indigo_rose99: (Default)
Do you remember when you were a kid, that feeling of immortality?  So much energy, nothing could hurt you?  All those warnings from your parents were just annoying...

These days it isn't the fact that I creak in the morning that gets to me.  It is the terror.

As you know, I smeared myself over a fair amount of pavement early last year while roller-blading.  It took me more than six months to recover fully.  I have recently started roller-blading again on the same track.  There is one big difference.

The first time I went out to the track, it was like I had not been away for months.  But the second time...  The third time was worse.  Every time I went down even a small hill, I started visualizing falling.  Over and over and over. It plays in my head. I can feel myself going down.  I can feel myself hitting the pavement.  I start to feel my legs waver as my balance goes...

I end up past the hill shaking, covered in sweat, with the bad kind of adrenaline high that makes my stomach feel sick.  And I never, ever want to do it again.  Ever.  I want to take off the damn skates and walk back to the car.

Yes, masochist that I am, I keep going.  I roller-bladed 6 miles today and 6 miles last weekend.  I keep hoping that it will get easier.  Too stubborn to stop, that's me.  This has been going on for a couple of months now.  I would like to tell you that it has gotten easier, but... I'm just using workarounds.  I find that if I slow down before hills, brake a lot, sometimes that helps. I spend a lot of time concentrating on GOING instead of FALLING.  I know this is all in my head.  There is nothing wrong with my skates or my balance.

This, this is what it is to get old. It isn't the aching bones or creaking back.  It is that intimate knowledge of the terrible, horrible consequences when things go wrong.
indigo_rose99: (Default)
I have not gone roller-blading much in the past 7 months. And during this time T took the opportunity to replace my wheels with ones we bought some year or so ago, and added a new brake.  We had some trouble getting the larger wheels on with the brake -- not enough room.   This further delayed me getting back out roller-blading.

Last Sunday the weather was beautiful.  I awoke with a strong urge to exercise. I called my friend and neighbor B, and convinced him to roller-blade around the neighborhood with me.  As I left, T warned me that the new wheels were a bit dubious in their attachment.  Evidently if you put them on too hard, that is as bad as too loosely.  T warned that I should keep an eye on... mysteriouspartsthatcouldfalloff.  I nodded, and tried not to bite through my lip at the feel of being back on roller-blades for the first time since... Well, you know.  I tried to imagine how I would check whether the wheels were in danger of coming off.  Perhaps lift my foot and look at them?  *hysterical laughter*  Yeah, like that is going to happen!  I can barely stand with both feet on the ground!  Fine, I'll look at them after they are off my feet. 

So, B and I roller-bladed in circles around our multi-circle neighborhood for an hour.  About 45 minutes in during a long straight stretch, B said, "Hey, wait!  You lost a wheel!"  I didn't feel unstable.  He found the wheel in the grass and showed it too me. Clearly my wheel.  I didn't lift my foot to look for fear of going over on the asphalt.  But I did go back and found a blue metal piece (about 1/2" in diameter, flat, with a hole in the center) and a black bolt-looking thing next to it.  B explained that these were only some of the pieces, but that the actual bolt that screwed into my piece was easy to replace.  He offered one of his.

But when I got back home, I learned several things:  (1) I had lost a middle wheel, thus no strange feeling of being unstable.  (2)  T felt strongly that I should have been checking my skates the whole time.  I'm still not sure quite what he had in mind for a practical application of that.  Perhaps telling B to look at them sideways?  (3)  There should have been two blue metal pieces.  (4)  The wheel cannot be put back on the skate without BOTH blue metal pieces.

T & I walked the section of the route where my wheel came off looking for the lost blue piece last Sunday.  45 minutes.  Nothing.

Monday of last week, I walked the first half of our zigzagging route through the houses looking for the lost blue piece.  61 minutes. Nothing.

T went online Wednesday looking for a replacement blue piece.  60 minutes.  We could find skates, wheels or bolts.  Rollerblade is uninterested in selling little blue pieces.  Nothing.

Today I set out to walk the small missing piece of the route that had not been walked.  Yes, it has been a week.  Yes, the piece was probably in some gutter or picked up by a curious kid.  I decided I just wanted the exercise and if I found it, this would mean we wouldn't have to replace the whole stupid skates.  *sigh*

I found it. 

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