Monday, June 23, 2008

Fighting terrorism one 20-mile ride at a time

What with the ongoing national anxiety over terrorism and the resultant formation of the Homeland Security Department, there’s been a lot of talk lately about what constitutes “torture.” Is torture only the really nasty stuff, or is forcing someone to sit through season three of “American Idol” in its entirety enough to qualify? (PS: Yes, it is.)

Personally, I don’t know. I’m repulsed by the idea of hurting someone in order to gather “intelligence.” I also don’t like the idea of some loony toon planting a bomb in a Twinkies factory in an effort to strike a blow for whatever deity/dictator/heavy metal guitar star he pledges his allegiance to.

So, like a lot of Americans, I’m confused, perplexed, ambiguous, and a couple other words that appear in the thesaurus under the word “confused.”

But I may have a solution; one that will appeal to both the right and left, the patriots and the humanitarians: My bicycle.

My bike is a beauty, an older Fuji road model, still in excellent shape with a reasonably light, rigid frame and all the bells and whistles. (Actually, it has no whistle, but it does have a bell.)

It also sports a teeny, tiny seat, made of a space-age material that is —according to the manufacturer and the guy at the bike shop who managed to say this with a straight face—“super comfortable” for long, scenic rides through the countryside. It really is, too, for the first mile or so. After that, things go downhill fast, and not the kind of downhill most cyclists look forward to.

The Lovely Mrs. Taylor and I ride between 10 and 15 miles every night after dinner, and usually 20 to 30 on weekends. People who know me no doubt wonder how I manage to stay so—ahem—full-figured, what with all this exercise. Let me just say that beer and Mexican food provide more than enough caloric integrity to maintain my Jovian physique, regardless of any workout regimen I may undertake. Short of running daily marathons, I’m never gonna be skinny.

But back to torture and how it relates to my bicycle seat. And more importantly, how Homeland Security could use this knowledge to their advantage.

The beauty of it, see, is that riding my bike doesn’t look like torture. A phalanx of Newsweek photographers could line up along the road to shoot photos of bicycle-riding suspects being interrogated and no one reading the magazine at home would think twice about the possible inhumanity of it all.

Riding my bicycle looks like fun! And at first, it is. Even your average terrorist would think so.

For that first couple of miles, it’s a real lark; wind in your hair, sun on your back, the endorphin rush that comes from getting off your fat behind and actually doing something physical. Then—speaking of fat behinds—you notice yours is getting a little uncomfortable. That tiny seat, designed for guys who look like Lance Armstrong, is doing things to your Homer Simpson backside that God and nature never intended.

By mile five, you’re wondering why someone can’t build a bicycle seat that feels more like a Barcalounger and less like an iron maiden (the medieval torture device, not the rock band).

By mile ten, you’re just wishing there was a government agent nearby to whom you could confess, so he could get you a pillow to sit on and make the pain stop.

By mile 20, you’re no longer aware of your backside, except as a distant extremity that’s going to feel really, really weird when you finally stop pedaling and dismount. You no longer care about cadres, terrorist cells or political ideologies—you just want to get off the flippin’ bike, already!

And all the while, to people driving past in their comfortable Buicks and Toyotas, you look like you’re having the time of your life. Only you and Homeland Security know the terrible truth.

More “Reality Check” online at http://mtrealitycheck.blogspot.com or www.milive.com.

No comments: