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View Full Version : If you had to start all over, what would you do different?


JonnyD
2002-12-19, 07:45 PM
Hypothetically, you have to start all over in unicycling. It's day one, ground zero, and you just picked up a uni for the first time. From now on, what would you do different? (assuming you still knew about everything, you just lost all of your skill)

Me, I would sell whatever I was holding and buy a Muni, never to have to worry about breaking anything ever again and be in bliss...;)

register
2002-12-19, 10:24 PM
Well, hypotheticly, if I had to start over again, i would use the internet to help. When I first started I didn't realize the world of unicycling world on the interenet.

Scott Stephens
2002-12-19, 10:35 PM
I would have asked more questions on the forum before purchasing the unicycle that i think is best for me.

Scott

peterbb
2002-12-19, 10:51 PM
I'd buy a new 20" instead of a used 16"

phil
2002-12-19, 11:59 PM
When I first started it was with a cheapest of the cheap 20" uni from a local juggling shop. Actually it wasn't, it was an expensive beast... so I'd have looked into it a bit more and got it much cheaper.

I also started off just planning to learn to ride, and maybe juggle on it... I never once thought you could go up mountains with it. I mean, it's only got one wheel! What kind of silly idea is that?!

More research, as ever, would not have gone amiss.

Phil, just me

rhysling
2002-12-20, 01:27 AM
Shin protection: I consistantly wacked my shins on pedal when learning the wheel... never occured to me to buy armour. My progress would have been a bit faster...

-C

SpYdeR v1o
2002-12-20, 01:31 AM
Nothing. I just about started here and you've nurtured me. heh You guys have been a big help! Thank You

U-Turn
2002-12-20, 04:50 AM
1) I would have started unicycling when I was 9.

2) I would have purchased the Power Pashley MUni instead of the base version.

harper
2002-12-20, 06:57 AM
I would have started advancing in skills when I was 11 instead of 50. I think it would have been faster and easier.

john_childs
2002-12-20, 08:15 AM
Originally posted by register
Well, hypotheticly, if I had to start over again, i would use the internet to help. When I first started I didn't realize the world of unicycling world on the interenet.
When I first started there was no internet.

My only connection to other unicycling was Jack Wiley's book "The Unicycle Book" that I checked out from the library.

GILD
2002-12-20, 02:37 PM
kewl question!

not much really, i'd have hoped that my parent's would've bought me a uni for my 12th/8th/5th b'day
apart from that, i've enjoyed the journey

:)

UniBrier
2002-12-20, 03:06 PM
If I could roll the clock back to 1976 I would have:

1. Known it's almost impossible to learn on a 16" hard tire "Troxel" with tricycle cranks! Thank God my parents gave me the 24" Schwinn for my 16th BD.

2. Learned more skills when I was young(er), I am so envious of my girls, they learn things so fast.

3. Not let my membership to the USA lapse for almost 20 years.

4. Made a better effort to stay connected with other unicyclists after college.

5. Not have waited to join a club until after my girls started riding.

Other than that, no regrets.

Catboy
2002-12-22, 01:56 AM
I would probably have bought a 20" United Maincap instead of a torker 24" and i would have learnt to freemount sooner. because it took me a little over 2 weeks before i could actually move more than a meter but it took me a month and a half to get to fremounting. I also would have probably bought differen pedals and tire much sooner. I also would have learned without a helmet so now i wouldnt be such a puss on doing new drops and stuff.

-Eric

U-Turn
2002-12-22, 02:33 AM
Originally posted by Catboy
I also would have learned without a helmet so now i wouldnt be such a puss on doing new drops and stuff.No insult intended, but that has got to be the worst excuse for not wearing a helmet I have ever heard.

James_please02
2002-12-22, 02:17 PM
I would have found a group of mates to start with, then i would have had some encouragment and a bit of competition. I would also have started on 20" not a 24", i would also just go straight into trials, forget all the little freestyle moves.

Catboy
2002-12-22, 06:02 PM
No insult intended, but that has got to be the worst excuse for not wearing a helmet I have ever heard.

I wear a helmet now. I just wished I had learnt withut a helmet so now, that I wear one, I wont be so afraid of doing new stuff, leaving me limited to only things I can do easily, and causing me to thusly have to take 15 mins of just saying "Im gonna do it!" or so before i try adding 5-6 inches to a drop. i am proud to wear a helmet, leg armor and occasonally wrist guards. I just felt it would have been better (emotionally speaking) to not wear a helmet the first two weeks of learning, so my courage would be alot greater.

U-Turn
2002-12-22, 07:31 PM
I know what you mean about overcoming the fear. I'm not sure armor really has that much to do with it, except in one sense: I know that my chances of a concussion is remote. Whether you wear armor or not you have to overcome fear to unicycle. The armor, like prudent selection of challenges, allows you to unicycle more often and longer. If you let fear take over, you'll end up not unicycling - whether the fear is of a little scrape on your shin or being embarassed in front of someone or of a broken leg.

