Monday, June 29, 2009

16 Bike Shop Dreams

"As long as you're going to think anyway, think big."
- Donald Trump

Be cautious. Have you ever found yourself, that day, fooling around in the bike shop, looking at mediocre bikes with modicum price tags when a clever little salesman decides to reel in your interest by quoting Donnie Trump (see above) ? And then he escorts you like a long lost brother towards a sleek and voluptuous looking bike hanging on the wall at the premium end of the shop.

Your eyes suddenly widen and you stare at it for a long time. You are entranced as it captivates you in a spellbind. You are gaping like a hippo. You are literally drooling from the mouth. There is a puddle of it near your feet. Now there is so much of it that it has become a scaled down human version of Lake Baikal.


Ofcourse, in no way is he asking you to make the purchase. You see, bike shop salesmen have an innate sixth sense. Without much physical contact, they already know how worn out your wallet is, the amount of cobwebs residing inside with its intricate architectural designs, that black and white photo of you in front of your house before you couldn't afford it anymore and it was foreclosed, those finger print grease marks on it from the engine of your vintage automobile that would spontaneously combust into flames when it was driven in the sun, those business cards handed to you by sympathetic employers after interviews with "Don't Contact" handwritten behind them, that credit card whose magnetic stripe won't work anymore due to the mountain of overflowing debt, those food ration stamps creased and folded so horribly that an art connoisseur would mistake it for Origami and may actually even offer you a price for them....

..Sigh.

Like a child who first wet his bed, you slowly furnish him your embarassing wallet with a strange sort of smile. Perhaps blue from shame, the last thing you do to save yourself is flick the lone green colored penny from in there like David Blaine the magician and quickly wipe it off with saliva to clean the copper oxide.

"Its okay, " he says in a morose tone and pats your shoulder. Then he points you to the door as he turns around to help another customer. His face has a smirk that you never caught properly.

"The exit is that way," he finishes off.

Its high time school textbooks corrected themselves. Mayflies don't have the shortest lifespans.



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16 comments:

  1. didnt get the gist of the last sentense. were u saiyng dreams die faster than mayflies? :))))

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  2. Wow, man. Way to just bum me out. Did you do a credit check on me and dig around in my wallet before you wrote that?

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  3. Anonymous4:28 PM

    Nice one! This lends itself to my theory of why bike shops are termed 'brick and mortar'. Mortar = blowing up dreams. =)

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  4. I certainly haven't come down to the level of desperation you describe (thankfully!). But its interesting that at my bike shop, there's always a few hard-pressed individuals from the neighbourhood touring the bike shop, marvelling at the luxuries of capitalism they could never dream to even touch, leave alone buy. Its funny, also a little sad.

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  5. Why does that bike cost 15 grand? Not even Lance Armstongs hand built Trek costs that much?

    I think P.T. Barnum said it best when he said,“There's a sucker born every minute”.

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  6. Anonymous7:40 PM

    15,000??? And its still stuck with 10 speed record on it. Not fair.

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  7. Why 15,000? Its for the Italian smell. C'mon guys! :)

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  8. Brilliant! That made me smile out loud.

    I did *exactly* that in a bike shop the other weekend where the object of my lust was a Ridley Helium.

    I bought a spare tube instead. :-)

    CAPTCHA: sweti. Like my palms while I stared at the beautiful carbon fibre.

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  9. B : Sweet bike, that. Let your wife not know about your lusts.

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  10. I really hate the marking up of product in the cycling world - it is easily one of the most gauging industries behind high fashion.

    There is nothing about a Pinerello that justifies the price tag, even the materials and assembly bottleneck of the Dogma.

    ...and riding on LightWeights is throwing money away unless you are a pro.

    Fight the industry and buy OEM carbon parts, you're still in the black vs a branded frame even if you throw it out and buy a new one each season and transfer the groupset.

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  11. Anonymous11:37 PM

    @Jason : Thats why there's Ebay. Isn't it amazing there's a fine balance to this world? Or someone would make me bankrupt by now.

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  12. Beautiful writing - that hurts.

    Gonna have to go give my CAAD8 some love now. At least she's loyal - and paid for.

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  13. Anonymous1:23 PM

    A $15000 bike is absurd. I recently saw a Trek with Lance's autograph on it in a bike shop for $9500. Anything more than about $4000 is pure extortion. With a little internet research and determination, anyone can put together a spectacular bike with top-end components for a fraction of what bike shops charge.

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  14. Anonymous7:38 PM

    I love this fresh blog. It gives me a break from all the Lance Armstrong fueled 'news' and unwanted commentary on others.

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  15. I visited my LBS yesterday and they had exactly that bike on display, too. Didn't do anything for me? What's wrong with me? I'm worried now ... :-)

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  16. Don't worry, there isn't anything wrong with you, Pinerallos don't really do anything for me either ;)

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Thank you. I read every single comment.