I must say: The question never crossed my mind. But I got the answer to it today. Here it is: What if there had been hipsters during the '80's?
Might they have ridden a "fixie" like the Schwinn in the middle of this photo?
If they had, they might have borne the wrath of all the disdain I heaped upon that decade's young and annoying people: the yuppies.
Now, I've never been a yuppie or a hipster. Couldn't have been either, even if I'd wanted to. But I'll make a confession: Back in those days, I wore a cycling jacket in a pink just like the one on that bike. It was a rather nice jacket, actually.
You know that anyone who ends a sentence with "actually" isn't wearing a jacket in a color like that! Likewise, on the day I learned, in Sociology 101, that my family was "working class," I was no longer part of it. Now, what that's got to do with hipster fixies and yuppies and a jacket I wore twenty years ago, I don't know.
All I know is that if I'm rambling the way I just did after seeing a tacky bike in a shop, I've spent too many hours reading way too many student papers. Some of them were due months ago; I suppose I've been suffused with the "holiday spirit." Plus, I don't want to deny any student whose "sob story" may actually be true. I mean, what if some freshman's grandmother died for the fifth time this year?
If she did, she sure won't be riding that bike in the picture. Me, I wouldn't be caught dead on it. But you probably knew that already.
In the middle of the journey of my life, I am--as always--a woman on a bike. Although I do not know where this road will lead, the way is not lost, for I have arrived here. And I am on my bicycle, again.
I am Justine Valinotti.
18 December 2010
15 December 2010
Getting Away, For This Moment
What have I done this week? Woke, had breakfast, rode bike to work, taught classes, read papers, taught more classes, rode home, read lots more papers, went to bed, woke and started the cycle all over again.
At least I was able to ride to work. Actually, I came to the conclusion that I had to. Not to meet some training goal or to fulfill some egotistical desire; no, I had to ride, even if only to work, to keep even a pretense of sanity. And, it was the only thing that was allowing me to do my work.
You see, last week, I took the train and bus on Thursday. The weather was cold, but not as bitter as it's been the last couple of days. Rather, I thought I could use the transit time to get some work done. But I was so tired that I couldn't focus. Yet, at the same time, I was on edge: Imagine that you can't keep your eyes open but an electrical storm is flashing inside of you. Even if I could have concentrated my energies enough to read a few papers, I couldn't have: Everything was crowded, so I had hardly enough physical, let alone mental, space.
It also seems that my work load at the end of this semester has been particularly onerous. I feel as if I never really caught up--in cycling as well is in my work; forget about my personal life!-- after losing a week to my eye infection.
I apologize for the absence of photos or other images. I just didn't get a chance to take any pictures. I take that back: My mind just hasn't been working in that direction.
But the riding has been good. And I actually was accompanied, at least for the first two miles of my ride home last night, by one of the full-time faculty members at the second college where I teach. She saw me pick up my helmet and one of those, "You ride, too?!," conversations ensued.
She may not be the most experienced rider. But she's a more skilled rider than she realizes. And, she wants to do it. Plus, I have to admit that while she was praising the fact that I seemed "unfazed by the cold" (and you all know how good I am at seeming to be one thing or another, as I spent so much of my life at it, until a few years ago!) and that I was keeping up the kind of pace I was (which, actually, wasn't that great, but I didn't care) , I was noticing how good she looked riding her bike. In my next life, I'd like to look as good as she does when she's riding. Hey, I wouldn't mind it in this life!
Now, here's the one of the other things I do to keep some shred of sanity: writing on this blog. I needed to do this, too: A couple of days away, and I really missed it. Whatever its other merits, if any, this blog and my other let me do some writing that doesn't involve comments like "Society can't think anything" or that dyspeptic prose found in the academic world or the narcotic diction of education papers.
Now I'm becoming narcotic. That's not too strange, though, given what time of year it is
At least I was able to ride to work. Actually, I came to the conclusion that I had to. Not to meet some training goal or to fulfill some egotistical desire; no, I had to ride, even if only to work, to keep even a pretense of sanity. And, it was the only thing that was allowing me to do my work.
You see, last week, I took the train and bus on Thursday. The weather was cold, but not as bitter as it's been the last couple of days. Rather, I thought I could use the transit time to get some work done. But I was so tired that I couldn't focus. Yet, at the same time, I was on edge: Imagine that you can't keep your eyes open but an electrical storm is flashing inside of you. Even if I could have concentrated my energies enough to read a few papers, I couldn't have: Everything was crowded, so I had hardly enough physical, let alone mental, space.
It also seems that my work load at the end of this semester has been particularly onerous. I feel as if I never really caught up--in cycling as well is in my work; forget about my personal life!-- after losing a week to my eye infection.
I apologize for the absence of photos or other images. I just didn't get a chance to take any pictures. I take that back: My mind just hasn't been working in that direction.
But the riding has been good. And I actually was accompanied, at least for the first two miles of my ride home last night, by one of the full-time faculty members at the second college where I teach. She saw me pick up my helmet and one of those, "You ride, too?!," conversations ensued.
She may not be the most experienced rider. But she's a more skilled rider than she realizes. And, she wants to do it. Plus, I have to admit that while she was praising the fact that I seemed "unfazed by the cold" (and you all know how good I am at seeming to be one thing or another, as I spent so much of my life at it, until a few years ago!) and that I was keeping up the kind of pace I was (which, actually, wasn't that great, but I didn't care) , I was noticing how good she looked riding her bike. In my next life, I'd like to look as good as she does when she's riding. Hey, I wouldn't mind it in this life!
Now, here's the one of the other things I do to keep some shred of sanity: writing on this blog. I needed to do this, too: A couple of days away, and I really missed it. Whatever its other merits, if any, this blog and my other let me do some writing that doesn't involve comments like "Society can't think anything" or that dyspeptic prose found in the academic world or the narcotic diction of education papers.
Now I'm becoming narcotic. That's not too strange, though, given what time of year it is
12 December 2010
Bikes Under The Tree
From Tree Hugger |
For many people, a quintessential childhood memory is one of finding a bicycle under the Christmas tree. One generation dreamed of a shiny Schwinn balloon-tired bikes; the next yearned for three-speed "English racers." Then there were those who lusted after slick-tired "Choppers" or "low-riders" or cruisers with sweeping curves--and, later, ten-speeds, which seemed as fast and exotic as sports cars.
If you've ever found a bicycle under the tree on Christmas morning, you know that nothing--not even getting that custom frame you'd been dreaming about--is ever quite as exciting. Perhaps things are different for the current generation, but for mine, and those that came earlier, a new bike was the ne plus ultra of rewards Santa (a.k.a., Mom, Dad or other adult) bestowed upon you for being a good little boy or good little girl. Not that I was ever either one... ;-] In fact, as an adult, I was once given a bike for Christmas for being naughty, if you know what I mean!
So, dear readers: I'd love to hear about the bikes you got, or gave, for the holidays.
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