Showing posts with label bike. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bike. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

The Easy Way to Teach Your Child to Ride a Bicycle

By Mike in Tokyo Rogers


Have you ever taught a child how to ride a bicycle? Well, if you have, then you can attest to the fact that it is a very rewarding experience and is also a time for growth and a memories to last a lifetime with that child...


Well, heck, it should be with all that exercise you get running along side of the bike pushing and holding it up, pulling your hair out, huffing and puffing and hoping you don't have a heart attack!


Teaching a child to ride a bike can also be an exercise in total frustration, grinding one's teeth, counting to ten, and great practice for patience therapy besides wanting to scream out loud things like, "STOP PUTTING ON THE BRAKES WHEN YOU ARE TRYING TO PEDAL!!!"


But, hopefully, we catch ourselves before we lose our tempers and calm down....


No, folks, teaching a child to ride a bike shouldn't be that big of a deal. It should be easy for both of you. Today I'm going to show you how to do it easily and simply with the minimum amount of effort for both you and that child.....


Thank God, I finally taught my six-year-old to ride a bike... In spite of the way they teach kids to ride bikes in Japan...


In Japan, they recommend training wheels. They also put the seats so low that, if you are not careful, the kid could scratch up their knees on the road. Since I live in Japan with my Japanese wife (and she's the boss) then we did things the Japanese way and my son had been riding around on his bike with training wheels for over a year. I wanted to remove the training wheels and do it my way... But, no!!!! The wife wouldn't let me.


This meant that, after the training wheels came off, he still had no sense of balance and I spent several hours holding the bike's seat and running along the bike trying to teach my kid something about it. After doing that several times in the heat of summer, I "let" my wife try that once... She got the point and relented; not only did the training wheels come off, the pedals came off too!


Then I took him to a small sloping parking lot and let him coast down the hill dozens of times while trying to keep his balance. Now that's the way to teach a child balance! No more of this running along besides the bike holding it up and hoping that you don't get a heart attack.


Trust me folks, I have 4 children; I think one of the worst and most inefficient ways to teach your child to ride a bike is by use of training wheels.


Two days of practice without pedals (30 min. each)... 
Today, pedals and off he goes!


My son has been messing around with training wheels for a year and hadn't learned any balance. Hence, of course, he cannot ride a bike.


Well, he couldn't until yesterday and today. Today, I got my way! And today he rides a bike, no problem!


Let old Mike tell you young parents how to teach your children to ride a bike:


First: remove the pedals and training wheels.


Second: find a nice low slope where the child can practice "gliding" down the slope.


Third: keep repeating this over and over for an hour or so for two or three days (maybe less)


Four: when the child can "glide" return the pedals and then help your child by holding the back of the bike while they pedal.


Five: You should be done. The child can ride the bike.


Six: Give the kid a hug and have yourself a drink.




Trust me folks. This works every time.


Ah, sweet efficiency and a lack of frustration!  


What does this have to do with marketing? Everything! Because frustration and exhaustion are not conducive to creative thinking... So, if you have a child who you need to teach how to ride a bike, then take my advice: Take off the training wheels and let the child practice "gliding" down a low slope in order to gain balance. Once the child does, put the pedals back on and, after a few pushes and support runs with dad, you're there!


It's so much easier and less frustrating... Then you can open a bottle of wine and celebrate... And come up with some good ideas!


------


Keywords: bike, bicycle

Monday, September 13, 2010

Japanese Government-Sponsored Bicycle Extortionists

By Mike in Tokyo Rogers

What a scam! I have uncovered an overt Japanese government-sponsored project to steal ordinary citizen's bicycles and extort money from said citizens in order to have their bikes returned.


This extortion plan has been running for years but it has come to my attention only recently. Before I explain the details of this vile scheme, let me give you some background information.

Last Friday was a really bad day. Probably one of the worst days I have had since I've been in Japan. Here, all this time, I thought the "crime" in this country was basically inconsequential, but my illusions had been shattered: Someone stole my bicycle.

