Originally Posted By: 02SE
Originally Posted By: andrewg
Originally Posted By: Superflan
Interesting reading. Never seen anything like this before, and I clearly recognize myself in the survival reactions mentioned. The more I grow old, the more I have fear.
Fear is healthy. Listen to it.
Riding in fear is terrible advice.
If you lack the riding ability to where you are constantly in fear, you either need to stop riding, or learn how to ride.
Once you have the skill to ride a bike and react instinctively with control and confidence to any situation that may arise, you no longer ride around in "Fear". You will be aware of your surroundings, and have respect for possible hazards (cars, gravel, cliff, whatever) but you won't be in "Fear" of them, because you will possess the ability and confidence to deal with them.
OP, here's the video version of that book I linked to in the PDF.
Yeah, there's some bad acting and subtitles, but it's still good advice.
Are you saying that I gave him the advice to "ride in fear"?
Originally Posted By: andrewg
Originally Posted By: Superflan
Interesting reading. Never seen anything like this before, and I clearly recognize myself in the survival reactions mentioned. The more I grow old, the more I have fear.
Fear is healthy. Listen to it.
Riding in fear is terrible advice.
If you lack the riding ability to where you are constantly in fear, you either need to stop riding, or learn how to ride.
Once you have the skill to ride a bike and react instinctively with control and confidence to any situation that may arise, you no longer ride around in "Fear". You will be aware of your surroundings, and have respect for possible hazards (cars, gravel, cliff, whatever) but you won't be in "Fear" of them, because you will possess the ability and confidence to deal with them.
OP, here's the video version of that book I linked to in the PDF.
Yeah, there's some bad acting and subtitles, but it's still good advice.
Are you saying that I gave him the advice to "ride in fear"?