I'm curious as to how many of you have been told by your health care providers to quit motocross after an injury? I'm just wondering if anyone else has heard it as much as I have in the last three weeks?
Today I was told by my Physical Therapist that my recovery time will be one year. She lectured me for riding and I felt like lecturing her about using the bathroom and driving a car because more people are injured or killed in the bathroom and a car than will ever be hurt in the sport of motocross. I also told her that I'd be back on the bike as soon as I was cleared by the doc to ride again and as soon as I could afford to replace the gear I destroyed and figure out what keeps causing my rear tire to go flat (the whole cause of this mess). That's going to make for one heck of a painful treatment tomorrow, but oh well. Us MXers don't give up, nor should we. I often feel like telling doctors that they need to stop practicing medicine because it's too dangerous with all of those infectous diseases out there. I want to tell the radiologists that they should give up their passion for the x-ray machine because the radiation's going to kill them someday.
If we all lived each day in fear, we'd all curl up in a corner and never realize what life's all about--living! If we gave up each time we got hurt doing something, then we never would have learned to sit or or even walk.
I guess what I'm saying right now is that if anyone else is frustrated with the lack of professionalism of your health care providers, I'm right there with you!
Please excuse the grumpy nature of this posting, but right now I feel the need to vent because I'm sure that I'm not the first one who has gone through this and I won't be the last either.
Does anyone have any ideas on how to change this besides doing what a friend of ours does? He lies and tells the emergency room people he's been bicycling despite the boots, helmet and motocross gear. I guess they're friendlier and provide better service if you crash on a bicycle than on a dirtbike.
Keep riding and keep it safe and on two wheels!
Today I was told by my Physical Therapist that my recovery time will be one year. She lectured me for riding and I felt like lecturing her about using the bathroom and driving a car because more people are injured or killed in the bathroom and a car than will ever be hurt in the sport of motocross. I also told her that I'd be back on the bike as soon as I was cleared by the doc to ride again and as soon as I could afford to replace the gear I destroyed and figure out what keeps causing my rear tire to go flat (the whole cause of this mess). That's going to make for one heck of a painful treatment tomorrow, but oh well. Us MXers don't give up, nor should we. I often feel like telling doctors that they need to stop practicing medicine because it's too dangerous with all of those infectous diseases out there. I want to tell the radiologists that they should give up their passion for the x-ray machine because the radiation's going to kill them someday.
If we all lived each day in fear, we'd all curl up in a corner and never realize what life's all about--living! If we gave up each time we got hurt doing something, then we never would have learned to sit or or even walk.
I guess what I'm saying right now is that if anyone else is frustrated with the lack of professionalism of your health care providers, I'm right there with you!
Please excuse the grumpy nature of this posting, but right now I feel the need to vent because I'm sure that I'm not the first one who has gone through this and I won't be the last either.
Does anyone have any ideas on how to change this besides doing what a friend of ours does? He lies and tells the emergency room people he's been bicycling despite the boots, helmet and motocross gear. I guess they're friendlier and provide better service if you crash on a bicycle than on a dirtbike.
Keep riding and keep it safe and on two wheels!