still aches tho)


 
Posted : 29/09/2009 11:01 am
 Esme
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Most accidents happen in the home - it's a well-known fact. So you are actually safer out on your bike


 
Posted : 29/09/2009 1:56 pm
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I am 52 and I broke a few ribs after i had a short excursion over the handlebars down @ Ae forest in May of this year, all my wife said to me was "you will have to learn to fall properly!", no mention of age... mind you, the older you get the easier bones are to break and longer they are to heal.... 😯

[center][b]"Growing old is compulsory - growing up is optional"[/b][/center]


 
Posted : 29/09/2009 3:20 pm
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41, thought I'd bust my hand a few weeks back after a pretty high speed off, my missus just laughs at me to be honest


 
Posted : 29/09/2009 3:23 pm
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if your worried about hurting yourself when you fall take some judo lessons and learn how to fall properly.


 
Posted : 29/09/2009 3:27 pm
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That's where all this nanny state / health and safety thinking has got us! 🙂

Get out and enjoy it - make the most of life and the opportunities you have. I'm sure they would far rather a fit and active man than a couch potato with grumpy attitude coz he can't get out and do what he wants to. Age is not a barrier - it just forces you to slow down a bit.

I have found as I have got older that I am just a bit more aware of the potential for what could go wrong and think, albeit briefly, that something could indeed go wrong. When I was younger the thought just didn't enter into my head. 🙂


 
Posted : 29/09/2009 3:27 pm
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You're only 39 FFS....

Tell them to get lost. Throw a tantrum. Storm off........

Who do these various others think they are eh?

Healing vibes for the ribs. Ride on! 🙂


 
Posted : 29/09/2009 3:28 pm
 igm
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I've currently got the heat lamp, deep heat and compression shorts on my left thigh.

Was it the ride round Dalby or the children's padded play area that did it?

Guess.

And bizzarely I can still ride, but sitting, driving the car and walking up stairs is darned sore


 
Posted : 29/09/2009 4:16 pm
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your nowt but a youth - just get out & ride - all my most serious injuries have happened in my 40's – still ride bike like I stole them – still trying to ride harder, faster longer now that I’m into my 5th decade


 
Posted : 29/09/2009 4:18 pm
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"take some judo lessons and learn how to fall properly."

That is a really good idea.


 
Posted : 29/09/2009 4:41 pm
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Our mate Eugene is 86.
He rode Nant-y-Arian with us on Saturday.


 
Posted : 29/09/2009 4:50 pm
 ART
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I'm 39 too, it's fine stop worrying, ignore all that stuff and get on with it. Biking keeps you young dontcha know 😀

Yey Jedi!!! 😀 - that's what I would love to be able to do by the time I'm 41. Well Ok probably a bit ambitious, but is always good to try and dispell the girls can't jump thing. :mrgreen:


 
Posted : 29/09/2009 4:58 pm
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I'm 39. Trying to jump at Buck Wood (that we, SingletrAction and friends, built). I build trails at Stainburn ("probably the hardest man made trail inthe UK" 😉 and try to ride them.

I fractured a rib falling off the on the pump track (baby smooth, christ knows how) but I opened the fracture carrying on of my kids off Ilkely Moor. That's what really hurt and stopped me riding for weeks.

"Growing up", whatever that means, is greatly over-rated. I hope I'm still riding (as badly as I do) as long as some of the other buggers mentioned above.

I've been coming home dirty, sometimes bloody and occassionally a little busted for years. Sod it, life's too short to watch X factor and Strictly 😉


 
Posted : 29/09/2009 5:20 pm
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35 here and just had 4 riding induced stitches out my elbow. I'm still getting faster and better every year. The mistakes hurt a little more each year though. That's what body armour was invented for.

My old man has just turned 60 and spent the last 2 weeks riding in the Pyrenees, including taking all the hard options and the hucks - he was the first one to drop a gully half way down the Superbagnere in the wet (he was also the first one to stuff it down said gully, but far from the last!).

Act your shoe size, not your age! Or alternatively "its better to burn out than to fade away".


 
Posted : 29/09/2009 5:23 pm
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lol, +1 for dick barton 😆


 
Posted : 29/09/2009 6:51 pm
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I'm 41 - I want my daughters (5yrs old and 2) to remember me as an active man, not somebody sitting grumpily clutching the remote and a can of beer.

I want them to think it's normal to go MTBing, surfing, climbing. Anything really....

Anyway, I still feel about the same as I did when I was 25. Just a bit more tired. And achey. And my neck doesn't turn as well as it used to. And my l/h big toe doesn't work at all anymore. And..........


