Wednesday, October 31, 2012

What do you think about during long runs?

A US friend of mine thinks of business ideas as he jogs.  He is currently incubating a start-up from one of his ideas and I wish him every success!

I have always found long runs very cathartic.  Over the years of solo long runs and hence long hours of thinking : 
- I've changed cars (2005) from my Toyota to Nissan Sunny
- decided to end a friendship with a person who was a leech (2005 and amazingly, I forgave/forgot and re-learnt this lesson in 2010).  Guess it is true : a leopard never changes its spots. 
- psyched myself through the most difficult years of my life (2005-2006)
- talked myself through job changes, work problems, emotional problems...
- admired and loved Taiwan during my jogs in very different scenic conditions there

So yesterday when a friend asked me what goes through my head during the long runs, I had no answer for once!  

Ironically 2012, I clocked a record number of hours in terms of training/racing mileage, yet most of it are not solo runs.  I have been blessed with running kakis (in plural). We LSD together, go to races together.  It's been a little support group that I truly appreciate.

These days, I chit chat or listen to music over the runs.  No real  logical thinking happens anymore.  

Is this a good or bad thing?  Good, I would say.

Dicey days ahead

I realize I suck at human relationships.  My alien uncle coming to Singapore and wanted to stay with me.  But his daughter now lives in Singapore and she has a spare room and welcomes him.  He prefers to stay with me.  My own family thinks it's not right, plus they worry for me since I stay alone and he has been mentally unstable in recent years.  I would prefer if he spent some time with his daughter and granddaughter - that's the right thing to do.  For all my emailing/SMSing, I fail.  He's still going to be in my hair.

This morning I prayed for patience and tolerance.  The next 2 weeks are going to be rough - it's a first for me in my new pad.  As Michelle puts it, I can't strut naked around.  Not that I do, but then I caught myself doing that, thought of Michelle's words and had to laugh out loud.

After my early morning conf call, I listened to Hillsongs for a bit before going to work.  And today's readings from Psalm 145 :

I will extol you, my God and king;
I will bless your name forever and ever.
Every day I will bless you;
I will praise your name forever and ever.
Great is the LORD and worthy of much praise,
whose grandeur is beyond understanding.
One generation praises your deeds to the next
and proclaims your mighty works.
They speak of the splendor of your majestic glory,
tell of your wonderful deeds.
They speak of the power of your awesome acts
and recount your great deeds.
They celebrate your abounding goodness
and joyfully sing of your justice.
The LORD is gracious and merciful,
slow to anger and abounding in mercy.
The LORD is good to all,
compassionate toward all your works.
All your works give you thanks, LORD
and your faithful bless you.
They speak of the glory of your reign
and tell of your mighty works,
Making known to the sons of men your mighty acts,
the majestic glory of your rule.
Your reign is a reign for all ages,
your dominion for all generations.
The LORD is trustworthy in all his words,
and loving in all his works.
The LORD supports all who are falling
and raises up all who are bowed down.
The eyes of all look hopefully to you;
you give them their food in due season.
You open wide your hand
and satisfy the desire of every living thing.
The LORD is just in all his ways,
merciful in all his works.
The LORD is near to all who call upon him,
to all who call upon him in truth.
He fulfills the desire of those who fear him;
he hears their cry and saves them.
The LORD watches over all who love him,
but all the wicked he destroys.
My mouth will speak the praises of the LORD;
all flesh will bless his holy name forever and ever.

Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Long tail marketing

I wished I paid better attention during statistics class in school.

Never knew how linked it would be to business.

Was chatting with an ex-HP colleague and he brought up the idea of long tail marketing.

It's made popular by an editor from Wired magazine.
http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/12.10/tail.html?pg=5&topic=tail&topic_set=

Yeah, I think such things over long runs.  Ideas, dreams...  And yeah, it helps that I have smart people around me where we can discuss these thoughts.  Thank you Jesus.

I realize I have not been reading for a while.  Time to go Amazon shopping...

Thursday, October 25, 2012

My Bike is serviced and good to go!

