I rode home the other day in the
pouring rain, on my bicycle. A few drops fell as I left my office, a few more
as I packed the bike and headed into traffic. The umbrellas were out, the
windows on passing cars were all rolled up. Then the deluge hit. I stopped under
the thick, spring-green leafy branches of a beautiful old tree by the law
school to keep dry. From the pace of the clouds crossing the sky it would
probably be about twenty or thirty minutes before it let up enough to get home fairly
dry. The safest thing would have been to stay under the tree for a half hour … but
I didn’t. As nearly everyone else – with the exception of other bikers and
runners along the way – ducked for cover under awnings and bus shelters or
hopped into cars, I headed into traffic and in short order was completely drenched.
The other bikers mostly sped by – those with rain gear looked just so
comfortable (I hadn’t packed mine that day). The runners seemed mostly okay in
the rain, several laughed and waved, recognizing another intrepid spirit.
Bystanders exclaimed and pointed as this completely empapada bicycle commuter passed by. I hadn’t expected to have a
hard time keeping my eyes open, but I did – the rain was that hard and fierce.
It felt glorious. It was a moving
massage. It inspired joy. If I go on, I will wind up romanticizing – or maybe I
already have – a ride on a warm, spring, rainy day on which I welcomed a change
in my daily routine. For the past eight months, my bicycle has been my primary
mode of transportation. I actually sold my car in the fall – my way of making
sure I didn’t backslide on this new adventure. That’s when I realized anew
something I had, in fact, long known: in the U.S. only poor people and New
Yorkers don’t have cars. I’ll tell you about the many ways I’ve re-learned this
another time, but for now let me note that people look at me a little funny
when they learn about my “transportation status.” Part of the surprise has to
be about the gap between what people imagine a university professor makes and
the lack of an automobile as a sign of lower income levels, but another part of
it is surely about the difficulty most of us have imagining life without a car.
A friend reports that in her neighborhood the parents have started a “bike ride
with the kids to school in the morning pool” rather than the traditional
car-pool. At a recent conference, I heard several people comment on how they’d
like to live in a more ecologically sound way but we just don’t provide the
structures to allow it. I’ve found myself advocating for those structures more
often and in more places now that I’m on the bike everyday, getting myself
where I need to go on my own Chicana-power; getting a little bit of daily
exercise; saving money on car payments, car maintenance, insurance and gas; not
making the environment any worse. I highly recommend it. There’s great rain
gear available for commuters so you don’t have to ride in the rain if you don’t
want to … but I’ve re-discovered that it’s just rain.
Theresa Delgadillo is on the faculty at Ohio State
University and is the Moderator of Mujeres Talk blog.
Love the image of you traveling under your own Chicana power!
ReplyDeleteI never owned a car and perhaps ten years down the road, I will eventually own one.
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