One day, I got tired of just sitting and watching Jeffery be cool. I wanted to be cool too. I wanted Jeffery to teach me how to ride his bike. It looked easy enough.
He showed me how to get up on the seat and how to pedal. He pushed the bike while I sat on it. It was almost like I was riding it by myself! I began to feel fairly confident that I was going to be the best bike-rider in the world.
We teetered slowly up and down the driveway a couple times. But on our third time out, Jeffery suddenly veered us off to the left and said "Hey! I wonder if you can make it down this hill!!" Then he gave me a shove and sent me rolling down a steep, grassy incline toward an oak tree.

I careened down the hill at chaotic speed and slammed into the tree, at which point I was launched off Jeffery's bike straight into a fence post.
As I was lying there at the bottom of the hill, bleeding from my face, I decided that bikes were fucking dangerous and should be avoided at any cost. I don't know how or why my five-year-old mind came to the conclusion that the bike was at fault for my injuries, but on that day, I became convinced that bicycles were deadly satan-machines that would eventually destroy me.
My sixth birthday was a few months later, and when it finally came, I could barely contain my excitement. I had asked for roller-skates or a pony and I was pretty confident about my chances of at least getting roller-skates. As soon as I woke up, I raced into the kitchen where my parents were already waiting.
When my mom told me to look outside for my present, it gave me reason to believe that I would be getting a pony, which was at least nine times better than roller-skates. I was so ecstatic about the possibility of getting a real, live, ride-able animal that I temporarily forgot where the door was and began pinging around the house like a gnat on meth.
Once I was able to control myself enough to find my way out of the house, I ran to the backyard fully expecting to find a tiny horse standing there in the grass. Imagine my surprise when I rounded the corner and was instead confronted by a bicycle. In a matter of seconds, I went from overjoyed birthday-mode to feeling like my parents were trying to kill me.
I ran screaming and crying from my birthday present. It was not the reaction my parents were expecting.

My parents had apparently underestimated how traumatized I was by my first biking experience. They immediately went into damage-control mode. In a tone of voice that was so enthusiastic it was almost condescending, my dad said "How about I teach you how to ride your new bike, Allie?!" I buried my face in my mom's skirt and cried harder. "Well, do you want to go for a ride on my bike?" My dad continued. "You can sit on the bar while I pedal! It'll be fun!"
I don't know how he finally convinced me, but the next thing I can remember is sitting on the cross bar of my dad's bike, clinging to him in unadulterated terror.
My dad pedaled slowly and safely around the block, doing his best to reassure me that bikes are fun and they are not dangerous satan beasts that want all of my blood. Five minutes had passed and I still hadn't been brutally murdered by the bike, so I began to relax a little. My mom stood in our driveway and watched with adoration. For a little while, it was the perfect family moment.
The next few seconds were a real turning point in my life. My dad and I were failure in motion, drifting slowly toward our fate like a miniature Hindenburg. In my memory, I hear his voice in warped slow-motion saying "Haaaaaa... haaaaaa... haaaaaaa... thiiiiissss iiiisssssss fffuuuuuuuuuuuunnnn! Hoooorrrraaaaaaaayyyyyyy! Leeeeeeet'ssss goooooooo riiiide oooonnn thhheeee grrrraaaaaaaaasssss!"
In what I imagine was an attempt to enrich my biking experience with different riding surfaces, my dad veered off onto a little strip of grass.
I don't know how we hit the rock and why we were both catapulted over the handlebars when it happened; we certainly weren't traveling at an outrageous speed. What I do know is when my dad's front tire hit the rock, my hard-earned trust shriveled up like an injured banana slug.

All 220 pounds of my dad came down on top of me elbow-first. I struggled free from underneath his crumpled body and ran to my mom. My dad just lay there face-down in the road, like a Hefty bag full of shame.

My fear of bicycles stuck with me for over a decade. While all my friends were riding their awesome bikes around town making badass motorcycle noises and popping mad wheelies, I was the weird kid running behind them, trying but failing to maintain some semblance of dignity.

556 comments:
«Oldest ‹Older 401 – 556 of 556I can relate to this, I never learned to ride a bike. I had a golf cart instead. Four wheels were much safer than two.
lol, I never learned my lesson about bikes and I don't know how I survived my childhood. At first I was afraid to use the brakes so when I wanted to stop, I would jump off onto the grass. My "friend" got to close to me while riding and her pedal got stuck in the spokes of my bike which sent me sailing over the handlebars in the street which required 3 stitches on my chin. Riding on the sidewalk, my front tire got stuck in what I can only call a moat (when folks extreme edge their lawns) causing me to lose balance, fall over and break my arm. My parents are luck the cops never showed up at our home to investigate why I was at the hospital so often. Stupid bike.
This has made my day for two reasons: 1) I have finally caught up on your hilarious blog and now do not have to worry that I have missed anything (I am even more excited to have not missed Spaghatta Nadle) and 2) It makes me feel better that I am not the only person who has bike issues. When I was younger my mom tried, really tried, to get me interested in bike riding. This failed miserably when my brother, in an attempt to be hilarious, nudged my back tire while we were out riding. I fell down and road-rashed my face, hands, arms and legs.
I have not been back on a bike since then. I was 10 at the time and am now 26. Chronically clutzy people (of which I am one) should not be required to participate in any form of locomotion faster than a light jog which requires balance to keep you from death. That's right, rollerblades, I'm looking at you!
Every time you make a post like this I just want to give you a hug despite the fact that you are a total stranger.