 
Posted : 29/09/2009 6:58 pm
 jedi
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you're never too old to learn new stuff


 
Posted : 30/09/2009 9:17 am
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statistically most accidents happen in the home so you are actually safer whilst out on your bike...


 
Posted : 30/09/2009 9:20 am
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'you're never too old to learn new stuff' - it just hurts more.

fractured rib or 2 here!


 
Posted : 30/09/2009 9:24 am
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"take some judo lessons and learn how to fall properly."

That is a really good idea.

Yeah, that's an awesome idea. Only last weekend at Glentress, an eastern looking fellow in PJs jumped out of the undergrowth, grabbed me and my bike by the arm and gracefully flipped us over his shoulder...

Seriously, how the hell is Judo going to help when your front wheel washes out at 30mph or you misjudge a drop-off and find yourself on your arse with a cracked helmet and a bike bearing down on you before you even have time to squeal?


 
Posted : 30/09/2009 9:28 am
 devs
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43 and still playing rugby and playing on my bikes. Injuries take a bit longer to heal but there's no reason to stop really. We don't stop doing stuff because we get old, we get old because we stop doing stuff!


 
Posted : 30/09/2009 9:30 am
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Thing is if an 18 year old falls off they get injured too, there really is no reason to stop.


 
Posted : 30/09/2009 9:30 am
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toby1 - Member

Thing is if an 18 year old falls off they get injured too, there really is no reason to stop.

Not nesser-celery. 18 year old's tend to bounce much better than someone in their 40's who will generally land like a sack of shit.

As you get older you aren't so resistant to falls either and take far longer to heal.

Watch out for that hip Grandad!

No need to stop tho.


 
Posted : 30/09/2009 9:39 am
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We had a gent here on a 2 day training course ... I thought he'd filled his DOB out wrong on his disclaimer as it would have made him 73, turns out he was 73. You'd have had him down as late 50's and the reason he was here ... because his mate always beats him on the descents and he's five years older!

Like everyone says, once you stop you get old very quickly.

Stuart


 
Posted : 30/09/2009 9:48 am
 jedi
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teenagers dont bounce better. its because most people when they get older dont try new stuff and get set in their ways and crash less and actually forget how to fall


 
Posted : 30/09/2009 9:48 am
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I would start worrying about the dull people you are hanging around with - it they are this staid now, how dull and repressive are the going to be in another 10 years?

A work collegue of mind was asked some time back to plug an electrical cable into a socket which was fixed to the underside of a fairly average table. She was horrified. "They cant expect me to go bending and crawling around under a desk. I am past that sort of thing at my age." She was so affronted at thier lack of consideration for her age and dignity and conserned she might at sone point be asked to plug something in again, she actually started looking for other jobs.

She had just turned 40 that year.

Is that the sort of person you and your friends/family want to be?

Have fun while you can.


 
Posted : 30/09/2009 9:52 am
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I told the good lady that if I'd hurt myself skiing she would be more sympathetic and she's come around.

hooray..


 
Posted : 30/09/2009 10:27 am
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to Forking Our Souls: first off I nicked judo lessons idea from a bike magazine (or a motocross magazine can't remember which) but having done judo being thrown over a mans shoulder while facing foward is very simmilar to being thrown over your handle bars you go about as high but you always land on your back. The technique in judo is to absorb some of the force of the fall with your arms any time you fall and the action is done a millisecond before you fall so it is helpful any time you are about to come in contact with the ground which I think mirrors most mountainbiking falls.

Iain


 
Posted : 30/09/2009 11:05 am
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teenagers bounce better as they dont spend all week sat a desk drinking coffee.


 
Posted : 30/09/2009 11:06 am
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Was my 37th birthday last weekend so I like the the sentiment of this topic very much.
I was very late to biking (35!) so I am loving getting faster & faster all the time even though I am anxious over the time when that stops...

To be honest I think I MTB is fairly low risk? I stopped rallying & moto-x (enduro)...


 
Posted : 30/09/2009 11:11 am
 hora
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Exactly what wwaswas says. Limit your risk. If your jumps are 'ok' and sketchy then its probably time to realise to knock that part of the head.

I say adjust your riding. That way you will ride longer into later life anyway without any complications. Keep at it the level you are and your riding could be the next few years max (extreme example but still). I was going to switch to roadbikes in my mid40s' that way I will be hopefully riding still in my 80's rather than stopped riding altogether by the time I hit 50 (I have a few old injuries from years ago)

dont listen to jedi- hes a bloody exception (mutters)- show off!


 
Posted : 30/09/2009 11:13 am
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