erixun
My helmet is on too tight....
Some days are harder than others and we all have crappy days at work. Usually on bad days a little throttle time helps the day's troubles go away. However, after working an overtime shift on my day off yesterday, and prior to working an overtime shift today to help pay for the NAFO trip and Red Lodge trip, I got the call I dread last night about 11:15 PM. A call that makes me hesitate to take that much needed throttle time for myself.
'Bad crash, motorcycle vs car, you need to come out.' You see, I am the department accident reconstructionist and get the lovely job of investigating all of the fatals. A motorcycist was going south, a car was going north. The driver was young, it was dark. A simple mis-judgement of time/distance perception and the car turns in front of the bike at the last second. No skids, no swerves, just impact marks.
The rider was vaulted over the car, and impacted the pavement. He was not wearing a helmet. The helmet was on the back of the bike, near as I can figure out at this point. Overheard one of the paramedics say 'if he only had a helmet.'
A helmet will not stop every fatal, and bad crashes are sensless endings to peoples lives, but to see this first hand, time and time again, and having made that long crappy walk up to someones door to tell them that their love one will not come home again, ever. It takes its toll.
Not be a downer and weigh everyone down, but this forum has been a form of therapy for me, (it lets me see into some normal lives as well as some not so normal lives - you know who you are), so instead of being able to ride the bike today or tomorrow because of working another overtime shift, I am taking a few minutes from my shift to vent.
Please ride like no one ever see's you, and wear your gear. If not for you, or your loved ones, for dumb ***** like me that respond to these things. And then take the incident home whether we want to or not. Not asking for sympathy here, I chose what I do, just asking all to take a extra bit of precaution.
Thanks for letting me off gas a bit. B
'Bad crash, motorcycle vs car, you need to come out.' You see, I am the department accident reconstructionist and get the lovely job of investigating all of the fatals. A motorcycist was going south, a car was going north. The driver was young, it was dark. A simple mis-judgement of time/distance perception and the car turns in front of the bike at the last second. No skids, no swerves, just impact marks.
The rider was vaulted over the car, and impacted the pavement. He was not wearing a helmet. The helmet was on the back of the bike, near as I can figure out at this point. Overheard one of the paramedics say 'if he only had a helmet.'
A helmet will not stop every fatal, and bad crashes are sensless endings to peoples lives, but to see this first hand, time and time again, and having made that long crappy walk up to someones door to tell them that their love one will not come home again, ever. It takes its toll.
Not be a downer and weigh everyone down, but this forum has been a form of therapy for me, (it lets me see into some normal lives as well as some not so normal lives - you know who you are), so instead of being able to ride the bike today or tomorrow because of working another overtime shift, I am taking a few minutes from my shift to vent.
Please ride like no one ever see's you, and wear your gear. If not for you, or your loved ones, for dumb ***** like me that respond to these things. And then take the incident home whether we want to or not. Not asking for sympathy here, I chose what I do, just asking all to take a extra bit of precaution.
Thanks for letting me off gas a bit. B
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