BIG RED

 

url“Owwww, oww, owwwww,” I cried.

“It’s nothing.” said my friend. “It’s just a scrape.”

Meanwhile blood was spilling everywhere in an ever-widening pool around our feet.

Somehow, as I was showing my new friend how to ride a tricycle, which she had never done before, and I held the trike steady for her so it wouldn’t move out from under her as she sidled on, I had my hand precariously gripped tight around the big front wheel. As she got on she pushed the pedals hard, and before I was ready, my index finger caught in the spokes and chopped the top of it off. Blood was gushing out in great big bloops of deep shiny crimson drops everywhere.

I called my trike Big Red because that’s what it was, and my new little friend who had just moved in a couple of houses down from ours had seen me riding really fast down our little San Fernando Valley street in Encino, in those track houses that were built for the soldiers coming home from WW2 and Korea, and I would go tearing down the sidewalk with the white plastic streamers flowing at at least 5 miles an hour. And she wanted to do that too. And even at three and a half, I knew I could teach anybody anything that I knew how to do, so I was showing her.

“Come ooooon,” she complained. “I want to gooooo.”

“Okay, okay,” I said, tears in my eyes, holding the bike steady so she could get back on, blood pouring down the sides of the tire and my jeans.

I held my finger tight to slow down the spurting blood. I was starting to feel dizzy.

But here’s the funny part and what I most remember.  It was how embarrassed I was.

Embarrassed that I had hurt myself.

Shame that she had to stop what she was doing, and that she had noticed.

The stupidity of me that I had done something that I couldn’t hide.

And somehow that I had wrecked her first tricycle riding experience.

So I bit my lip hard and I took my little white t-shirt hem and wrapped it tight around my finger like a tourniquet ,so it would bleed into the t-shirt, and it wouldn’t be so obvious.

And this worked well enough.

She immediately began to pedal with a great big smile on her face.

I let go faster this time.

I remember her laughing and laughing as she rode my Big Red, round and round in big weaving circles in the driveway.

And I was happy she was happy.

I really was.

This is a true story.  The End.

DIANA LANG © 2016

6 thoughts on “BIG RED

  1. Jodi Plaia

    Wow. So good. I was right there… in that moment with you while reading this. I’ve got a lump in throat.

    Reply
  2. Hilary Lindsay

    It is so sad for us to be embarrassed to say we hurt, to say we need. Why wouldn’t we think the others will believe us, will value us? We are told it’s better to give than receive but it’s only true because receiving is so difficult. Ironically we assume it’s stronger to be the giver but so many of us give just to feel worthy. We have to give to feel good about ourselves. Ah well, sometimes we are the unwitting or unwilling or grateful beneficiary of that from another ourselves! We are so weird. 🙂

    Reply
    1. Diana Lang Post author

      It’s how I was wired at 3 1/2. It doesn’t actually feel weird to me. I think, even at that age, I understood pain and need, and I was simply responding to it. It’s complicated, lol. Love you, Hilary.

      Reply

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