What a bummer. I had that bike for over four years! I had never locked it even once. Figured I didn't need to.

I won the bike playing Pachinko, so it was free. I took it home and gave it to my daughter who didn't want it. So it sat for a few years in the rain, getting rusty, until one day I decided to ride it.

I had actually begun to enjoy riding the old bike around. I didn't care if people laughed at me for riding a little girl's bike. Everyone in this town knows me. After all, I don't intentionally live my life to make a fashion statement. I don't need the approval of my peers to know that I am cool.

I mean, what could be cooler than a 52-year-old ex-punk rocker riding around town on a little girl's bike?

Chiba-San – Yoga's Rock & Roll grocer
My old "wheels" were rusted and worn. One of the pedals was broken off and I had screwed a bolt in its place so I could pedal the bike.

Sure, it was a piece of junk. But it was my piece of junk and I loved it. Now it's gone...

I straddled up to my favorite seat at my favorite bar and ordered a strong one to drown my tears. I sang to the bartender about my missing friend, and all the good times we had together. Next to me sat Mr. Chiba. He is the "Rock 'n' Roll" vegetable guy in town. Mr. Chiba is cooler than cool.

I guess I should tell you about Mr. Chiba right here. Chiba-san runs a vegetable stand here in Yoga. You folks in the States go to your super-markets and stock up on a week or two worth of groceries and that's that. In Japan, most people don't do things that way.

In Japan apartments are very small. So most people go grocery shopping daily. Of course super-markets sell vegetables, but most people buy from vegetable stands that are everywhere you go here, including Tokyo. So we have direct, fresh-from-the-farm veggies available daily. Vegetables sold at large supermarkets are not as fresh.

Everyday, thousands of people park their bikes in front of the train stations.
Anyhow, most of the vegetable guys are out in front of their stands hawking for customers. But Mr. Chiba is too cool for that. It seems like he could care less if you shop at his vegetable stand or not. While the other guys are out in front shouting out to prospective customers to come by, Mr. Chiba is just sitting in his stall, listening to 70's Rock music and "chilling out." The guy don't talk too much.

Perhaps it's because he has confidence that he has the best produce at the best prices. Maybe he does. He kicks everyone's rear-end when it comes to discounts on fresh Strawberries and Bananas.

Anyhow, I'm at the bar, complaining to Mr. Chiba that someone stole my bike. He tells me that it probably wasn't "stolen." He says that probably the government took it away.

"When did you leave your bike in front of the train station?" He asks.

Aerial reconnaissance photo of Stalag 13
"Friday." I reply.

"Yeah, I saw where they were taking away all the bikes on Friday," he tells me.

That makes sense. I mean, "Who in their right mind would steal a rusty old piece of junk with a flat back tire, like my bike?" I say.

So he tells me to go to the station and ask the guys there about it. I do. And sure enough, those government-backed criminals went and scooped up every single bike that was parked in front of the train station on that day.

I go to where they have interned all the bikes. Before I can walk in, the two old guy guards ask me to fill out a form with my name address, phone number, etc. I have to show them a picture I.D. too.

Red arrow indicates rusted out, old clunker
They tell me where the bikes that were confiscated that particular day were. I walk into the prison grounds. There must be ten thousand bikes in this "bike penitentiary." I walk around and there she is! I spot my bike.
"Wow! Japan is a great place!" I think (a bit too soon).

I wheel my bike to the gate and tell the guard that this is my bike. He tells me that I can take my bike, but I have to pay a small parking fine. I reach into my pocket and start to pull out a couple of dollars.
"How much?" I ask.

"Two thousand, five hundred yen." He replies.

"Two thousand, five hundred yen!? That's about $25 dollars!" I'm shocked. "Wait a minute! You guys go and steal my bike from in front of the train station and you want me to pay you about $25 bucks to get it back? No way!" I protest.

The old guy just says, "Two thousand, five hundred yen."