Oh girl, now I want to hide under my blanket with a bag of chips. :-D Your friend teaching you how to ride a bike? Pretty much how I learned to stay the f*k away from these two-wheeled monstrosities until I turned 18 and was like "well you need to either learn to swim or to ride a bike, or you'll end up with no friends whatsoever. Drowning or breaking the neck? A watery grave or a greasy spot on a street?" Love your blog, Allie, keep up your work.
That was the hardest I've laughed since.... since your dog post.
I learned how to ride a bike around age 8. I was really overly cautious, so I didn't get any scars from it, but I did fall a few times. At first it went so slow and I thought I'd never learn, but then it suddenly clicked and I can ride bikes to this day. Though since I no longer own a bike I get a tiny bit wobbly when I ride my friend's bike.
I had little interest in my bike as a kid. The first time my dad sat me down on it (no training wheels and too tall for me to put my feet down) I was convinced he was trying to kill me. Plus my neighborhood was all hills and I was the only kid without varying gears or speeds on my bike.
Stupid Huffy.
Thus I always approached bike riding with fear & trepidation until I got to college and my dad's mountain bike (the Huffy was long gone) was my only means of transportation. I managed to get past my biking fears and became fairly able at maneuvering around town & the campus with minimal damage.
Then I got hit by a car.
Stupid bikes...
I was also eaten by a bike at a young age-- I still have scars and a lingering fear.
Thanks for sharing-- hilarious as always.
Katie
You look so defeated when the other kids are high-fiving themselves on their sweet bikes...
I alternated between feeling sad for 6 year old Allie and laughing at your ridiculously funny drawings!
I'm surprised my sister doesn't have more of a fear of bikes than me. When I first got my training wheels off I managed to run over her because she was lying on the sidewalk looking at a bug. I thought she'd move, honestly, and I was sure I'd fall if I went off the curb. There were bike treads on her back for days. Poor sister.
I injured my cooter on a bike once. fuck bikes. they're evil. people keep tying to get me to ride again - i hate those peoeple too.
i kinda also think you're awesome.
This is the first comment I've ever left on your blog, but I felt I should finally say something.
YOU ARE ABSOLUTELY HILARIOUS! I have read all of your posts (yes, I'm creepy like that), and laughed at all of them. Seriously, reading your posts always brightens my day.
Also, I had an incredibly similar experience in my childhood. I was learning how to ride my bike with training wheels in a parking lot near my home. All was going well, my mom was standing a little ways off watching, my dad was jogging along next to me, and I was blissfully unaware of the danger that lay ahead.
You see, my sister and her friend came along to go rollerskating. Unfortunately for me, they decided to rollerblade right at me, on either side of me. Needless to say, I was horribly frightened. I fell off my bike and skinned my knee on the gravel. My dad came running up to try to help, but it was too late. I wouldn't ride my bike again for a very long time.
Finally, when I did decide to ride my bike again (at the ripe old age of 10), I had to learn to ride without training wheels... a harrowing experience that I barely survived.
This post brought up some lovely memories. :)
Pfft, going down hills.
When I first had my training wheels taken off, I actually did quite well. Sure, I was scared at first but eventually I gained more confidence in my balance and found I could go faster.
My grandmother and her partner took me into the tennis court in the park across the street, a nice flat area where I could really get some speed going on. This was a lot of fun, for quite a while, until I smacked head-first into a tennis pole going as fast as I could pedal.
I did get back on a bike some months later, and would go out with my dad. One time we were heading down a hill toward a bridge, on our way home from a park, and my dad hit a rock at a high speed and went sailing over his handlebars. He got himself a good gash on his head but was actually okay, though I was pretty traumatized.
Somehow, I was still OK with bikes and now I ride one for exercise just fine. :) Some of my friends always seem to hurt themselves, but typically I am OK! Well, I did go over the handlebars that one time heading down a short gravel hill... but that totally doesn't count.
You are amazing
This one time my mom was babysitting a friend of mine and explicitly told me not to let her ride my bike, so the first thing I did was let her ride my bike.
She road past two houses, fell off and broke her arm.
I had many bike accidents as a child but my never ending need to be accepted by the boys drove me foward into my pursuit of bike adventures... until I rode off a metal bench and sliced up my calf. I still love them just not quite as much. You make me laugh so hard! I want to be your stalker, k?
oh god, i still have a scar on my forehead from a pre-preschool nike failure.
it makes me look like harry potter
Fabulous as ever! And you are not the only one... I didn't learn to ride a bike until I was 23. When I was 5, I was well on my way to getting past training wheels when a traumatic gravel patch skid put a damper on my enthusiasm. I probably would have just gotten back on, but that very night my parents had one of those parties where little kids mill around at knee height having kid conversations while the adults stand around having their adult conversations. And I happened to overhear my mom talking to somebody about phantom limb syndrome. The idea that you could lose a body part and then STILL FEEL IT itching or whatever was the freakiest thing I had ever heard of. And I became convinced it would happen to me the next time I fell off my bike. So I didn't go near it again.
When I next tried to learn to ride a bike, I was like 10. A bunch of kids from my class rode by and made snide comments. When I tried again at 16, it was my neighbors who commented.... When I finally learned, at 23, it was about the worst circumstances possible. I had been accepted into graduate school, and the summer before I started course work I was doing some field work for my advisor in Costa Rica. The thing was, the field sites were down at the end of 5 km path. A bike path. And so, in the 3 weeks between when I arrived and when my advisor came to check on my progress, I learned to ride a bike on a slippery concrete trail in the rainforest, with deadly vipers waiting in the forest on either side if I fell off. Completely true story, I swear to god! My advisor still doesn't know.
I ran my bike into an open car door. Twice.
When I started reading this, I thought "Oh, she has friends who are 7 years old. Oh, I see."
