Nyx788

Nyx788 t1_j6ngy90 wrote

I've been to the gym and back with stop at walmart then headed to work- all with little issues.

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Nyx788 t1_iv09vt4 wrote

I had the fun privilege of being hit my a car on my morning run in January.

I can tell you that the woman never even turned her car off, just yelled through the window, and when I went into flight mode she didn’t even wait the 30 seconds it took me to come back to my senses.

The police were also zero help.

So one broken toe, caused me to lose 6 weeks of my marathon training, and a bunch of therapy later I’m still finding fun little side effects from it in my life.

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Nyx788 t1_isbh4ou wrote

Totally see what your saying. I do think it comes back to that feeling of 'It won't ever happen to me' and hopefully it doesn't. There are defiantly areas I've ran once or twice but quickly marked off as no-go zones because of to many blind spots/drivers racing down the street/no or poor sidewalks.

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Nyx788 t1_isbfmhz wrote

A lot of people are oblivious and assume THEY will never be in an incident. I can tell you that earlier this year I was hit by a car on my run (they did a rolling stop while turning right at red light and it was the driver's side of the car that hit me) and I was wearing brightly colored clothing and had multiple bright lights on me to indicated 'hey person here'.

I love running roads and do so all over town (mostly Springfield) but I make sure I'm as safe as possible; running at less busy times, bright colored clothing, lights, bone transfer headsets (so I can hear the world around me), when I'm on the street running I run towards traffic, if I'm not 100% sure a car is paying attention I just wait and if it gets too busy out I reroute to a less populated area.

I cannot even tell you the amount of, mostly men, running in the dark wearing all black; mind blowing. Drivers do need to pay more attention but as runners/bike riders we need to go out with the expectation that they aren't.

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