On Nearly Getting Hit By An SUV

In which I worry that I’m letting my guard down while cycling

Clive Thompson

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A photo of a cyclist going down a city street, taken from the side, with the cyclists heading to the right, and the shops in the background blurred by motion
Photo by Roman Koester on Unsplash

Back in the spring, I wrote about getting hit by a car while riding my bike. The accident happened back in 1992, when I’d just gotten my first job out of college and was riding to work. I hadn’t paid close enough attention while going through an intersection, and wham: A car t-boned my front tire.

Thankfully, I wasn’t hurt badly. And, rather usefully, the accident scared me straight. I became a much more attentive cyclist.

As I wrote …

If you get hit by a car once while riding your bike, the impact sticks with you, psychologically. I’ve been rather more cautious around cars ever since. After seeing that car turn my bike into a pretzel — so easily, so trivially — I have a bone-deep fear of just how much kinetic energy obtains in two tons of moving metal, even when it’s driving along at a seemingly poky pace.

I also have a shuddering sense of just how much worse things could have gone. If I’d have been slightly faster off the mark? My legs would have been where my front wheel was. I can’t fully imagine how badly I’d have been injured.

The upshot is, even to this day I’m a bit more cautious in urban traffic.

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Clive Thompson

I write 2X a week on tech, science, culture — and how those collide. Writer at NYT mag/Wired; author, “Coders”. @clive@saturation.social clive@clivethompson.net