Also, I ABSOLUTELY LOVE your portrayal of your childhood self, it couldn't be more wonderful :]
And this, dear children, is why you should never ride on the crossbar...
I love your blog posts! I visit your blog every day hoping.... PLEASE WRITE MORE!!!!!
I just have to tell you that EVERYTHING you write/paint/do/whatnot makes me laugh so hard that I feel in imminent danger of voiding my bowels. If I ever feel incontinent or constipated, all I need do is open up your blog, and my problems are almost immediately cured. If I am feeling sluggish, your blog gives me energy. If I feel down about something, you lighten my mood. If I am bored, waiting for the megavideo time restriction to pass for a new tv show obsession that I've developed, you provide me with entertainment. What I am trying to say is, you are so fucking hilarious and interesting, that, at least in my mind, you have won the internet 1000 times over. I consistently laugh at your musings. Keep up the hard work, as you are unequivocally producing quality pieces!
<3,
HypnoNerd
Completely understand.
29 1/2. Still can't ride a bike.
I realized this morning that I sort of have a crush on your drawings. (There's nothing strange about that, I swear!) Today I want to pounce upon and hug the way your dad is lovingly clutching his coffee cup to his chest. Also the way Small Allie's little stick legs totally fail to reach the pedals.
the panel of your dad's excited face after the slow motion audio is literally the funniest thing i have seen today. thanks for a great story. again. :)
the panel of your dad's excited face after the slow motion audio is literally the funniest thing i have seen today. thanks for a great story. again. :)
I was so bad at learning to ride a bike that my dad got me a scooter for Christmas. It was purple and it was awesome. It was this fact alone that prevented me from being the 'running kid.' That is, until the tires went flat and none of the bike pumps would fit in the tiny, purple scooter wheels.
I also was terrified of roller skates. It makes perfect sense, then, for my parents to throw me a surprise sweet 16 birthday party at a roller skating rink. You can imagine how that turned out. Now that we are safely out of the 80's I see no reason to ever have wheels beneath my feet, unless I am in the 4 wheeled variety with a seat belt. Is there a clinical term for fear of wheels?
s'ok! I have a huge scar on my thigh from teaching myself how to ride a bike when I was kid :)
On my 7th birthday, my parents also called me outside to get my present. Which was, in fact, a pony. Boy, was I excited. But let's just say that your experiences with bicycles seem tame in comparison to the hell that animal put me through.
These days, I happily ride my bicycle everywhere, but you couldn't pay me to go within striking distance of even the most seemingly placid equine. In fact, I'd rather embrace an angry goose. Heh.
Oh no, that made me so sad =(
When I was six, I was VERY close to riding my bike on my own. I was gaining speed, my dad had let go of the back of the bike, and I was managing on my own. Then my little sister, who had been running along side darted in front of me and I ran her over. We both dissolved into screaming hysterics. Consequently, we both rocked the training wheels until we had nearly outgrown our first bikes.
Such a sad story Allie. I still love you though. I remember when I learned to ride a bike. My mom kicked me out, locked the door, and yelled I couldn't come inside till I could ride that fucker. Parents suck.
Such a sad story Allie. I still love you though. I remember when I learned to ride a bike. My mom kicked me out, locked the door, and yelled I couldn't come inside till I could ride that fucker. Parents suck.
I have not rode a bike in years, and I never knew why. Now I realize it was out of solidarity for you and your traumatizing experiences with the evil they call a bicycle.
Stay strong.
Awww. I fell off my bike a lot but I just kept getting back on it, like the dumb little kid I was. :) I just recently got a bike again after 15 years and while it really is "like riding a bike", it definitely take some getting used to.
I...uh...I...errr...I just wanted to say that, uh...ok, thatsubtext under "Leave your comment" is /mega/ scary. I'mma try again in like, 5 minutes. D:
OK
So anyway, I'm choosing to look only at my kjeyboard, as I dread seeing that line again. Because of this, sorry for any typo's.
so pretty much, you are totally my favourite person on the internet right now, having only found this site today. It's perfect. <3
While teaching our daughter to ride her bike, she ran into me, knocked me down and broke my arm.
She's never gotten on a bike again and her $250 bike was ridden that 1 time before she outgrew it.
your dad in the 80's looked JUST like my dad in the 80's.
Being 60+ I can proudly say I have never learnt to ride a bike, my relatives all gave up on me after I mangled their bikes. So I can relate to this. Who needs a bike when you can drive a car!!!
Love the blog, have only just discovered it.
I had this awesome idea as a kid that worked beautifully for a few weeks. See, my mom wanted me to walk our hyperactive English Cocker every day, and I wanted to ride my bike. I was also perpetually lazy, so I had this amazing and brilliant idea of hooking his leash to the handlebars of my bike. It was AMAZING! Mooch pulled me all over the neighborhood, got completely worn out, and I got to ride my bike at ridiculous speeds while only occasionally using a small amount of energy to apply the breaks.
Now, the house on the corner of my street frequently had people plow down their mailbox with their car--because people always take that turn too fast. So, the 4th time they had to put a new one up in a year, they went for a custom one made out of steel and barbed wire. As my dog spotted the cat on their porch, with us travelling roughly at 15 mph, I saw my fate with the mailbox in slow motion.
As I lay there, bloody and concussed on the ground, my primary concern was that I'd taken out my neighbor's new mailbox. But, true to the owners' intent, all the razorwire and arrowheads were still attached to the upright box, even as I was missing teeth and my bike had snapped in half.
