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A Bike Beats a Car's Gas, Insurance, and Repair Prices

Sadie Kneidel is part of a daughter-mother writing team in North Carolina.  She is a teacher and community activist as well as the co-author of two books. Living in a collective household, she concentrates her efforts on community gardening, biking and neighborhood organizing.  Two books from Fulcrum co-authored by  Sadie are Going Green: A Wise Consumer's Guide to a Shrinking Planet (May, 2008) and Veggie Revolution: Smart Choices for a Healthy Body and a Healthy Planet (Nov, 2005).  Contact Sadie at skneidel@earthlink.net.

 

Guest Blogger Sadie Kneidel--

Catherine eyed me skeptically over the breakfast table. "Are you really going to bike?" she asked with surprise.

"I think so," I said. "I mean, my brain believes I am. My body might have other ideas. Like the bus."

Just then the bus rumbled past the front door. We smiled at each other. "Well," I said. "What I meant to say is, yes. I’m biking. I’m gonna race the bus."j0182782.jpg

It was Tuesday morning, 7:10 AM. My car had broken down the morning before on the way to work, leaving me
to coast to the mechanic on a busted clutch. I’d had to roust my housemate Catherine from her warm bed, and
beg her for a ride to work. I’d been half an hour late, and stressed and frazzled to boot.

But this morning, although my car was still in the shop, I was prepared. In the grayish dawn light of my bedroom, I donned long johns, jeans, two shirts, a wool sweater, a windbreaker. I pulled on a ski mask to protect my neck from chilly drafts, gloves to shield my fingers, and of course, perched atop it all, my shiny yellow helmet.

"Well," said Catherine. "At least if you fall off your bike, you probably won’t even get hurt. You’ll just bounce."

I wrinkled my nose at her, not that she could see it under my arsenal. "I won’t fall," I said. "I’ll be fine."

Waving goodbye, I shuffled out the door and clambered atop my bicycle. With one kick, I rolled down the sidewalk, swung to the right, and hit the pavement. I was off.

I was prepared for an arduous journey. My work commute takes 25 minutes by car, from my urban neighborhood
just south of downtown, to Guilford Tech’s satellite campus on the outermost reaches of the northeast part of town. Every morning, as I dodge the rush-hour traffic crowding the city’s vehicular arteries, I think, "Today’s the day I’m going to die." But I haven’t. At least not yet.

This morning was different. I headed due east, straight toward the pink streaks heralding the sun’s imminent arrival. Cars whizzed past, but I didn’t notice them much. I was more occupied with the tight feeling of my thigh muscles and the slight grinding feeling of something in my hip. 'Oh jeez, what am I thinking?' I berated myself. This is insane. I could
see the bus stopped four or five blocks ahead of me. 'Maybe I can catch up with it,' I thought hopefully.

Eight minutes later I was passing downtown. The clock tower read 39 degrees, but I was soaked in sweat. What
had happened to spring?  I stopped to strip off my windbreaker, welcoming the chilly wind through my wool sweater. Lord, it felt good.

I’d expected heavy traffic on this four-lane road, but I barely even noticed the cars that passed me. Instead, I watched the blistering orange sun bobbling over the horizon. I checked the gas prices at each gas station I passed. $3.47. $3.51. $3.56. My legs no longer felt tight. I felt like an engine, a smooth efficient machine. I wondered how much I’d get for
selling a Toyota with a broken clutch.

I passed a service station where a lady in a thin spring dress paced as a mechanic peered under the hood of her stalled car. She stared through me as if I were invisible. I passed a house where two men stood, hands in armpits while a Chevy idled in the yard, warming up. I held my breath and ducked through the cloud of exhaust.

I was flying. I felt like a bird. I had no idea how long I’d been riding. Five minutes, fifteen, fifty. My four-lane city road merged with a county road; the buildings gave way to stubbly fields. I passed the farm bureau, the coop extension, the county agricultural office. A lazy train track wove beside the road. I looked up: brilliant green tree branches silhouetted against the throbbing sunrise sky.

One last hill, and I turned on Aunt Mary Lane. I cut north, crossed a six-lane road, and breathlessly coasted onto campus. I craned my neck to see the school clock. Was I late? How late?

The clock read 7:48. My body surged with elation. I grinned wordlessly under my ski mask. It had taken me
33 minutes to cross town by bike, just eight minutes longer than by car.

I couldn’t believe it. For the past six months, I’d been complaining about how impossibly far away my job
was. I’d acquired my car reluctantly, and winced with each accumulating mile on the odometer. The tanks of
gas, the car insurance, the stress - it was a necessary evil, I’d believed. Riding the bus to any job would take unbearably long, and there was no way I had the stamina to bike to destinations outside of my neighborhood. Only an athlete could bike that far.

What had I been thinking? I wasn’t even tired. In fact, I felt remarkably alive. I almost skipped from the bike rack to the bathroom, where I peeled off my sweaty long johns and slipped into a fresh blouse and slacks. I scooped my hair into a ponytail and regarded my reflection quizzically. My cheeks were so pink I looked clownish. My eyes were twinkling. I felt upbeat and energetic – a mood I can’t usually attain at 8 AM no matter how much coffee I drink.

I strolled to my classroom carrying my bicycle helmet like a badge of honor. When my car had broken down, it
sure hadn’t seemed like a blessing. But I guess that faulty clutch was the miracle I was waiting for to show me that sometimes the solution I need is right in the place where I refuse to see it. Here I’d been, racing home from work in my car so I’d have time to get to the gym for exercise. I’d never even considered biking to work because I hadn’t thought I was strong enough. I didn’t think I could afford to spend the time or energy. But this morning, I knew I couldn’t afford not to. As the bus pulled up to the campus bus stop, right next to my parked bike, I smiled to myself. I’d won this race on my own two wheels.

Do you ride a bike?

Related:  The Car Addiction

Get An Oil Change And Save On Gas

Cheap Gas Tips

The Health Benefits of Cycling To Work

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