My tubular tyres and rims were coming undone at the last ride.  How dangerous!  Thankfully I rode all the way back at our usual 35kph uneventfully.  Last Thu I took Speedier into Integrated Riding to fix the wheels and for his first ever servicing.  They found a leak in the valve of the rear tyre, so had to purchase a new tyre.  Picked up Speedier just before the ride, didn't have time to inspect him, went to the usual Wed ride.

So after the ride/run/supper last night, I did my usual wipe down of the bike and discovered a thick layer of muck on the chain - arghh... Integrated Riding must have put grease on the bike chain.  Took bike downstairs, degreased and hosed.  Had to repeat the process 3 times!  Should have just taken my dishwashing liquid to the chain.  Could have saved me time!

Mental note to self - tell bike shops never to help me grease bike.  Wax lube which I purchased as part of a mass order is simply awesome.  It's so clean!

While scrubbing the muck off, all I can think of is : I sure love living here.  Integrated riding is a 2min walk away.  I can hose my bike down even in the middle of the night without worrying about waking up the neighbours or making a mess.

And, one more : when I ask to borrow a bike, kind-hearted folks just drop it off since I'm so close to our meeting point at East Coast.   Thanks to K, my uncle has a foldie to explore the area when he arrives next week.  Work off some of his excess energy so he won't be preaching aliens/conspiracy theory to unassuming Singaporeans.

Matty

Matty and a slice of fake (rubber) bread.  

"Bread for me, why thank you!  Seem to have difficulty pinching a bit out to eat.  What?  It's fake!!!  Protests!"



Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Top city skylines

HK is no. 1?  And Singapore didn't make top 10?  I suppose it's all very subjective.  Even if you remove my bias, I still feel our new skyline with the Helix bridge, the Flyer, the spaceship-like Marina Bay Sands, is simply breathtaking.

I am blessed enough to get to appreciate the view every morning as I drive to work via the Sheares Bridge.  At the top of the bridge, as the view opens out, I still stop to thank God for His provision.

http://sg.news.yahoo.com/top-10-city-skylines-20121022.html?page=1

Engadget writeup on Greenwave lighting

Company I work for made it to Engadget!  Woot!
http://www.engadget.com/2012/10/22/greenwave-reality-ships-wifi-light-bulbs

Monday, October 22, 2012

Old friends

I just saw a post on FB by a friend, "old friends are like wine, the older they are, the better it gets".  In my heart, I started to say a quick prayer that she does not get hurt really soon.  

Human relationships are completely fallible.  It will happen, don't hold your breath.  I learnt this lesson many times over, the hard way, over the years.  The older/closer/better the friend, the greater the chance of that friend failing you, simply because you are more open/vulnerable to that person.  

It is best to expect nothing from friends, and when kindness comes, you will be genuinely happy about it.  Best lesson of all, adopt Job's attitude (Job 1:21).  
The LORD gave and the LORD has taken away; blessed be the name of the LORD!”

The lazy runner

Race no. 2 in the month of Oct (month of races) - Nike We Run SG.  Asked Alex to run ahead cos I didn't feel like sprinting 10km!  Memories of being winded beyond tolerance from the Safra run!  The coach clocked 49mins for the 10km run.  He was complaining of being tired from cycling.  Haha...

My plan was to start slow and then speed up after 5km or so.  But everyone was going pretty fast.  On many occasions, I literally slowed the pace and trot along just to catch my breath.  As my results shows, 2265 people finished ahead of me!  Fast!


With this race down, there's just 3 races to the end of the year.  Newton 30km, Stanchart 42km and MR25 50km.


I watch too much Korean TV

All started with Ian/Michelle watching this Korean series called 同伊.  As they relate in all seriousness, they once asked a dinner guest to go home early - so that they both can continue watching!  I thought they were joking, little did I know... After they were done, I was handed the disks with a "good luck".  Hmm...  

Initially, all Korean men look the same to me, I kept needing to stop to think, now who's he again?  Before you can say 'bibimbap!', I was in too deep.  One night I watched til 3am, ok ok I'm not proud of it but since there's really nothing much going on at work anyways, I took the next day off and continued with Korea hour.  Yesterday too.  I was happily watching and then had to stop in the middle of an imperial decree on dethroning the evil queen and reinstating the good queen, because it was dinner time with Matty!  

