It’s all about the cookie…
Holding on to the seat, I wheel my newly purchased road bike out of the garage and onto my gravel driveway. I was excited about my first ride, also a bit nervous as I had zero experience with clipless pedals, but there I was, ready to go.
What happened next was like a bad, slow motion dream.
I clip my shoes and try to pedal. I instantly realize I’m in big trouble. My gear is too big, and I can’t get the bike to go. By the time my brain begins screaming “abort, abort” to unclip and put my leg out, it’s too late. I go down.
My first ride is from a dead stop to flat on my side, in the gravel, in my driveway.
Take that Lance Armstrong.
Here’s the best part: My wife, who had just filed for divorce, happened to be driving by at that very moment. I can still see my four-year-old son Kyle sitting in his car seat, waving from the back window and saying, “Hi daddy?” — with this confused look on his face.
I just laid there for several minutes thinking about my life and what went wrong, what happened to me, what happened to my marriage?
At that moment I decided it was time to change. Time to understand myself and the specific things I would need to change to become the type of person that could create and maintain solid relationships. Laying on a gravel driveway still clipped to your bike as your family uncomfortably drives by will do that sort of thing to you.
Top Comments
Keep your hedges high? I baulk at that one, it sounds like you get to tell each other who you can and cannot have in your lives. Who gets to decide who does or 'doesn't respect your relationship with your spouse'? It sounds way too subjective and open to the playing out insecurity and jealously. Everyone needs friends outside of their marriage, friends who speak against your spouse aren't always speaking unfairly, sometimes they're speaking out of love for you.
Sounds like you've misunderstood what is being said and run with it!! You might be playing out some negative past experiences in your interpretation - that's certainly not what he meant, or how it came across.
I have a really happy marriage and no negative experiences that
I'm reacting to in my response. I simply don't agree that decisions about whom we associate with, outside of our marriage, should be part of some unilateral decision. I think this is an individual decision. I understand that the writer is suggesting that this discretion around who you allow to influence your marriage is protective and nuturing, I understand his intention, I just don't agree with it.
Can I marry you both?