Headaches
and Other Pain
Getting rid of them could prove fatal!
You are out
on the road and a headache begins. At the next stop you take some
over-the-counter medicine to get rid of it. No problem with that,
you think, especially because you're not taking any other
medication nor have you been doing any drinking. An hour later you
fail to negotiate a turn and end up hurt ... or dead.
You have an
abscessed tooth and your dentist prescribed a ten day supply of
penicillin for you. You are not allergic to it and are not taking
any other medication. The swelling has gone and so has the pain.
The curve that you were going to take a little fast turned out to
be your worst nightmare and you could not negotiate it at all.
Penicillin, it turns out, does not cure road rash nor the loss of
that leg.
These are
not examples that just can't happen - they have!
Over-the-counter
medication does not have to cause drowsiness to be a problem. Even
if after reading the warning labels and finding that there are no
side effects to be worried about, you should still be careful. An
experienced certified MSF instructor recently described an
accident he had that simply should not have happened. He was not
riding too fast. The road and weather were perfect. The curve was
relatively tame. But the antihistamine he took to help him get
over a pollen induced headache caused him to become confused and
less than competent in that curve. He ran off the road and was
very lucky to have survived the experience.
In the case
of penicillin, I was in the middle of my MSF instructor training
class and out on the range working with 'students' on one of the
more complex exercises. The abscess I had was no longer a problem
and I had only two days left of the medication to go. While out on
that range I suddenly got terribly confused. When asked to end the
exercise by the other instructor, I was to signal the students to
'restage' and direct them to the staging area. Instead, I merely
slowed them all down as they passed me, then WALKED OFF THE RANGE
as if the exercise was done. The students kept riding around the
range, without my supervision. It could have been worse. I could
have directed those students into trouble. As it was, we were all
lucky.
Why did
these things happen even without the complication of mixing other
drugs or alcohol? Because some medications act very strangely in
combination with high heat environments! It was well over 90
degrees in my case and I had been out on the range all day long.
I'm led to believe that heat was also a contributing factor in the
incident the other instructor was involved in.
So, if you
find that you are fighting a headache or some other pain and
decide to take care of it and continue your ride, think again! At
the very least, slow it down and tell yourself that you may think
you are 100%, but the headache or other pain has already told you
that SOMETHING is not right with you and you took some medication
that, hopefully, is strong enough to get rid of those SYMPTOMS.
If the medication is strong enough to do that, it is strong enough
to make you less than a 100% rider.
In the real
world you may have to ride a ways before you can get off the bike
and park it until all is well with you. SLOW DOWN and drive with
the knowledge that you are NOT 100%. No shame in that. But dying
to prove how tough you were was hardly the smartest thing you ever
did when you were alive.
Return
to
|