The kid is such a fussy eater. Ask him what he wants and he'll say soup and corn.  He rejected rice with soup last night and Michy had to get up midway through dinner in an Indonesian restaurant, buy a cup of corn from MacDonalds for the little guy.  

I am so tired now - between Matty and 同伊.  But be glad, there is peace in Korealand.  The good queen is back in place and the evil queen downgraded to concubine because the wise king was concerned for the crown prince's well being if he sent the evil queen away.

Friday, October 19, 2012

Do not be afraid


Gospel Lk 12:1-7

At that time:
So many people were crowding together
that they were trampling one another underfoot.
Jesus began to speak, first to his disciples,
"Beware of the leaven--that is, the hypocrisy--of the Pharisees.

"There is nothing concealed that will not be revealed,
nor secret that will not be known.
Therefore whatever you have said in the darkness
will be heard in the light,
and what you have whispered behind closed doors
will be proclaimed on the housetops.
I tell you, my friends,
do not be afraid of those who kill the body
but after that can do no more.
I shall show you whom to fear.
Be afraid of the one who after killing
has the power to cast into Gehenna;
yes, I tell you, be afraid of that one.
Are not five sparrows sold for two small coins?
Yet not one of them has escaped the notice of God.
Even the hairs of your head have all been counted.
Do not be afraid.
You are worth more than many sparrows."

Thursday, October 18, 2012

Runner's diarrhea

And I thought it's just my sensitive digestive tract.

http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/runners-diarrhea/AN00376

How life should be...

Last night's reading was particularly touching.  So obviously my life is far from the ideal...




Gal 5:18-25



Brothers and sisters:
If you are guided by the Spirit, you are not under the law.
Now the works of the flesh are obvious:
immorality, impurity, licentiousness, idolatry,
sorcery, hatreds, rivalry, jealousy,
outbursts of fury, acts of selfishness,
dissensions, factions, occasions of envy,
drinking bouts, orgies, and the like.
I warn you, as I warned you before,
that those who do such things will not inherit the Kingdom of God.
In contrast, the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace,
patience, kindness, generosity,
faithfulness, gentleness, self-control.
Against such there is no law.
Now those who belong to Christ Jesus have crucified their flesh
with its passions and desires.
If we live in the Spirit, let us also follow the Spirit.

Tuesday, October 16, 2012

My race calendar - updated again!

My racing year turned out to be busier than I intended!  Here's how it looks now :

25 Feb - Singapore Duathlon (10km run / 36km cycle / 5km run)
1 Apr - 2XU Compression run (15km - free race in KY's stead)
1 May - SIS Age Group run (10km - free race after they canceled Fear Challenge)
26 May - Adidas Sundown Marathon (21km)
1 July - Gold Coast Airport Marathon (42km)
15 July - SIS Age Group run (15km - free race in Manly's stead)
9 Sep - Army Half Marathon (21km)
13 Oct - North Face trail (50km)
21 Oct - Nike SG run (10km)
28 Oct - Newton run (30km)
11 Nov - Great Eastern run (21km - free race in Linny's stead)
18 Nov - Run for Hope (10km - free race given by Peter's friend)
24 Nov - Brooks Happy Run (9km)
1 Dec - Standard Chartered Marathon (42km)
30 Dec - MR25 Ultra (50km)

That's 15 races in total this year.  All the races + training runs = a lot of mileage!  Next year I will return to the basics.  Run short distances and enjoy the process.  For now til Dec 30, I will need to keep my game face on.  Because as the coach put it, pain is temporary, glory is forever!

Monday, October 15, 2012

I.am.an.ultra.marathoner

The results from the North Face run is out so early - 27 out of 76.  Yes, only 76 women in Singapore were mad enough.

