Amanda P
Legendary Member
- Location
- York. Well, York-ish...
palinurus said:Too dangerous - 43%
Too much traffic - 38%
I'm too old - 36%
Health reasons - 21 %
Weather puts me off - 22%
They are excuses, though.
I'm (semi-humourously) attempting to draw a distinction between valid reasons, and excuses.
When someone gives a reason for something, you can argue the point, and you may change that person's mind.
When you get an excuse, it's the other way around: they have already decided what they are or aren't going to do, and the excuse is a post-hoc justification for it. You can argue with someone who makes an excuse until you're blue in the face, but you are unlikely to change their mind.
Clearly those "reasons" are excuses. If they were valid reasons, no-one would cycle. We are living proof that they are, in fact, excuses, since many of us are old, or have health problems, get wet regularly and so on, but we cycle nevertheless.
Perhaps I can be more helpful by suggesting that the excuses aren't going to go away any time soon. We can't change the weather, we can't easily reduce traffic, or make it less dangerous.
What we can do is try to alter people's perception of these things. The reality is, of course, that we cope with the traffic (and anyway, there'd be less of it if some of those drivers were riding bikes); we don't mind the weather, and so on.
I think one of the best ways to alter these perceptions is to simply keep on visibly riding a bike. Every time a driver seems someone riding a bike, that driver is a tiny bit less likely to percieve cycling as something only cranks, hoody-wearing louts, sandal-wearing tree-huggers or lycra-clad enthusiasts do.