Like Riding a Bike
By
John W. Vander Velden
You have heard the adage…”Just like riding a
bike”. You know things learned that are
not forgotten. Well mostly. I will not argue that there are things
learned on the subconscious level that are so ingrained into our minds that we
can trust they remain. Riding a bike is
one of them. To attack the process of
balancing on two wheels logically will result in failure. Sometimes there are things you just have to
learn by doing.
How did you learn to ride a bike? That’s assuming you did learn. Not everyone does. I remember teaching my son and a nephew how
to ride. You know running along side
with one hand on the seat the other on the handlebar, huffing out encouragement
until my last wind failed. I also remember
failing to teach another nephew using the same process. You have to want to learn to ride a bike,
even be willing to take a tumble in the process.
I was never as strong as my older brother. He is likely still stronger. But having an older brother shapes your
perspective. He could ride a bike
and…well, I couldn’t…then. Fact was I
had to learn on my own…mostly. Hints
about steering into the lean and keep pedaling were helpful. But certainly no training wheels were
available. We had a slight grass covered
incline on our farm. Push the bike to
the top, line it with a cement block I had placed so I could climb on, make
certain the pedal was right, push off pedal and …fall…bang…ouch!
I remember lying in the grass and wondering what I had
done wrong. No time to dwell on that,
get up and repeat the process. I found
myself a few yards further down hill.
Hmmmm…I’m improving. Like I said
you have to want to ride bad enough. My
brother could ride and I had something to prove. I don’t remember how many times over how many
days I worked at learning that skill.
But it likely wasn’t many. I was
a kid after all. But what mattered was that
I did learn and I did ride…a lot. Sorry
Mrs. Lambert. My high school English
teacher said that “a lot” was only a place you build a house. So I rode a great deal and still do.
I don’t think about turning into the lean or anything
else. I just ride my bike. So what is this post about? Bike riding?
Sorta’. About wanting to learn a skill? Closer. About relying upon those things our minds
know without our conscious thoughts, like walking and chewing gum? Could be.
We trust that we can do things even if we haven’t done
them in a while…”just like riding a bike”.
That the skill exists waiting for our need. I expect that is true about a great many
things. But we should go back to when
and where we learned these talents in the first place…the why…and the how…and
remember the mindset that drove the learning.
Real learning can’t be forced.
Set kids in a classroom and put a book in front of them, demand they
read chapter 235, page 85,022 or whatever.
They’ll be a quiz later. But pass
or fail those facts do not find a real home in his mind if that student does
not really want them there. He needs to
want to learn it.
Back to you and me.
When we want to learn a skill or some information we do what it takes to
learn it. We accept the tumbles…the
bruises…skinned knees…to gain that skill.
And if we do…if we really do…then even years later that skill or that
knowledge will come to us when we need it most…just “like riding a bike”.
I rely upon the things I have learned. I take many of those talents for
granted. But everyday I get up and walk,
and that should remind me that there was a time I couldn’t. That thousands of times each day I do things
small and larger without a thought, thing I have been taught. And knowing that, I should understand that
I’m not done learning…not yet…not ever. The
desire to learn is still in me. To me
it’s part of life and drives me forward.
Not that every lesson is easy…or fun…or painless. But just like the improbability of rolling
along on two wheels did not deter me, for I did learned to ride a bike, and I
will continue to learn…today…tomorrow…and as long God gives me breath.
(768 Words) 2-23-2017
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