A few days ago I broke my helmet again. This time I was going too fast on some gravel and sped across a turn that was sharper than I was expecting. I flew off my bike. I broke my third helmet. Time to get another.
I'm totally fine, nothing broken, no stitches or anything like that but I'm still pretty banged up. Most importantly though my head is fine. No concussion or head injury at all. Fortunately my partner is a first responder so honestly a great person to be around when you're in the middle of nowhere injured and they've been keeping an eye on me but I'm definitely past any sort of concussion danger period. I wasn't that worried anyway.
But that helmet gets to go in the trash and join its friends now. Missed but not forgetten.
I'm an experienced biker...and skater and hiker and kayaker and other stuff too. I've gotten myself out of stickier situations than this but it was very hot out and very sunny and I'd had a beer and a decent lunch and was near the end of my long bike journey and I goofed. It happens. And it's not a big deal because I had my helmet on.
The last time was a skating accident. It was wet and I forgot how slippery skates get when its wet. The previous time I thought it would be fun to ride down stairs. It is and I do it all the time but probably you shouldn't. At least not without a helmet.
I see people out all the time on all sorts of wheeled things without one and I feel so much anxiety for them. I'm not particularly clumsy or anything but if you do something long enough eventually an accident might happen. I wonder if they know the impact it will have on them and their loved ones if the accident happens to them. I wonder if they know how easy it is to prevent it from being as bad as it could be.
All of my accidents were maybe my fault but I know very few bikers who haven't had similar, either because of something they did or something someone else did. They're all okay too because they all wear helmets.
So comrades please just put a helmet on. Your brain is valuable because it contains a lot of who you are, and you're probably more valuable than you think. We all take care of our bodies and minds in so many ways so please don't neglect this way. Helmets are cheap, adjusted properly they can be very comfortable too. The right kinds can be personalized with stickers and messages and really become something special to you. Hopefully you buy one and you have it for life and you never need to replace it. But if you do need to replace it that's good too, because a helmet is so much easier to replace than you are.
Anyway I'm looking forward to buying my next helmet and I hope it lasts me longer than this last one. But if it doesn't I'll be glad to because hopefully it means I'm okay when I otherwise might not have been.
So please if you're going to be doing something that could result in a head injury, no matter how unlikely, just put on a helmet. You're worth it.
Brains do heal, but it takes a long, long time and there's never any garauntee of complete recovery, or even partial recovery. Plus brain damage is cumulative over time. Even bumps and shocks that don't cause any immediate symptoms can add up to traumatic brain injury. It's been a major thing with youth sports in the usa - us football involves a lot of high impact tackles and if a kid starts that at 6 or 8 by the time they're twenty they can accrue real damage that can effect them for life.
I know you're joshing but the helmet IS designed to break easily. This lets it absorb and redirect the force of the impact so effectively. Cars call it 'crumple zones' but it's the same thing.
You're supposed to replace most helmets any time you drop them even if there is no visual damage for this reason. The dropped helmet may now have cracks you can't see in the foam below the shell and in any subsequent crashes your skull may end up taking more force than it should.
I know you're joshing but the helmet IS designed to break easily. This lets it absorb and redirect the force of the impact so effectively. Cars call it 'crumple zones' but it's the same thing.
SURE, or maybe that makes sense or maybe BIG HELMET GOT TO YOU
That's why there's third party testing and helmet certifications. Do not trust DOT helmet certification because manufacturers can self-certify and the standard they self certify to is decades out of date. ECE certification actually requires real third party testing.
There are inexpensive MIPS helmets that cost around the same as other helmets and are no bulkier, but they will absolutely save you from being severely injured where others would fail to do so.
Yes! If you're on anything motorized, doing downhill cycling, or MTB, get an ECE 22.06 helmet. Do not settle for DOT!
If you're just a casual cyclist or short distance commuter in a bike-friendly, low traffic area with lots of separated bike trails and sidewalks everywhere like I am now, a full face helmet is probably overkill.
Yeah I gotta nose around to bike shops, fwiw last time I biked was months ago so I haven't been risking my dumbass head. I want one of those nice rotational impact ones tho.
Back in 2019 I was hit by a car when I was riding without my helmet. Got a nice concussion out of it, a few weeks of amnesia, and spent a few months recovering from the TBI.
If I had been wearing a helmet I would still have had months of FMLA with merely a broken shoulder and have played so many video games. Alas, the screens gave me headaches, all I could do were books of Sudoku puzzles!
yeah I probably should be more consistent, I'm around 50% in the summer and 100% in the winter. Its kinda miserable in the summer (I may just need a nicer helmet with better airflow) and I'm a pretty conscious biker and stick to streets and paths and such (and live somewhere where I'm usually on half decent cycling infrastructure and drivers aren't too aggro), but on the off chance I take the wrong kind of fall...