The pony would have been worse...trust me. My grandma decided that when I was in 4th grade I needed to learn to ride (she lived on a farm) so she got a demon pony and made me try to ride it. It had this habit of rubbing up against it's food bin thing trying to push me off. And one time it succeeded and she made me get up and ride it again and it was going to thunderstorm so the pony went crazy and rode all over and I couldn't get it to stop. I'm 26 and still afraid of horses. Also, my 16 year old brother can't ride a bike, so I understand!
I legitimately love you. I love your grammar obsession and your drawings. You, I love.
You're fantastic. I have to go to work and I can not express my full love for you.
Just know that I'm totally, creepily in love. With you. And your blog.
So it would seem that many people on here love you. Not to say that you don't deserve that level of commitment, but I don't think I can compete with that much love. I would like to offer, instead, my everlasting best-friendship. In preparation for said best-friendship, I have been going through your entire library of posts from the beginning. I am currently enjoying your entries from last October. "Enjoying" is maybe not the word to best describe my extreme level of enjoyment, oddly enough. In fact, others in my office/vicinity would probably consider the following more accurate in describing the ways in which I appear to enjoy your style of writing: "spontaneously bursting into fits of uncontrollable laughter during which tears may or may not stream down her face", "losing it", "silently shaking in her chair for no discernible reason", "an embarrassing display of snorting and cackling noises", or possibly even "suffering from an attack of some sort". Also maybe "incompetent" because sometimes it is difficult for me to answer the phone. But don't worry, I can usually check myself before I wreck myself. That was an exaggeration and you should not worry about costing me my job. What was I-- oh yeah. I will help you become more famous if I can. That may only mean you will see an increase of three or so readers (regretfully, I also am not famous), but know that I fully support your dream of a pants-less future spent in the comfort of your home. And so concludes my lengthy comment.
LMFAO!! You are too funny Allie! LOVE YOU! I too took a LOOOOONNNG time to learn bike riding! i was terrified! I felt more comfortable on a 2,000lb horse that my fucking Straberry Shortcake Bike! :(
Allie you are a comedic genius. It makes my blog look like a shriveled up old raisin of an old lady trying to get a tan in Miami....I haven't posted in almost 2 years. You've inspired me to start again! Thanks.
Wow. This post, albeit very funny and entertaining, brought back some grave memories for me. My dad, too, thought it would be a killer idea to set me on his handlebars (at the age of three) and take me for a ride around the neighborhood. I still remember it all very vividly--twenty-three years later. My dad hit a speed bump and I flew off, landing on the asphalt in my tank top, shorts, and bare feet. When we returned to the house, my mom immediately...wait for it...grabbed the video camera to document the memorable occasion. So now, I can watch a film of my sad face and tiny hand holding a wash cloth up to my road-rashed skin. Awesome.
My friend turned me on to your blog, and I've been loving every minute of reading! You are hilarious!!!
My friend turned me on to your blog, and I've been loving every minute of reading! You are hilarious!!!
You are a pisser! I felt so bad for your dad.
Thanks for the belly laugh!
Allie, you have inspired me to write my own bike story, complete with Paint drawings and a link to your page.
I showed YOUR bike post to my dad. "This," I said, "is why it took me four extra years to learn how to ride a bike."
"Except, you didn't have any traumatizing bike experiences."
"Well no, but it was the POTENTIAL trauma that kept me off of the bike!"
So yes. HIGH FIVE, bike-fearing-buddy!
Its really Great to see this site.Give us more interesting and informative stuff.keep doing work like this for the further also..Thanks Buddy.
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I just read your interview with Micheal Humphrey (back in May).
In it there was a link to "Rageguy", the link:
http://rageguy.com/RageGuy_FFFUUUU.png
Does not seem to go your art. Instead something else seems to be going on there. Not sure what, just giving you a head's up.
Please fix the pictures.
Figured out the issue with the Pictures. Image Shack is blocked by our works Proxy Servers. Image shack is balls.
Who needs a dangerous bike when you could have a Xootr! I got one for my birthday two years ago and I STILL love it (you can read all about my experience here: http://www.thegiftdetective.com/blog/archives/4411) As if you could ever read through all these comments...oh well, if you ever do get through reading them all you'll learn about such a cool thing!!! :-)
The pictures aren't loading!!!!!! NNNOOOOOO!!!!!!!
O my Gawd! Brilliant! I mean, you poor girl. Loving this. New follower! Discovered you from your mention at Whoa Mumma.
I crashed too during my first riding experience. Into a landscaping company's trailer. Totally the bike's fault, and I'm still scared of lawn mowers. Vile machines of razor-sharp death that will one day become self-aware like the Terminator and eat us all...on our bikes.
The Hefty Bag full of shame was what got me ROLLING here at work :)
I think I'm the only one so far that learned to ride without trauma. I never had training wheels - my parents gave me this tiny flea market bike when I was 5ish and let me do what I wanted. I immediately rode it down the steep hill my street was on and have been pedaling ever since.
I started reading your blog when you talked about the fish and your childhood, and I've been hooked ever since! Don't ever stop :)
I also had a bad first attempt at learning to ride a bike in childhood.
13 years later, at age 19, I finally taught myself.
And now I LOVE it.
My God, Allie Brosh!
I go away for a few months and I come back to find you are famous! Just remember I was one of the originals...
Also your Dad has a cool beard, almost as cool as mine...awesome.
Mysterg xx
I had a similar experience but with roller skates. I'm sorry, roller BLADES. My neighbor got a pair and let me wear hers then gave me a little push down her driveway. I didn't know how to stop, and ended up hitting her trash can, getting my leg stuck inside, and rolling down our street about 30 yards. Our hot neighbor from across the street ran over to help me. GAH. I wanted to die.
deadly satan-machines... awesome.
I could have written this, except it was my dad who pushed me down the hill. Eight times. In shorts. (summer) I looked like a breakfast sausage.
