This so far has involved:
1. Buying bananas - However, rather predictably they have gone off before I have eaten them.
2. Running up and down the stairs - whenever I need something from a different floor, like a sandwich.
4. Riding from my house to university - on a bike, not horse, although still surprisingly dangerous.
I'm living in a different house this year in the centre of Bournemouth, but I didn't realise the initial treacherous bike route from my new abode.
My housemate had assuringly told me the route was a 'piece of cake'. However this was far from an Angel Delight.
More a Black Pudding.
I went out the back door, helmet on - I got hit by a car last year (on my bike, broken wrist etc) - and it started to rain. Hooray.
Then some steps appeared; I could handle these, but it was only 9.30am so I got off my bike and carried it down.
There's no need to be too adventurous yet.
But then, staring down at me was Bournemouth's Mount Kilimanjaro; a steep slope with less build up than a bad Death Metal record.
It just goes straight up. I need time to aclimatise, get into my stride, even change into an easier gear. The latter being the most vital.
The gear issue was the main problem surrounding my predicament - I was still in an enthusiastically steep gear from the previous day. This was going to be quite a climb.
In a positive move, I attempted to quickly get on my bike and change the gear to a lower one; I wobbled from side to side, trying to keep balance. Unsuccessfully, I put my feet back on the ground. I'm Ok though, I can do this: I didn't go out last night.
It was time to give it another go but it was hard seeing through the drizzle: I leapt on the pedals anyway, but my body went from one side to the other again, but this time more dramatically- a bit like a child who's parent has taken off the stabilisers without telling them.
As I tried to keep balance whilst getting into an easier gear something very unfortunate arose, or flew rather.
A FLY on some sort of suicide mission careered at high-speed into my left eye.
If you can imagine, you're walking down this hill, and you see a 'cyclist' who looks like he is on the peak of an 'A' class drug, raving on his bike, with one eye feeling the full affects of this chemical infusion. Squinting constantly with one hand appearing to punch his face (eye).
Unfortunately the nightmare continued; I had managed to get into a lower gear, but I had one hand trying to pull the fly out of my eye.
The bike was going right then left. Two hands had kept me on the bike. But, well, one...
Then, out of no where I was in a bush. Imagine thorns. This was no bed of roses.
I pulled myself out, smiling to passer-by's - they may have not see the incident.