Its one of those things where I rationalize that the stats aren't actually that great on a helmet improving your safety in my kind of mild urban cycling situation, which is true, but on the other hand it can basically only help (though there is the phenomenon where drivers treat un-helmeted bikers with more caution, but I don't know the stats on that very well and kinda doubt it generalizes that well).
people on e-scooters without one are nuts ngl, especially the older/smaller ones that can get tripped up by friggin anything, but its normalized to go 15-20+mph on them down the goddamn sidewalk so I think helmets are a lost cause with the rental ones at least
Yeah for me it's just not worth the risk. If your head bounces off the pavement because a taxi decides that they're gonna open the door into you it's worthwhile to have something between your skull and the road. Keep yourself safe comrade you deserve it too
I've been lucky to only scrub out a couple of times with roughly 20 years of biking in a sleepy college town and then city with deece bike infrastructure. I'm also a chubby fit guy who takes it easy on my bike commute.
But still, I have a family to provide for now so I'm going to go to my local bike shop tomorrow and get a good helmet. Recs would be appreciated
Get a MIPS helmet that fits you and is comfy. That's the only recommendation. What's most important is that you wear it. The helmet you wear is the better than the helmet you don't regardless of any other qualities of the helmet.
I was a bike courier for a bit and very few wore them, though I always did. People got concussions and didn't care, but they may later on. I ate it a couple times but just got some scars on my legs and bruises on my arms but my head is mostly fine but I blame that on my birth and the crowd-surfing incident of 2011
Yeh. It's easy to be indifferent about your health when you're 23 and can walk off major injuries, but when you're sixty all those old injuries will add up to a lot of misery. Wearing ppe is about protecting all the people you'll become in the future, too. They deserve your kindness.
Definitely seconding your point on helmets. On another note, it's such a nice feeling to have a pint and bike around on a summer day, I wish summer wasn't coming to an end here!
"Fuck you, don't tell me what to do" reactions against wearing a helmet when riding is one of those times where "no veggies for dinner, no bedtimes" theoryless pop-anarchists really show their asses.
I got a concussion and almost had to get my brain scanned for injuries when I crashed off my bike. That was with the helmet. Helmet got broken into pieces. Without it, that would have been my head.
Hmm... Become a hermit, have no children, problem solved? At that point I can sleep anywhere, wolves can have me too if that's the case. Something something diogenes.
Thank you for sharing this, and I 100% concur. If you bike, skate, scoot, whatever, protect your head.
I had been riding my bike to work for a couple of years, without wearing a helmet. I knew I should get one but just never got around to it.
Finally, I actually got myself a helmet. The next day, riding to work, wearing my helmet for the very first time, riding the same route, doing the same ride like normal, I took a corner a little too sharp and my rear wheel caught the curb. I fell and banged my head HARD against the concrete bridge wall. That helmet saved my fucking brain. I wear my helmet every time I ride.
I've seen it if by hiking you mean climbing or bouldering or doing hiking on rocky cliffs or something. I don't hike in a helmet though I don't do a lot of climbing activities.
No, but i have a sem-irigid plastic insert that fits in my cap to give me a small amount of protection from smacking my head on branches.
Honestly, hiking in a helmet is hardly a bad idea. People trip in the bath and die all the time. If you're going to be scrambling up rocks why not? A well fitted helmet isn't necessarily uncomfortable or burdensome.
If i could dictate culture it'd be entirely normalized to wear simple protective gear almost all the time, because, again, why not?
Got into a wreck going 30+ mph on a steep downhill a year ago. Fractured my wrist, messed up my bike and shattered my helmet but walked away. Thank God for my helmet on that day.
If you drive in traffic, don't wear a helmet. It leads to much riskier driving since drivers conceive you as not as vulnerable, making accidents much more likely. A helmet won't protect you from the internal bleeding a car will cause in case of an accident.
So, I've seen this claim made before, but usually toned down quite a bit, with a study linked. What's the actual source study say?
Because there is a study showing a closer passing effect, yes, but its important to evaluate what it can and can't tell us, and frankly I didn't think the effect was big enough, to blanket say "don't wear a helmet in car traffic"
edit: here's the best analysis of the study I could find (a later paper focusing on statistics and how the original data was interpreted)
I don't have time to spend ages looking for more studies but this doesn't look like a big enough effect to say "don't ever wear helmets in traffic" (drivers averaged like 20cm closer passing with a helmet, but the averages are still firmly in the 1.5m range which is well beyond what's legally required in my jurisdiction)
frankly close passes may not even be the primary driver of crashes, making the point even more moot. seems like getting doored or squeezed into unsuitable terrain, or completely not seen and hit at an intersection or corner, all are more likely, but thats just in my experience
I'm not an "everyone should definitely have to wear a helmet all the time" person exactly, they aren't the silver bullet people like to think they are, and shouldn't be necessary in a relatively safe, calm urban cycling environment (ie not busy streets shared with cars) but in purely safety terms, I don't think there's evidence that the potential harms outweigh the benefits.
The firmest stance "against" helmets that I think is supportable is that they should certainly not be mandated, and that riding conditions should be improved by all available means so that they are less and less necessary.
Oh and worth noting, all of this analysis is based on one guy cycling in the UK in 2006. UK cycling and driving culture may not be generalizable to other countries.
People can, and do, die tripping over their cats. You should always wear a helmet regardless of conditions. Taking a spill from a bike is always dangerous, whether you're bombing down a narrow mountain path at 30mph or you just had a goofball moment and fell off your bike while you weren't moving. There's no good way to fall and bounce your head off concrete.