It was a great race actually.  I was immensely blessed.  God gave me windy (pre-storm conditions) and yet held the rain til way after I left Macritchie.  I had the coach run beside me, and he even carried my water bottles for me so I ran unburdened - of cos I had to fall into a pool of mud to elicit any sympathy from him.  He kept me going...  not in the positive way, he'd barked, "comeon, run".  When I whinged about the blood, he only said "comeon run to the next checkpoint".   The pain was quite tolerable despite the fall, stomach bug, lack of training due to my laziness the last month...  I am indeed blessed.

And I could not have been able to finish so easily without Alex.  Having a pacer in him - I am very blessed.

Walked a great deal - most of the uphills I walked.  The camaraderie among the racers is just fantastic.  Everyone cheers each other on.   At the 38km mark, I looked at my watch and realise a sub-7hr timing was possible.  Together with 2 angmo ladies (one of whom is Angela Flynn who also rides with R&R - amazing coincidence), we hang together to the finish.  She finished right behind me.



Friday, October 12, 2012

The North Face Run

Last year, I wondered about this race.

This year, I signed up.

It's tomorrow.

I'm still weak from the stomach bug.


It's 50km of trail.

In the sun.

I wonder if I will need the hospital after.


Wednesday, October 10, 2012

Excuse, my stomach's on fire

After the BBQ on Sat night, I woke up to puke all night and since then, my stomach's been on fire.  I feel like this now
After failing with various self remedies : honey, lemonnade, 凉茶, even stronger 凉茶, I decided to see a doctor before Saturday's suicide mission (aka the North Face 50km race).

The doctor closest to home took half an hour to see 1 patient - seeing how there were 2 more patients in front of me and I had a 11am meeting, I left.  Went to my usual GP at Holland Drive during lunch (see! I told you Holland is the center of the universe).  Now to transfer the fire from my stomach to my legs and GO GO GO!

Without a Strategy, There Is No ROI

This guy sounds completely HP!  That's how we used to talk, "so what's your strategy?" is a common refrain.

http://www.briansolis.com/2012/08/without-a-strategy-there-is-no-roi/

I surrender



Tuesday, October 09, 2012

Spontaneous Human Combustion

I wonder about it sometimes...

And it all started from a bout of food poisoning when I had to wake up to puke numerous times.  My stomach was churning with acid for a long time.  Still churning as a matter of fact.  Running with heartburn is seriously uncomfortable, my buddy drove over for some super duper 凉茶 that costs $7!!  It's a little better, but stomach still emitting heat.

So I wonder about this.  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spontaneous_human_combustion


Monday, October 08, 2012

On marriage and divorce

Yesterday's reading was all about marriage.  First reading was from Genesis 2:18 on how God made Eve from a rib off Adam and the gospel reading was from Mark on marriage and divorce.

Mark 10:2-12

The Pharisees approached Jesus and asked,
"Is it lawful for a husband to divorce his wife?"
They were testing him.
He said to them in reply, "What did Moses command you?"
They replied,
"Moses permitted a husband to write a bill of divorce
and dismiss her."
But Jesus told them,
"Because of the hardness of your hearts
he wrote you this commandment.
But from the beginning of creation, God made them male and female.
For this reason a man shall leave his father and mother
and be joined to his wife,
and the two shall become one flesh.
So they are no longer two but one flesh.
Therefore what God has joined together,
no human being must separate."
In the house the disciples again questioned Jesus about this.
He said to them,
"Whoever divorces his wife and marries another
commits adultery against her;
and if she divorces her husband and marries another,
she commits adultery."

Thursday, October 04, 2012

What do you do with your lunch hour?

http://business.asiaone.com/A1Business/Careers/Out%2Bof%2Boffice/Story/A1Story20121003-375359.html

For the longest time, I ate lunch during the lunch break with my co-workers.  I have always been blessed with awesome co-workers - most of whom are still my friends til today.

In recent years, I started to use my lunch break to run errands or meet other friends.  While in Motorola, I could run to mid-day mass which was just fantastic.  I miss that.

In my current job, I totally give up.  I ate perhaps 1 week's worth of lunch with them, then I just did my own thing.  Sometimes I eat at the nearby foodcourt alone, peacefully.  Sometimes I run errands.  While I was renovating my home, I met my contractors to talk to them or shopped for furniture or house related matters.

