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Thread: Should I give it up?

  1. #1
    Join Date
    1st December 2010 - 13:24
    Bike
    None - I'm currently a cripple :(
    Location
    Paraparaumu
    Posts
    172

    Should I give it up?

    Hello KBers!

    I have been a-pondering for some time (well about 5 months to be exact), whether or not I should give up my trail bike...

    You will need to read a little to understand my knundrem.

    Sep 2011 - I purchase a brand spanking new 2011 Forza 230F. Cheap option for a learner girl biker, it was everything I wanted/needed in a first bike, yes its a chinese import kinda bike, but Iv had no issues at all and LOOOOOVED riding it (please dont start a debate on chinese bikes :P )

    Jan 2nd 2012 - I go out for a ride with an awesome bunch of people. Have a really stupid, slow motion, awkwardly angled fall (well like my 3rd fall for the morning) and end up stuck under the bike with my right leg pinned in a most unnatural position. After a visit to the emergency room, and some xrays and then 4 weeks later an MRI, results show I dislocated my kneecap, have torn my ACL and half torn my MCL. So basically my right knee doesnt have the stringy bit that stops the knee from turning around backwards....

    I've been out of a knee brace and off crutches for about a month now, and have an ACL reconstruction surgery booked in on the 7th of June.... and then 9 months of recovery....

    So im pretty much looking at 9 months of no riding....

    Its been really hard seeing my bike sitting in the garage unused and all my gears gathering dust. Most of my gear is brand new and has never been used (had heaps of stuff on order that arrived after my accident *sigh*). The bike has 8 hours on the engine, and still looks new and polished.

    I have just bought a house, move in next weekend, and am considering selling the bike. I know i probably wont get that much for it, or my gears, but I also dont know if I can handle having it sitting there for 9 months unused, and then AFTER that 9 months have to spend big money on a proper knee brace for riding.

    My older brother has had the same surgery done before, and he hasnt managed to get back into MX properly. He does downhill mountain biking and running etc, but has said that his knee is just not the same and he feels like he has to be really careful on it.... a bit of background on my brother = growing up I cant remember him NOT being in some sort of cast/brace/crutches for more than 6 months at a time lol. Hes not the type to wuss out on anything sport-wise. So I value his opinion. if he says hes not keen to ride again, then I dont know how I'd handle it!


    So pretty much I want some advice. Has anyone had the same or similar injuries and come back into it with no problems? I love riding, and I would marry my bike if I could.... but I dont see the point in keeping bike and gears if Im not going to be able to go back to how I was before (accelerate hard and see what happens hahaha)

  2. #2
    Join Date
    17th July 2005 - 22:28
    Bike
    Dougcati, Geoff and Suzi
    Location
    Banjo town
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    10,162
    Keep riding I've got nerve damage, a munted hip, rooted back and more boring issues that aren't worth crying about.
    You only live once.
    Quote Originally Posted by Paul in NZ View Post
    Ha...Thats true but life is full horrible choices sometimes Merv. Then sometimes just plain stuff happens... and then some more stuff happens.....




    Alloy, stainless and Ti polishing.
    Bling your bike out!
    PM me

  3. #3
    Join Date
    27th February 2005 - 08:47
    Bike
    a red heap
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    towel wronger
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    6,522

  4. #4
    Join Date
    17th April 2009 - 22:12
    Bike
    2012 KTM 125sx
    Location
    Nth Shore
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    565
    Keep your bike & gear. End of the day if you truely can't ride then give it up then.
    My husband has had full knee reconstruction - he rides. Should wear a knee brace but doesn't!

  5. #5
    Join Date
    10th May 2009 - 15:22
    Bike
    2010 Honda CB1000R Predator
    Location
    Orewa, Auckland
    Posts
    4,490
    Blog Entries
    19
    I'd be tempted to keep the gear, sell the bike, and then in 12 months time or whenever your strong enough get another bike.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    17th April 2011 - 14:39
    Bike
    Honda VF750f.
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    Nelson
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    4,330
    Nooooooo, http://www.kiwibiker.co.nz/forums/sh...post1130317635. If I listened to all the stories the medical profession told me I still would not be walking properly or using my right hand( I hate wanking left handed). Just take your time, you will come right in time.
    For a man is a slave to whatever has mastered him. Keep an open mind, just dont let your brains fall out.

  7. #7
    Join Date
    1st December 2010 - 13:24
    Bike
    None - I'm currently a cripple :(
    Location
    Paraparaumu
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    172
    this will be handy after surgery, thanks!

  8. #8
    Join Date
    22nd October 2006 - 00:29
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    SXF250
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    Up North
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    1,242
    My take would be if you want to keep riding it'd be well worth investing in some training, cheapest way I know to ride safer, if you are going to ride again you have to change something or it'll happen again & I don't think it's solely knee braces, they are the ambulance at the bottom of the cliff, bike training & some real strength/stability work in the gym on your knees & core would be my theory.