My solution was to learn to skateboard. I still regard skateboards as safer, despite snapping a kneecap in half at 17, because you can ALWAYS just get off a skateboard.
With a bike, you go where it goes. Which my dad proved the day he took off on YET ANOTHER BIKE my folks got me in an attempt to get me to ride and hit the handbrakes to avoid hitting the family dog. It went just about how you'd expect.
Demons with wheels. You are absolutely right.
Awesome, awesome, awesome Blog!!
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2 things:
ALT TEXT OMG ALLIE I LOVE YOU
and, I had a similar [though not as funny] double bike whammy experience. having previously been scarred by a bad bike experience, i didn't like being around friends when they were on them. my guy friend bragged about how good of a rider he is, and how safe he is, then accidentally jumped the curb and RAN ME OVER. literally. bike treads across my body like a cartoon. -_-
The pictures make the post even better!
Great post, as usual :)
(Laugh) that last part made me sad ... a little >p<
I can't remember ever having too horrible experiences like that ... except for one time when I wanted to prove how super cool and awesome I was on my speedy bike and veered sharply into our drive ... I got a cut on my elbow and cried.
Ehn, life. >o<
I understand that that must have been traumatizing... but that was truly hilarious. Love the blog, especially the cartoons...
The killer bike reminds me of superbike from the fairly odd parents kind of...
Eden
So you didn't get a brand new pair of rollerskates? And you didn't ride your bicycle past his window last night?
Great illustrations. Very witty story. Thanks for this.
All the best, Boonsong
i havent ridden a bike in about 15 years. I broke my right femur TWICE on a bike. exact same place, 2 years apart. Nothing like learning how to walk 2 extra times. That sucked balls.
This is hilarious, your blog combines cartoon with storied realism in a great way.
Hey Allie-
Just discovered your blog recently (Jen from cakewrecks gave you a shout out not too long ago) and I have to say, it is seriously entertaining.
I NEEDED to comment after yesterday's post. This:
" My dad just lay there face-down in the road, like a Hefty bag full of shame."
made me laugh aloud. at work. repeatedly. all day long. EVERYTIME I THOUGHT ABOUT IT. haha.
Just thought you should know!!
this is enough to get me to give up biking forever.
hilarious as usual!
i crashed my bike once, and didn't ride it for a year. O.o
and i currently don't have one. nooo thanks.
i crashed my bike once, and didn't ride it for a year. O.o
and i currently don't have one. nooo thanks.
Fantastic - again!
I... am bad on a bicycle. I had one when I was little - and we lived in the country in an area that had lots of gravel driveways. Oddly enough a 90° turn from a paved road onto loose gravel does not work quite as well as one would think.
Neither does trying to ride on a new sidewalk when there is a 2" wide and 4" deep gap between said sidewalk and the hard dirt and you have the attention span of a gnat, and the coordination of a drunk with parkinsons.
Nor does riding a bike with pants that are long enough to get stuck in the chain of a chain driven bike....
Thank you for your stories. Please compile them and publish them. I would buy a copy for all my friends for Christmas!
This blog keeps getting recommended to me based on my art style and blog, and I can see why! It's fawking hilarious! Lovelovelove the stories and laid back art to compliment it! Everything is so cute!
I just found your blog last night and have spent pretty much 80% of the time since then reading it. Your posts are hilarious! Like, laugh so hard it hurts, funny. I just wanted to say I really enjoy reading them and I hope you continue to share your stories and drawings! Wow, too many exclamation points! :P
Also, thanks for visualizing what happens in my head when I have lots of stuff to do. The procrastination cycle you drew was pretty spot on as well. Either you're a genius, or you've broken into my brain. Hmmm... :)
The big question is, does your dad still feel guilty about it? Mine is still a bit torn up about the shopping cart incident of 1980 (pushing the carriage and him running after was fun - until I fell out) and the sledding accident of 1981. I'm not sure why, after a few days my scratches healed. The tree in the latter accident was never the same, though.
A hefty bag full of shame. This cracked me up.
This is my newest most favorite blog in the whole wide world! Just had to say that.
That's only a lot damaging. Ooo and I added a link to your blog on my own if you don't mind! (read: The blog that I made four hours ago)
Found this site from PointlessSites.com. Amazing!
~ Eric
Don't feel bad-- every experience I have ever had with bikes has been a tragic and painful one. I was late to learn how to ride a bike in the first place, but when I did, I'd always fall off spectacularly. I have a scar on each knee from my adventures in bike riding.
Then, when I was 17, just two years ago, I went to Europe for this student ambassador thingie. Part of the trip was bike riding in the Netherlands, which was just peachy, until I managed to land myself in a ditch and injure myself magnificently. I didn't get it checked out or anything since we couldn't really slow down the trip, and I was convinced that I was just being a baby about my extremely painful wrist. My thigh was branded with the most enormous bruise ever, which turned rainbow colors with each passing day. For the rest of the trip, about ten days, I pulled weeds and white-water rafted and lugged luggage with my hurting and stiff wrist.
Two days after I got back from my trip, I had my wrist x-rayed. It was broken.
So as you can see, bikes and I don't have a fine history together. We don't hang that often. And that's just fine with me, because they're dangerous and evil sons of bitches.
Please put up a link to www[dot]catholicheritage[dot]blogspot[dot]com
Love it. While my dad taught me to ride a bike staring at a flagpole and I did not crash or injure myself, I do remember it as a terrifying experience. I love your picture of the monster bike!
I had a fear of bikes until I moved to a place where I could bike freely. Trying to bicycle in a place like Vegas is akin to taking a walk in the jungle while lots of bombs are going off, bullets are being fired in your general direction, and VC are chasing you with bayonets.