Yesterday, I went to Far East Flora in Commonwealth over lunch.  I'm looking for cutesy plants for the kitchen.  So far, the plants I've seen are very er.. "plant like".  I want cutesy plants... I'll let you know if I find them. :)



Wednesday, October 03, 2012

Living like it's your last day on earth

M came back from Germany last week, for sad reasons.  We met at her dad's wake.  He had a heart attack and it happened so quick.  She was lucky to be able to jump on a flight real quick and be back with her sister and mom.  We chatted about whether he knew he was having a heart attack (he's a GP with his own clinic) - we will never know.

M and I shared a tent for 3 weeks on our Mt Everest base camp hiking trip.  We got along infamously well.  Over the years though, we lost contact.  The last time I met her was 2009 she was based in Shanghai then and me on a biz trip (I was based in Taipei then).   We caught up over breakfast in Pudong : she had gotten pregnant, then lost the baby and then got divorced.  Shortly after that, she moved to Germany and seemed happy there, judging from her Facebook photos and updates.

I didn't stay long at the wake.  She was busy entertaining visitors (there's only her mom & her sister) and a steady stream of visitors.  Her dad was well liked.  I liked him too - all the more after I reversed onto his Mercedes a lifetime ago with my little Dahatsu, and he didn't even bat an eyelid, waved me off.  

I got home positively depressed until I flipped to the day's reading and it was very comfortingly apt.

Eccl 3:1-11 
There is an appointed time for everything,
and a time for every thing under the heavens.
A time to be born, and a time to die;
a time to plant, and a time to uproot the plant.
A time to kill, and a time to heal;
a time to tear down, and a time to build.
A time to weep, and a time to laugh;
a time to mourn, and a time to dance.
A time to scatter stones, and a time to gather them;
a time to embrace, and a time to be far from embraces.
A time to seek, and a time to lose;
a time to keep, and a time to cast away.
A time to rend, and a time to sew;
a time to be silent, and a time to speak.
A time to love, and a time to hate;
a time of war, and a time of peace

Tuesday, October 02, 2012

Paying for car park sucks

Ascendas changed their car park policy recently and did away with quarterly cheque payments.  Payments are now either via GIRO or AXS.  I remembered the first month after the change (Sep) and the second month after that (Oct), it slipped my mind.

So yesterday, I had to push my cash card to pay $12 for all day parking just to let myself out!  And no one was answering the phone for the carpark hotline!  Wanted to die.

This morning I had to find an AXS machine to pay for the month, en route to work.  And I contemplated leaving the car in the free car park at the top of Vigilante Drive.  In the meantime, praying and crossing my fingers that my sob story email finds compassion.  After lunch, I called the car park person again and they allowed my late payment for this month.  Thank you Jesus!  And yes, I need to mark my calendar to pay every 25 of the month.  *mutter mutter, what's wrong with cheque payments, mutter mutter*


From Yahoo News - Kodak to stop selling inkjet printers from 2013


I have friends (ex-HP) who are going to lose their jobs.  Sigh.  I hate times like these.   And as of this afternoon, I've added 2 ex-HP friends from the doomed printer division of Kodak, to my LinkedIn account.