"Look, this bike is old, worn out, and rusty. The back tire is flat. I got it for free. I've never even locked it. I'm not going to pay you $25 dollars for my own bike back. Come on, let me have my bike!"
But the old guy wouldn't budge. Finally I said to him:

"If I don't pay you the money, then you guys will have to keep the bike. Is it okay if I don't pay?"

"Yes." He says.

So I walk out of the bike jail and I'm mad. Those scum steal my bike and then they want to steal my money too! Well, I'll show them! I'm not going to pay.

A few days later, I'm back at Chiba-San's vegetable stand and he asks me if I found my bike. I tell him I did. I also tell them that they wanted two thousand, five hundred yen for the bike, so I didn't pay. Chiba says I shouldn't have spoken Japanese to those old guys.

"You mean if I acted like I couldn't speak Japanese, they would have let me have my bike back for cheaper?" I ask him.

"No. But at least that way, you could have given them a hard time." He takes a drag on his cigarette and laughs at his own dry jokes. I like this Chiba guy's sense of humor.

I tell Chiba that I have a plan to steal, er, I mean "rescue" my bike. I figure that I could go back to the bike prison late at night and scale the fence. Once inside the compound, I would locate my bike and carry it out of the grounds.

But wait a minute! How am I going to carry a heavy bicycle over a 13-foot-high fence that has rolled barbed wire at the top? I would need help. I ask Chiba if he'd help me rescue my bike.

"You are going to "rescue" your bike!?" He asks with a chuckle.

"Yeah! I'm an American. We are good at these kinds of things. We do it all the time.... Of course I don't have a helicopter. But are you going to help me or not?"

He just grins, and says, "Sure. Anytime."

We both just start laughing.

At least there are no machine-gun towers or spotlights
So I have considered my bicycle rescue plan thoroughly: The dangers and the risks involved. I have also considered the possibility of a loss of life. (Mine – I mean, what if I got tangled up in that barbed wire?)

Well, I was going to steal back my bike. But I have decided against it. Why? Two reasons:

First, I know Chiba-san; If he saw some cops coming, he'd probably just light up a cigarette and mosey along like he didn't know me. Leaving me to my fate. If the enemy police did show up I know I cannot depend on my Japanese ally to stick it out and fight for me.

And, second; I might be an American, but I'm not as dumb as these people we've got running our federal government. I think these things through; all the scenarios, all the possibilities. I am a firm believer in Murphy's Law.

The problem with my plan was that once I got into the compound and got my bike, how was I going to get the bike and myself back over the 13-foot-high fence covered with barbed wire?
Nope. Couldn't be done without a big ladder or a helicopter. And I'm not about to go walking around the neighborhood at night carrying a big ladder. Do you think that might look suspicious? Nah!

That was it. And so, "Operation Enduring Rescue" has been..... Cancelled; I had no good exit plan. And now, I have no crummy bike either....

But at least I'm not trapped inside a barbed wire compound with a bunch of broken down transportation in the heat of the night with no exit strategy – Like some Americans in Afghanistan or Iraq that you might know.

(Final note: I found out what happens to the bikes that are never claimed by their owners. The Japanese government ships them to North Korea under the guise of Economic Developmental Assistance. This is such a despicable ruse. Why? Well, the government steals our bikes and if we don't claim them, they send the bikes to the DPRK and most probably count each one as $25 in economic aid. But, when you realize that any bike that is not claimed is just abandoned by it's owners, then you realize that the bikes are just trash. And they are – if the owners think the bikes are worth the money, they pay to get their bike back. The rest? Garbage.

So in order to help fight Japan’s mounting trash burdenthe government "donates" the bikes to North Korea and looks, to the rest of the world, like it is helping out a destitute country. When in all actuality, it is just disposing of junk that has to have parts cannibalized in order to make a running vehicle...)


(This article first appeared on Lew Rockwell)

Top 3 New Video Countdown for May 6, 2023! Floppy Pinkies, Jett Sett, Tetsuko!

   Top 3 New Video Countdown for May 6, 2023!!  Please Follow me at:  https://www.facebook.com/MikeRogersShow Check out my Youtube Channel: ...