  9. #9
    Join Date
    17th April 2011 - 14:39
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    Honda VF750f.
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    Nelson
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    4,330
    If you go out riding with a lot of thoughts about getting hurt, you are probably going to get hurt. I would suggest working on your mental strength as well as physical strength. But I'm
    For a man is a slave to whatever has mastered him. Keep an open mind, just dont let your brains fall out.

  10. #10
    Join Date
    1st December 2010 - 13:24
    Bike
    None - I'm currently a cripple :(
    Location
    Paraparaumu
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    Quote Originally Posted by unstuck View Post
    If you go out riding with a lot of thoughts about getting hurt, you are probably going to get hurt. I would suggest working on your mental strength as well as physical strength. But I'm

    In all honesty, I don’t really think about much at all when I’m out riding….. I take things as they come….i probably sound dense as right? lol I always go out thinking something like “wooooo, I hope I encounter some new terrain, something challenging or different that’ll test my balance, and ability to listen to instruction”… I ride straight into it and adjust as I feel needed… and am usually riding with someone experienced enough to tell me what im doing wrong and need to change.

    I guess ill just use my 9 months of “recovery” time to get back on track with fitness etc. as you can imagine sitting around in a knee brace an stuck on crutches did not do any good for my gym routine!! Although having my membership on hold was great for my bank account

    So anyone want to buy my bike seeing as I wont be using it for 9 months :P never been dropped......

  11. #11
    Join Date
    24th September 2008 - 01:32
    Bike
    a shiny new(ish) one
    Location
    Dunedin
    Posts
    3,650
    hey.
    My advice to you is to keep the bike, for multiple reasons, which I will list below.
    1. psychological benefit- look at pro athletes, they have sports psychologists to help them focus on WHY the want to recover, a positive attitude has been proven to aid in recovery. Give yourself a reason to recover, and a goad to acheive.

    2. Finances - it doesnt sound like you need to cash, so hang onto it, you have plenty of time, the bike isnt going anywhere. If you know you always have a bike in the shed, you can get back onto it in your own time, you can be careful, take one step at a time, and ride again when YOU feel ready.

    3. You love bikes, Sell it, and youll regret it. If you were ready to get rid of it, this would have been a 'for sale' thread, not a 'what to do' thread.

    Basically, hang onto it, there is no rush, use it as a tool to keep you going. Know that there is a goal, and know in your mind that you can ride again. You might not be able to do big table top jumps and ride like jeremy mcGrath afterwards, but you will be able to ride, and enjoy the fun and exhileration of a bike.

    Keep hold of it, and look forwards to when you ride it again.

    Also, take this time to buy a cheap tool set, and do some basic work on it, you have time, to learn how to do basics like oil and filter changes, take the carb off (assuming it isnt injected) and give it a clean out and learn about it. take off the wheels and swingarm and give all the bearings a good grease, give the bike a bloody good wash.
    This will keep you entertained when you would otherwise be out riding.

    Keep the bike. Youll get back on it.

  12. #12
    Join Date
    8th January 2011 - 06:21
    Bike
    KTM 530 exc 2010
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    Up the Mungatokes
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    149
    I rolled my ankle walking on a flat track just after I turned down a dub on the back of my m8's Yz 400 my ankle was swollen up like a soccer ball worse than a broken ankle /had 1 of them 2/ & had 2 stay of the bike 4 a year or so & stick 2 the Quad so the message is clear sell the bike get a Quad & Dont risk walking across a flat surface when ya M8 can offer you a lift instead
    THE DEAR LEADER SAY'S Life is Hell ride hard or head home just get the fuck outta my way !!!

  13. #13
    Join Date
    28th November 2007 - 13:41
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    2008 CRF450, CBR900RR, 125 Pit bike
    Location
    Hamilton
    Posts
    733
    If you cant ride two wheels at least get a quad. Even just to prove all the doctors wrong. Buy good knee braces and you will be sweet. Make sure you build up your knee before riding again

  14. #14
    Join Date
    11th January 2010 - 04:48
    Bike
    KTM 350 SX-F
    Location
    Jafa Land
    Posts
    1,134
    Riding is an addiction, well it is for me anyway.

    I have broken/cracked 3 ribs, lacerated my liver (internal bleeding), nearly lost a finger and have a permanent back injury that means I can't slouch on the sofa or I'll be in agony in minutes. I have been told to stay off the bike for 6 months and at one point gave it up completely. It didn't work. I know that, despite the injuries and potential for more, it is so much part of who I am, I just have to accept the risk.

    This doesn't mean you'll feel the same, but before selling up, really think about what your life would be like without the buzz of riding. It costs a lot to give up only to find you want back in.

  15. #15
    Join Date
    30th November 2008 - 21:15
    Bike
    GG 300 SD 10
    Location
    North Shore
    Posts
    226
    Keep bike......
    Get knee braces......
    Wait.....
    9 months isn't long.

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