Yeah, my older buddies would love the way I describe my old place.
I'm glad I'm not the only one.
Hi Allie,
I've been reading you for a few weeks now and you are absolutely brilliant! You have actually inspired me to start blogging again, you pretty much totally rock. Just thought you should know!
-Mike
That demon bike is AWESOME!
Anyway, don't feel bad...as I can personally attest, you didn't miss much.
Bikes=bad.
Found your blog recently via finslippy and now I hate to tell you but I'm gonna have to stalk you. Also you bear a striking resemblance to Kristen Bell. In your pictures that is, not the drawings...
When I was 8 or 9 I rode my bike to the school that was right down the road. I was playing in the sand box (which for that school was huge) and I was not the thinnest kid at the time. Some little boy persisted to make fun of me and it hurt my feelings. I tried to tell him to stop but my cries were relentless. So I decided to ride my bike away from him, he decided I was not allowed to leave without being in physical pain to accompany my emotional pain. So as I was riding away he took this sand rake and placed it right in my path. Without any time to react I hit the rake and the bike dramatically flipped over me in some weird vortex, me flying through the air, somehow landing in a pile of metal, twisted body parts and tears. I got up and rode away, somehow only escaping with bruises and an emotional scar that has haunted me for almost 15 years.
I discovered your blog a couple of days ago and am reading all the posts compulsively! Congratulations and keep up the good stuff!! I really like your ironic writing and your hilarious drawings -it must be difficult to achieve such expressive faces in MS Paint!
I guess you don't have much spare time, but I leave you here the link to the blog I take part in. It's a blog on literary creation. The problem is it's in Spanish, but I remember you saying that you can speak a bit of Spanish? Well, I leave it in case you're interested :)
Kind regards,
Paula
http://blasfemicos.com
Hey there,
What a great blog you have.
Please take a look at mine.
http://www.makeyousmile.net
Let me know about link exchange via mail artlae@gmail.com.
Good luck!
@TruthSeeker:
Hey there,
What a bad advertising scheme you have.
Please take a look at this post:
http://hyperboleandahalf.blogspot.com/2010/01/tricking-is-bad.html
Let me know about how you're going to throw yourself to poor, tricked Allie's feet and beg for forgiveness via mail marakachina15@gmail.com.
Good luck!
Spamming is obnoxious. Don't do it.
Damn! You are good! I mean scary good. I've added you to my blogroll just so that other people will read you and possibly remember that they found you through me and thereby think I'm good too.
That's not sad, is it?
I hate those kids that hi-five on their sweet bikes. Their bikes aren't sweet, and they suck...HA!
*I have relationship issues*
:-D <--that's so you'd know I was kidding, and wouldn't judge me.
*I have self-esteem issues*
:-D <---that one's just in case you forgot.
... XD Lol... I crashed into a tree on my first two wheeler... not fun, but I walked the bike home, and rode again after I received bandages. ... Did you try riding a bike way to small for you through a foot deep puddle?? It works.
nice stuff, really appreciable!!!!
Dear allie freaking brosh ,
You are mandated by the unwritten code of schtuff to post some sschtuff (only in real life I do not say sschtuff) much more often.
It is unfair to the rest of us out here who sit at our computers and freaking GORMANDIZE your posts, to have to wait unfair and extended periods of time for your piquant and excellently illustrated posts mo fo ..... MY GOD
WHAT WOULD G-ZIS (jesus) do mo fo ??
would he or any other super hero for that matter deprive the world of their powers because it was .... tedious at best.....HARUMPH
If you were not a such a flocking adroit concious entity i would be utterly disgusted with your ....what can only be described as selfish and dilatory, attitude to your blog........
HARK TIS NOT THE MO.... FO..... time for diffidence in posting allie brosh !!!
I CLICK FRAUD IN THE HOPES THAT YOUR WOULD POST MORE OFTEN...
regards
btw im a huuuuge fan =] hehhehehe
Dear allie freaking brosh ,
You are mandated by the unwritten code of schtuff to post some sschtuff (only in real life I do not say sschtuff) much more often.
It is unfair to the rest of us out here who sit at our computers and freaking GORMANDIZE your posts, to have to wait unfair and extended periods of time for your piquant and excellently illustrated posts mo fo ..... MY GOD
WHAT WOULD G-ZIS (jesus) do mo fo ??
would he or any other super hero for that matter deprive the world of their powers because it was .... tedious at best.....HARUMPH
If you were not a such a flocking adroit concious entity i would be utterly disgusted with your ....what can only be described as selfish and dilatory, attitude to your blog........
HARK TIS NOT THE MO.... FO..... time for diffidence in posting allie brosh !!!
I CLICK FRAUD IN THE HOPES THAT YOUR WOULD POST MORE OFTEN...
regards
btw im a huuuuge fan =] hehhehehe
I love your blog so much! I've never read anything that's made me laugh and cry so much all in one go. I love you.
My dad taught me how to ride a bike. Then, I saw one of my friends had training wheels and wondered what it was like to have training wheels. I tried her bike, and proceeded to run into the curb and fall off.
That was the end of training wheel curiosity for me.
On the other hand, I NEVER, EVER had roller skates. I still never had them. or roller blades. or ice skates. I can sort of ice skate on the rental figure skates at the ice rink. I once tried the hockey skates, but then learned that I can't use them because the way I stop is the grooves on the front of figure skates.
anyway... that's my rambling for today.
Yay! I'm not the only person who can't ride a bike!
Bikes are evil. My parents got me one when I was 5. I fell and scraped my knees the first time I tried to ride it. After many more falls and two very bloody knees, I ran inside crying and I gave up on learning to ride a bike. It was kinda sad when all my friends would go out to ride their bikes and I couldn't. I'm almost 23 years old and I still can't ride a bike.
