August 11, 2009

crashing my cruiser

To further justify my klutzy nature, let me tell you about crashing my cruiser bike. I was riding to work along Harvard Lane (that Broadway access road north of Table Mesa), a section of road that has a lot of pot holes and uneven parts. I commute on a Bianchi Milano cruiser (aka tank) with open-top panniers hanging off the sides of the rear wheel. Coasting downhill at a good speed, I hear some papers flapping around in my pannier. Not wanting my papers to blow away, and also unwilling to stop, I leaned back with my right hand to stuff them back in the bag. Next thing I know, I'm flying over the handlebars, directly into asphalt, hands first - must have either hit a pothole, or some small part of my brain thought it was a good time to hit the front brake, or both. Then the really heavy bike lands on top of me, the punk! Luckily some nice road bikers stopped to help by pulling the bike off of me and helping me find all the stuff that fell out of my oh-so-convenient open top panniers.

Along with that bruised ego, I ended up with several missing sections of skin on my elbows, wrists, and palms, a bruised right palm, bruises under my left upper arm and all over the front of both thighs, and a bruised pelvic bone. I even scraped off part of my old ACL surgery scar (that felt strange). Well, what else you gonna do but go to work? The fine ladies at the NOAA Health Clinic cleaned me up, covered me in bandages, and sent me off to my desk.

All those separate, small-ish wounds provided a good time to experiment with different healing methods. Bandaids + antibiotic ointment are ok, but the best stuff I've found so far are biooculsive dressings, just this sheet of clear plastic that you put over the wound and leave it there until it falls off. Wound healing at its best and easiest, gets The Bruise Report seal of approval!

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