Safety signIt’s not always where you think it is.Photo: Jonathan WarnerAfraid to ride a bicycle?

You’re not alone.

Help Grist raise $25,000 by September 30 to further advance our climate reporting

We know that bicycling is good for public health: More bicycling and less driving leads to improved air quality, noise reduction, fewer car crashes, and reduced carbon emissions. 

But what about personal health — that is, YOUR personal health and safety?

Grist thanks its sponsors. Become one.

Many people don’t bike out of fear — with the most significant terrifying factor, of course, being cars. As many as 60 percent of people in U.S. cities would like to ride a bicycle if it weren’t for traffic-related concerns.

But you might have more to fear from not riding.

Fear the chair in which you read this.

Fear your car commute.

Grist thanks its sponsors. Become one.

By all means, fear a poor diet and sedentary lifestyle.

But bicycling?

True, most of us who ride a bike in traffic every day have our bouts with fear. And for good reason. High-speed roads suck to ride on and suck more to cross. Exhaust sucks to breathe. Driveways and parking lot exits are the pits. The door zone is a drag.

But these are concerns no matter what mode of transportation you’re using. We do tend to feel safest in a cushy SUV, but we’re still subject to the right hook, the too-close pass, the cut-off — and at freeway speeds, to boot.

Cars are indeed worth fearing. But not only if you are on a bicycle. Cars are terrible for your health even when you aren’t driving or dodging them.

Bike close-upPhoto: Giovanni OrlandoBicycling, on the other hand, is astoundingly, incontrovertibly good for you. A 2009 review of the scientific literature found that the slight increase in risk from bicycle crashes is more than offset by the vast improvements in overall health and lifespan when you ride a bicycle for transportation. In fact, the health benefits of bicycling are nine times greater than the safety gains from driving instead.

The research is compelling enough to elicit amusing talking points about the environmental detriments to prolonging our lives.

You know the old saw about how you’re less likely to be in a plane crash than in a car crash on your way to the airport? Everyone’s heard it, but its impact on the fear of flying is minimal. Fear isn’t rational.

There’s a strong trend to turn a blind eye to the perils of car dependence — perhaps because our cities and lives are designed, and not entirely by us, to be dependent on cars. Our nation’s economy and our daily life depends on being able to set aside valid concerns. And a culture of misplaced fears is certainly convenient to those who would like to keep it that way.

Fortunately, just as fears can be influenced, fears can also be overcome.

And by getting on a bike, you can free yourself of fears that are specific to driving — like hitting someone with your car.

When you ride a bicycle, you make the roads safer for everyone. In a car, you become a hazard to the public’s well being.

Of course, there are many ways to get exercise besides bicycling. Running is great for you. Walking is excellent as well, but doesn’t have the same demonstrated effect. Climbing mountains, weight training, yoga: all great for your health.

The real thing that’s killing us is that we continue to create places that impose barriers to actually being able to move your body. High-speed streets without sidewalks or crossings. Walkable neighborhoods where there is literally nowhere to go. Gyms accessible primarily by car.

We never want to hear this, but we’re all going to die. Why not get out there and ride your bike first?

 

 

More good writing about fear and bicycling:

http://www.copenhagenize.com/2009/09/fear-of-cycling-01-essay-in-five-parts.html

http://www.kenkifer.com/bikepages/health/risks.htm

http://www.floridabicycle.org/freedomfromfear.html