Yay! I'm not the only person who can't ride a bike!
Bikes are evil. My parents got me one when I was 5. I fell and scraped my knees the first time I tried to ride it. After many more falls and two very bloody knees, I ran inside crying and I gave up on learning to ride a bike. It was kinda sad when all my friends would go out to ride their bikes and I couldn't. I'm almost 23 years old and I still can't ride a bike.
Sorry about the double post.
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I have to say, I just read through your past posts and I have to commend you! People have done tons more (travel the world, perform daredevil acts, run corporate empires, etc.) and are not half as funny and insightful as you, who apparently rarely leaves the house and instead examines her own idiosyncrasies with a humorous eye. The stories about your childhood are wonderful! The latest two had me laughing to myself like a crazy person. Even my lazy dog opened an eye and gave me the WTF glance. The drawings really enhance the posts.
This reminds me of the time I decided the best way to play bicycle polo would be to run over the kick ball with my front wheel rather than kick it.
Not so happy memories.
Because you are great, Allie, I drew you a picture.
http://enapsychcharm521.files.wordpress.com/2010/06/unicorn.jpg
Not as great as yours ... but ...
from Super Ninja-Pirate-Samurai with flaming sword Kl,... something...and a flaming lifeboat
I am so sorry that you had bad experiences with bikes when you were little.
I loved my bikes. The one I had the longest was my sister's old bike, pink with a banana seat.
As I ride around on my current bike, I can honestly say that I miss that banana seat. /sigh
Every single time I have tried to ride a bicycle (dozens of times) I have ended up with something scraped and bloody by the end of the incident. This has been happening to me consistently over a period of the last 15 years of my life. This past year, I finally gave up trying to understand what people meant when they say "It'ss like riding a bicycle," because to me, that expression means that I will soon be bleeding from my elbows over a sink, applying a grossly inappropriate abundance of Neosporin.
I was super confident riding my bike until the day before my 7th birthday when I tried to ride one-handed. I managed that quite easily and got cocky so tried with no hands. Long story short I spent my birthday with one less pinky fingernail.
See, I was the opposite--I had a fear of roller skates ever since I fell off them and landed hoo-ha first on one of the wheels. Injuries to the hoo-ha are serious business.
Dear Allie,
Thank you for your wonderful blog posts. They always manage to make laugh even when I am at work at want to kill my boss.
Please keep them coming!
Love,
Katie
@Taylor: I agree, I don't have a hoo-ha, and still that made me cringe...
@The Keeper of the Bipolar Devil: I'm with you on that, Allie keeps me from workplace homicide every day!
A friend linked to you last night, and over the past 16 hours I have spent waaaayyy too much time reading pretty much your entire blog. I've laughed so much my stomach hurts. Congrats - one follower closer to winning the internet. :)
HAHAHA nice
Here's the deal. I love you. You make me laugh every time I read through one of your posts, even if I just read it a few minutes earlier. Please keep being so amazing. I'm sure that if you do, you'll win at the internets.
Thank you for giving me a reason to spend the past three days on the computer. It has been a joy to read your blog. Keep being great and you will definitely rule the internet.
-Jess
love your storytelling! :)
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I am reminded of another bike story from my younger years. It doesn't involve crashing or injury, though. Suppose there was a possibility of death, at least.
After three days of heavy rain, all the bike paths in our town here were flooded. I suspect the town designed the paths to keep water off the roads. Anyway, my brother and I went for a ride through a Nature Trail path and came to a low point that was completely under water. Halfway across, the railing from a bridge was just visible. We stopped and pondered a bit, and I said "Hey, ride through there so we can see how deep it is." And he did. Water came up to his waist but he got across, so I followed.
We got home and my parents wanted to know why we were soaking wet. My brother ratted me out in an instant, and my dad told my brother "I am very disappointed in you for doing what your brother asked you to do! That was very dangerous." He then turned to me and said "I'm proud of you, that was very good thinking sending your brother in ahead.."
These illustrations are absolutely fantastic, and I am eagerly awaiting the next post.
It's amazing how many of us probably should have been kept in padded rooms as children, but still survived to (nominal) adulthood.
It's a crime that someone hasn't given you your own show yet!
Well hot damn. Here I was thinking your dad was gonna come along and save you from your fear.
My bad.
I swear every ficken post I read I think to myself - THIS is the funniest/best post EVAR.
Then you write another.
This is really nice info.Thanks for such a wonderful post.
home jobs
Dear Allie,
When you put on a jacket, what arm do you put in first? (ALWAYS?)
<3 -Jen
PS - The name hyperbole-and-a-half.blogspot.com is open. If I were you, I would register for that and use it to link here so that no one else registers for it and tries to pretend to be you.
I feel for you, Allie - because I grew up living on a busy street corner, I never really had the chance to learn to ride (and so the infrequent times I DID try to learn were always involved with falling because I had lost any lessons learned before . . . ). Unfortunately in high school, they always assume that everyone knows how to ride a bike, so my France exchange group was scheduled for a bike ride at Versailles. Cool huh . . . or NOT. Tried to learn riding with my host student (i.e., tried to just get on the bike and bike along a canal with her and her friend), but long story short, a necessary bridge over a canal that involved a spiral ramp resulted in disaster and a permanent scar on my knee. I've only tried biking one other time (also, I think, in France, strangely enough) and have sworn off it ever since I learned that owning a car is much less knee-dangerous . . . :-)
Yeah, try growing up on a dirt road and learning to ride a bike THERE. I'm still picking gravel out of my knees and elbows.
