rumrunnergirl
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Apr 11, 2005
- Messages
- 1,108
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I don't think they are going to get hurt on the sidewalk or the driveway
Yes it is.Why? Is it made of nerf?![]()
I guess I'm missing your point here... Are you saying that since you can fall down a flight of stairs, then it's pointless or silly to take precautions when it comes to other activities???If just cruising around no, if doing something dangerous yes. You can fall walking down the stairs or running around and hit your head and get brain damage.
Yes it is.
I don't question how you raise your kids please don't question me, There is no chance my are going to get hurt. When they move on to bigger bikes then yes they will wear helmets
Sorry, that line of reasoning makes no sense at all. NONE.
I don't think they are going to get hurt on the sidewalk or the driveway
Are you mocking those who make their children wear bike helmets? Seriously????
What's next...make fun of babies who ride in carseats?
I guess I'm missing your point here... Are you saying that since you can fall down a flight of stairs, then it's pointless or silly to take precautions when it comes to other activities???
My family doesn't need any prompting when it comes to precautions against head injuries. We have a friend and neighbor who slipped on some ice in a parking lot three winters ago and suffered a concussion that resulted in neurological damage that he still hasn't 100% recovered from. As an indirect result, he's since lost his engineering job and his marriage and now lives on SSI. Members of my family wear helmets when we mount a bike, when we ski, and I even wear one whenever I ice skate.
Ah, here's how these threads go. The true believers who can't wait to pounce post, a very few dissenters post and are shredded...
and the vast majority read, but don't bother posting, because they don't feel like being shark bait in the "you're a bad parent" feeding frenzy.
Those are horrible analogies and do not make sense for trying to prove a helmet should always be worn.
You miss the point. Everything is dangerous, some things are more dangerous than others. You use the proper protection when necessary. If you are doing jumps, riding downhill, or doing a race you need a helmet. If you are just cruising around the block you don't need a helmet.
The hockey player in your sig should be wearing a full face helmet to protect his face. I think playing hockey without a full face helmet, like a football helmet, is much more dangerous than riding down the street without a helmet.
I'd actually argue that you need a helmet only when you have an accident on your bike. The problem is knowing when you're going to wreck. While I agree that your odds of crashing are greater on any given bike jump than riding around any given block, the cumulative risk for causal riding is greater for most bike riders... kids even more so. The only time I've gone over my handlebars was when I was a kid simply "riding around the block".You miss the point. Everything is dangerous, some things are more dangerous than others. You use the proper protection when necessary. If you are doing jumps, riding downhill, or doing a race you need a helmet. If you are just cruising around the block you don't need a helmet.
I agree, I wear a full cage when I play.The hockey player in your sig should be wearing a full face helmet to protect his face. I think playing hockey without a full face helmet, like a football helmet, is much more dangerous than riding down the street without a helmet.
Come now... No one's called anyone a bad parent. Hopefully someone you know won't have their lives turned upside down by head trauma in a "simple" accident so that you'll be turned into an insufferable "true believer" in the importance of head protection too. Quite frankly, I do view things differently now and take a little more caution when I do things like getting out of the shower, holding the hand rail on a flight of stairs (my father fell down the stairs at home last winter and fractured two of his vertebrae), walking to my car in a slick parking lot in dress shoes, walking out on a rink in street shoes, etc.Ah, here's how these threads go. The true believers who can't wait to pounce post, a very few dissenters post and are shredded...
and the vast majority read, but don't bother posting, because they don't feel like being shark bait in the "you're a bad parent" feeding frenzy.