(Reuters) - Eastman Kodak Co said it plans to stop selling inkjet printers from 2013 as it winds down most of its consumer businesses and focuses on commercial printing.
Printer makers are struggling with falling sales as companies cut costs and people increasingly use mobile devices to take snaps and share them digitally.
Lexmark International Inc said last month that it will stop making inkjet printers and focus on its more profitable imaging and software businesses.
Kodak, which has already shuttered its digital camera business, said on Friday it expects to incur a charge of $90 million related to the wind-down of the inkjet business.
The company will, however, continue to sell ink to existing customers of inkjet printers.
Kodak, which filed for bankruptcy earlier this year after struggling to adapt to the digital age, also said it received "significant interest" from suitors for its printing kiosks and scanner businesses.
The company said it expects to cut 200 more jobs, adding to the 1,000 announced earlier this month. It has cut 2,700 jobs so far this year.
Kodak, which once employed more than 60,000 people, expects to emerge from bankruptcy in 2013 as a much leaner company. The latest jobcuts will reduce its workforce to 13,100.
The company said it was still in talks to sell its patents, estimated to be worth between $2.2 billion and $2.6 billion, and that it will submit a motion to a bankruptcy court to extend its right to file a reorganization plan until February 28, 2013.
Kodak said earlier this month that it may abandon efforts to auction its 1,000 digital imaging patents, and instead set up a new licensing company to help repay creditors.
According to media reports, Kodak received only sub-$500 million bids from investor groups, including Apple Inc and Google Inc.
(Reporting by Sayantani Ghosh in Bangalore; Editing by Saumyadeb Chakrabarty)

Monday, October 01, 2012

The lazy runner

Did not run well at the Army Half marathon cos I started out too hard trying to chase a personal best time of sub 2h.  Then it has been downhill since then.

Suddenly it is October and I am staring 3 races in the face and feeling faint.
Oct 13 - The North Face 50km
Oct 21 - Nike run 10km
Oct 28 - Newton run 30km

What was I thinking?!

The plan (my insane plan) is to then sustain through Nov and finish on a high note with the Standard Chartered marathon Dec 1.

May the good Lord send me his flying angels...