Two words: lemon twister (now called Skip-Its). They are pure evil and I think one of them put out a contract on my head. It's the only way I can explain my torn ligament and chipped bone. Asshole Skip-It. Satan on a rope. With a lemon.
I just spent two days (and nights) reading every single entry of your blog.
I think you broke my brain.
In a good way.
-Harley.
P.S. I was gonna write you this really awesome and witty comment so that people would look at it and go 'wow, this person is really funny and witty' but I guess I'm just not, especially not since my net died when I was gonna post it and now I'm writing it for the second time around and couldn't even make it better that way. Oh well, at least I got my point across.
Also, I totally relate to the posts about the cold, as I live in Iceland.
I remember being 10 years old and still on a little girl bike while my friend and next door neighbor was on this awesome 10-speed mountain bike. Naturally, I was envious of her and wanted to be as big of a girl as she was with her adult bike speeding down street like she was trying to win the Tour de France.
I tried to keep up with her pace on my little girl bike and the next thing I know, my foot slips off the pedal, I'm falling on my right side and doing a complete 360 on gravel and bits of untamed desert land the lawn couldn't eradicate.
Two years later, I contracted a balance disorder and I haven't been on a bike since. If I ever get another one, I'm demanding training wheels and never taking them off. Ever. An adult tricycle? EVEN BETTER.
I begged my parents for roller blades when I was a kid. Our driveway was surrounded by a chain link fence and when I finally got them for my birthday, I used the fence to push myself along like a freakin wobbling skate prodigy. I should have stuck to what I was good at, I really should have. Because eventually I was all "I am probably the best rollerblader ever. I should become an olympic athlete, I owe it to the world. I am going to let go of the fence now, because that is a good idea."
It wasn't a good idea. It was a terrible idea, resulting in blood and "MOM WHY DID YOU DO THIS TO ME?!"
Mildly related, I also proudly owned a scooter, and I thought it made me look graceful as a ballerina and literally did ballerina/figure skating dance moves while riding it, which sounds cool, but wasn't.
I think I'll write a post about that. I have been inadvertently inspired.
See, this was a nice post until I saw this bit about you careening. You tipped Jeffrey's bike over so you could yank barnacles off it?
You're weird.
Unless you meant "careering". That'd make sense, then.
MORE BLOGGING -addicted-
No stalking required on your part~
You can find me at
http://julsbeads.blogspot.com/
where there is also a token of appreciation waiting for you.
Genius. That's what you are.
SUCCESS ! I have managed to read through your entire blog,
it took foreverrrr
but I did it
You should be proud that I spent a week of my summer dedicated to YOU
Mmine was a big fall into a ditch on a family bike trail riding adventure at age 6 as well. Then again in Tarifa Spain on a hostel's bike after too much Sangria. And then again just a year ago trying to bring a 6 pack of beer home in my purse while riding my bike and dodging downtown Denver traffic. Bikes scare me and riding them is on my list of 'things I'm not good at doing.' Frankly, I am surprised I am not dead because of them.
Your posts are pure twisted genious. Can't wait til the next one!
I can't ride a bike OR swim. *is a failure at life*
At least I'm not scared of heights.
But bugs scare me.
And I fail at sports.
*depression*
But *happiness* this made me lol. 8D
Item suggestion for the STORE: bind stories into picture books. Excellent gifts for loved ones.
Your dad looks Mufasa in the gorge in the third-to-last picture.
Dear Allie,
I enjoy your articles very much, and it makes me sad that there have not been any recently. I understand that this is likely due to the fact that you have a real person life and are not an word/picture creating robot (there's only about a 28% chance of that and I'm nothing but a slave to the odds). But anyway, please write more things to make me laugh and give me an excuse not to water my plants or fill out college applications. It doesn't even have to make that much sense. You don't even have to color the pictures. I just really hate watering my plants. Allie, I don't even have a watering can, I have to use a old Desani bottle. Anyway I decided not to email this request to you because I'm mostly just trying to find something to do while my Christmas Cactus withers and dies, and also you probably have real people emails to address.
Thank you,
Katie
P.S. If you respond to this comment I'll draw you a picture of a Unicorn. I'll even draw you riding it. It would be fucking sweet. Just sayin'.
UPDATEEEEEEEEEEEE! DO ITTTTT!!!!
DO WANT MOAR!!!!
NOWWWWWWWWWW.
dude. i totally found your blog yesterday and read all of it. it's been about 12 days or something since you last posted so please write moree :)
I found your blog when I Googled the non-word "boobcycle." Based on this alone, I will continue reading.
Have you seen this?
now you know you're really famous and awesome. Babies know who you are AND think you're funny.
Love it. But what happened to Spaghatta Nadle??? I miss Spaghatta Nadle.
--Christina
Oh dear god Allie you are an actual genius! I have recently started a new job where I have nothing to do...so spent the last week reading all of your blog posts, thank you so much for being so freaking hilarious and getting me through this week. The only hard part was to not burst out laughing as my boss is sat right opposite me...xx
Your dad is hot.
I'm sorry you had such a bad experience on a bike, when you were young! It sure didn't have to be like that! Riding a bike was always fun for me, but I mastered "riding" the bike before I mastered getting on and starting by myself. So, if I was tooling around the block and I managed to fall, I would have to rely on the kindness of a neighbor to get me started again. LOL! Finally my mom made me practice in front of the house, back and forth, back and forth, until I could start reliably, by myself.
be very careful when riding bike, cos it's easy to fall down, riding bike need good "stabilization" technique..! i remember when i was a child, i can released my hands and the bike still can go forward...lol! of course riding on flat ground!
You inspire me to draw comics too. My laughter is yours.
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