wafflycat said:As a girlie, I find it insulting that it is thought I require some sort of special treatment by way of facilities to get me cycling. As a woman, I look at the 'it's not cool' 'It's not pretty enough' 'no one cool does it' well, frankly dispiriting, as what has gone on as regards female liberation since the 60s? It's all gone backwards. Now young women in the UK aspire to be WAGs and celebrities it seems, the adverse effects of which extend to well beyond cycling. That is appalling. As regards danger & 'feeling safe' this is the UK we live in, not bloody Afghanistan, women are safe in the UK, we are able to travel independently. It appears we have bred a generation of wimps of young women. I blame women my age for that and if I had a daughter, I hope I would not have done that to her. Indeed I have had women of all age groups express surpise that I cycle alone, on the grounds "It's dangerous out there, you are so brave!" At which point I point out that this is not Afghanistan, that there isn't a sex maniac behind every lampost and that drivers really aren't out to get us. Yet frankly, I despair of the feeble attiude towards independence in life of a lot of my gender.
I know what you mean, Waffly. I teach an adult beginners' class, and almost all the people who attend are middle-aged women. (They are also invariably tiny, so that it's hard to find a supply of bikes small enough. Make of that what you will - perhaps it's a Swansea thing.) It's heartbreaking to hear the stories of where the barriers to cycling came from - they tell of brothers that were given bikes while they were discouraged or forbidden from doing almost anything that might have been fun or liberating. And for forty or fifty years they have simply been convinced that riding a bike is one of the many things they will always be incapable of doing, because they are not men. It's almost painful that they then learn to do it, usually without difficulty, inside of two hours, for it speaks volumes about lost opportunities and wasted potential. It's vital that we don't find new ways to cripple generation after generation of girls with notions of inadequacy.