From the NYT - Cycling and Helmets


To Encourage Biking, Cities Forget About Helmets
Eric Hanson
By ELISABETH ROSENTHAL
Published: September 30, 2012
ONE spectacular Sunday in Paris last month, I decided to skip museums and shopping to partake of something even more captivating for an environment reporter: Vélib, arguably the most successful bike-sharing program in the world. In their short lives, Europe's bike-sharing systems have delivered myriad benefits, notably reducing traffic and its carbon emissions. A number of American cities - including New York, where a bike-sharing program is to open next year - want to replicate that success.
So I bought a day pass online for about $2, entered my login information at one of the hundreds of docking stations that are scattered every few blocks around the city and selected one of Vélib's nearly 20,000 stodgy gray bikes, with their basic gears, upright handlebars and practical baskets.
Then I did something extraordinary, something I've not done in a quarter-century of regular bike riding in the United States: I rode off without a helmet.
I rode all day at a modest clip, on both sides of the Seine, in the Latin Quarter, past the Louvre and along the Champs-Élysées, feeling exhilarated, not fearful. And I had tons of bareheaded bicycling company amid the Parisian traffic. One common denominator of successful bike programs around the world - from Paris to Barcelona to Guangzhou - is that almost no one wears a helmet, and there is no pressure to do so.
In the United States the notion that bike helmets promote health and safety by preventing head injuries is taken as pretty near God's truth. Un-helmeted cyclists are regarded as irresponsible, like people who smoke. Cities are aggressive in helmet promotion.
But many European health experts have taken a very different view: Yes, there are studies that show that if you fall off a bicycle at a certain speed and hit your head, a helmet can reduce your risk of serious head injury. But such falls off bikes are rare - exceedingly so in mature urban cycling systems.
On the other hand, many researchers say, if you force or pressure people to wear helmets, you discourage them from riding bicycles. That means more obesity, heart disease and diabetes. And - Catch-22 - a result is fewer ordinary cyclists on the road, which makes it harder to develop a safe bicycling network. The safest biking cities are places like Amsterdam and Copenhagen, where middle-aged commuters are mainstay riders and the fraction of adults in helmets is minuscule.
"Pushing helmets really kills cycling and bike-sharing in particular because it promotes a sense of danger that just isn't justified - in fact, cycling has many health benefits," says Piet de Jong, a professor in the department of applied finance and actuarial studies at Macquarie University in Sydney. He studied the issue with mathematical modeling, and concludes that the benefits may outweigh the risks by 20 to 1.
He adds: "Statistically, if we wear helmets for cycling, maybe we should wear helmets when we climb ladders or get into a bath, because there are lots more injuries during those activities." The European Cyclists' Federation says that bicyclists in its domain have the same risk of serious injury as pedestrians per mile traveled.
Yet the United States National Highway Traffic Safety Administration recommends that "all cyclists wear helmets, no matter where they ride," said Dr. Jeffrey Michael, an agency official.
Recent experience suggests that if a city wants bike-sharing to really take off, it may have to allow and accept helmet-free riding. A two-year-old bike-sharing program in Melbourne, Australia - where helmet use in mandatory - has only about 150 rides a day, despite the fact that Melbourne is flat, with broad roads and a temperate climate. On the other hand, helmet-lax Dublin - cold, cobbled and hilly - has more than 5,000 daily rides in its young bike-sharing scheme. Mexico City recently repealed a mandatory helmet law to get a bike-sharing scheme off the ground. But here in the United States, the politics are tricky.
SHAUN MURPHY, the bicycling coordinator of Minneapolis-St. Paul - which inaugurated its "Nice Ride" bike-sharing program this year - has been pilloried for riding about without a helmet. "I just want it to be seen as something that a normal person can do," Mr. Murphy explained to the local press this past summer. "You don't need special gear. You just get on a bike and you just go."
In New York, where there were 21 cyclist fatalities last year, the transportation commissioner, Janette Sadik-Khan, is always photographed on a bike and wearing a helmet. The administration of Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg has nonetheless rejected calls by Comptroller John C. Liu for a mandatory helmet law when New York's 10,000-cycle bike-share program rolls out next year, for fear it would keep people from riding. Still, the mayor says helmets are a "good idea," and the city promotes helmet use through education and with giveaway programs.
In the United States, cities are struggling to overcome the significant practical problems of melding helmet use with bike-sharing programs - such as providing sanitized helmet dispensers at bike docking stations, says Susan Shaheen, director of the Transportation Sustainability Research Center at the University of California, Berkeley.
But bicycling advocates say that the problem with pushing helmets isn't practicality but that helmets make a basically safe activity seem really dangerous.
"The real benefits of bike-sharing in terms of health, transport and emissions derive from getting ordinary people to use it," said Ceri Woolsgrove, safety officer at the European Cyclists' Federation. "And if you say this is wonderful, but you have to wear armor, they won't. These are normal human beings, not urban warriors."
In fact, many European researchers say the test of a mature bike-sharing program is when women outnumber men. In the Netherlands, 52 percent of riders are women. Instead of promoting helmet use, European cycling advocates say, cities should be setting up safer bike lanes to slow traffic or divert it entirely from downtown areas. "Riding in New York or Australia is like running with the bulls - it's all young males," says Julian Ferguson, a spokesman for the European Cyclists' Federation. And that's in part what makes it dangerous. (Many European countries do require helmet use for children.)
In London, where use of a new bike-share program is exceeding all expectations, the number of riders in suits and dresses is growing, Mr. Woolsgrove says. And more Londoners seem to be leaving helmets at home.
We may follow a similar pattern. In her study of nascent bike-sharing programs in North America - including Montreal, Washington and Minneapolis - Dr. Shaheen found that the accident rate was "really low." A large majority of participants strongly agreed that they got more exercise since the program started. And helmet use in bike programs tended to be far lower than among the general public.
Another study this summer found that only 30 percent of local riders using Washington's Capital Bikeshare program wore helmets, compared with 70 percent of people on their own bikes, said John Kraemer of Georgetown University, the study's author, who supports helmet use.
Before you hit the comment button and tell me that you know someone whose life was probably saved by a bike helmet, I know someone, too. I also know someone who believes his life was saved by getting a blood test for prostate specific antigen, detecting prostate cancer. But is that sense of salvation actually justified, for the individual or society? Back in New York I strapped on my helmet for a weekend bike ride in Central Park. But I'm not sure I'll do the same two years from now if I'm commuting to work on a mature Citi Bike system.
Mr. De Jong, who grew up in the Netherlands, observes of Amsterdam: "Nobody wears helmets, and bicycling is regarded as a completely normal, safe activity. You never hear that 'helmet saved my life' thing."
A reporter and blogger on environmental issues for The New York Times.