I personally think that unicycling on the edge of a 3-story building or a 50-foot dam is stupid. But it may be beneficial in the fear aspect in helping set thresholds. No matter what you do in unicycling, nothing will be more dangerous than that! But I think there are better ways to fight one's fear than those activities.

I've seen some skateboarders at the skate park with no armor falling again and again into extreme pain and lie there screaming or yelling. The conclusion I came to was _not_ that they were brave, rugged, or exceptionally skilled so that it was worth it. I finally decided that they were masochistically beating on themselves, and skateboarding was their way to do it. There were far better riders there, some with armor and some not, that were not beating on themselves. They had crashes, to be sure, but their approach was different.

I'm not an extreme rider. Will I ever be? Who knows. But I do know that managing my pain and risk of injury is one of the intellectual skills that are part of unicycling. The better I do that, the more time I have riding and the faster my skills will develop. When I'm home nursing an injury, my skills are atrophying - getting worse.

By starting out with a helmet, you showed that some of those essential skills are already well advanced. I doubt that not starting with a helmet would make you braver now. What it might have done is lull you into a false sense of security until you tried that BIG stunt and incurred real dehabilitating brain injury. And your 15 minutes of psych-up? I think it would still be there helmet or no.

Why was Dale Earnhardt killed? Perhaps no one knows for sure, but I can tell you he wore his seatbelt despite his proven skill in driving. And I'm sure that dealing with fear is a big factor in automobile racing!

JonnyD
2002-12-27, 08:12 PM
Now that I think about it, the original question was simply one that picqued (sp?) my curiosity, but now I can use this list to help my friends who are just starting to unicycle. Cool!:)

Drewnicycle
2002-12-27, 09:28 PM
I'm a big armour advocate. Helmets I think, give newcomers to the sport a little more security and one less thing to think about. I don't think a helmet gives enough of a sense of security to make that 6' drop or gap or whatever.
If I had to start over I probably would have read less about how to freemount, ride, etc. and just tried to do it myself.

Memphis Mud
2002-12-28, 12:36 PM
I would not have taken a 30 yr break. If we'd had this internet and this forum back then, I'd have stayed into it.

MUni didnt exist either. That'll keep you interested.

guitarist88
2002-12-29, 10:41 PM
hey jonny when you were talking about new friends were you talking about me?

guitarist88
2002-12-30, 04:46 AM
Originally posted by guitarist88
hey jonny when you were talking about new friends were you talking about me? michael.jpg

jagur
2002-12-30, 05:07 AM
1st i would have started earlier and 2nd i would have takin a bus to the uni.com wharehouse and spent a week riding every uni there before i bought one so i knew exactly what i wanted without out all the experiments.

ah wait,i probobly would have sold that one too,at least the road trip would have been nice :)

JonnyD
2002-12-31, 06:22 AM
when you were talking about friends were you talking about me?

Mike-- you could say that, yeah.:)

guitarist88
2003-01-01, 08:25 PM
I haven't seen you since last year!
:cool:

bagpiperboy
2003-01-01, 10:28 PM
beautiful picture mike, are you going to post the movie of that sometime? I would post a picture of you from efy, but I forgot to backup my adobe photoshop when I cleared my hard drive!!:eek: so that will just have to wait
-Jonathan Ware-

Uniwitold
2003-01-02, 10:46 AM
I would begin at least 57 years earlier at the age of 10.Wear protecting gear succesively to presenting injuries.Bear with the boring task of putting on the gear in the knowledge that I will have more fun than suffering.
Knowing my temperament ,when young, the above said would amount to nailing fresh gelli to the tree.
I hope the comm.lines of this messge are appropriate.
Uniwitold.

JonnyD
2003-01-02, 07:47 PM
By the way, that picture of me, taken by guitarist88, is copyrighted. :D :rolleyes: ;)

Erin
2003-01-09, 05:29 AM
I would have done it just about exactly the same! I'm glad I listened to the folks on this forum.... I would have made less wise uni purchases and spent a lot of time 'reinventing the wheel' - har, har, while figuring out how to freemount, hop, idle etc if I hadn't had the help of this forum.

And I'm glad I discovered Darren Bedford.... my completely reliable supplier of my seemingly endless desire for uni's and their various parts.

I (heart) uni/MUni/Trials

johnfoss
2003-01-17, 06:27 PM
Originally posted by JonnyD
From now on, what would you do different? (assuming you still knew about everything, you just lost all of your skill) I don't think I would change anything. Had I learned to ride at a much earlier age, I probably would not have stuck with it. Then where would I be? Probably not in CA where the weather is nice.

Had I learned on a "real" unicycle instead of a P.O.S. Troxel, I might not have had the appreciation of what I'd accomplished, so may not have seen it as so important.

I made a lot of mistakes along the way, but the overall experience has been way too positive to mess with. If the chain of events had not happened the way they did, I never would have met my wife.

But "assuming I still knew about everything" I would have made some certain stock purchases... :)