Yellow Man: Am I a bad dad if I let him think I was hanging on the whole time?
Little Boy: Am I a bad kid if I let him think I didn't learn this on my own a month ago?
I had the pedaling part without falling over down pat right away, I just couldn’t get started from a dead stop.I’d lean the bike against a tree (or a parked car) and push off.
I learned to ride so young that the bike was too close to the ground to get hurt if you fell. Apparently I was also a hipster at 4 years old, as it was also a “fixie”!
Taught my son to ride on the baseball diamond. Why? Psychology. “Falling in the dirt won’t hurt as much as on the sidewalk”. Took for hours before he felt solid enough to ride on the concrete.
I’m glad I got to teach him, but would have been just as proud if he learned on his own.
When I was in my twenties, my mother finally confessed that for a while she was worried about me being slow on the uptake, because I professed a belief in Santa Claus until I was about twelve..She was amused when I told her I had caught on to the Santa myth when I about five — but I thought she believed in him, so I pretended to as well to prevent her disappointment at learning he didn’t exist..Sort of like a 1950s version of “The Abilene Paradox,” I guess.
My daughter wanted me to take the training wheels off her tetracycle. I told her if I di, I wasn’t putting them back on. After a few seconds, she decided she wanted them on. A month later, same request, same answer, but she was ready. Never had any problem with a bicycle thereafter; even did a bit of unicycle riding – onstage.
Boots at the Boar Premium Member over 10 years ago
I was given a beat-up bike at age 8 and told to learn to ride it. “Yell if you hurt yourself.” Best way to learn how in my opinion.
flyertom over 10 years ago
I had the pedaling part without falling over down pat right away, I just couldn’t get started from a dead stop.I’d lean the bike against a tree (or a parked car) and push off.
Ailin over 10 years ago
I don’t get the difference between the two scenarios
Seed_drill over 10 years ago
I learned to ride so young that the bike was too close to the ground to get hurt if you fell. Apparently I was also a hipster at 4 years old, as it was also a “fixie”!
dzw3030 over 10 years ago
Thanks for the trip down memory street. :-)
Not the Smartest Man On the Planet -- Maybe Close Premium Member over 10 years ago
Answers: No, and no.
Not the Smartest Man On the Planet -- Maybe Close Premium Member over 10 years ago
Answers: No and no.
Puzuma over 10 years ago
Taught my son to ride on the baseball diamond. Why? Psychology. “Falling in the dirt won’t hurt as much as on the sidewalk”. Took for hours before he felt solid enough to ride on the concrete.
I’m glad I got to teach him, but would have been just as proud if he learned on his own.
paultunes over 10 years ago
why ask people who have no children??? might as well ask a deaf person how they like Mozart.
Doublejake over 10 years ago
When I was in my twenties, my mother finally confessed that for a while she was worried about me being slow on the uptake, because I professed a belief in Santa Claus until I was about twelve..She was amused when I told her I had caught on to the Santa myth when I about five — but I thought she believed in him, so I pretended to as well to prevent her disappointment at learning he didn’t exist..Sort of like a 1950s version of “The Abilene Paradox,” I guess.
hippogriff over 10 years ago
My daughter wanted me to take the training wheels off her tetracycle. I told her if I di, I wasn’t putting them back on. After a few seconds, she decided she wanted them on. A month later, same request, same answer, but she was ready. Never had any problem with a bicycle thereafter; even did a bit of unicycle riding – onstage.
lord of flies222 about 9 years ago
I got taken to the top of a hill and got pushed down. Repeatedly. I learned real fast after hitting a tree.