I am not clumsy by nature.
There are people out there who may not believe this and, sadly, there is evidence suggesting that I can be a lumbering oaf with all of the coordination of a drunken donkey.
Take last Thursday for example.
I was invited to the Stockport Beer Festival. It was Thursday, so initially I wasn’t too keen. Drinking on a “school night” is bad practice, typically, as the repercussions the next day can be quite nasty. Hangovers at my time of life are monsters and torture me for days.
I decided to go late and leave early – a sound plan in theory.
The event was held at Stockport County Football ground, which is about four miles from where I live and a bus ride away. I arrived at about 8:45.
Beer festivals are fun and great for people watching. Once you have paid your entrance fee, you buy your souvenir glass and sample all wonder of real ales from around the region. For those who like weird drinks, they also have a fairly chunky selection of perries and ciders that can quite literally blow your head apart if you have too much.
I stick to beer – I know its strength and I know how many I can have before I have to stop.
The real ale connoisseurs who attend these festivals can be quite weird; they treat their beer like wine and urge people to sip it and savour it. You are expected to buy half pints so you can sample as much as you can before falling over. Most of these people have beer guts so big that small moons orbit them.
And some of their beards are something else.
I met a couple or mates and a few work colleagues and had an enjoyable hour or two sipping various beers with names like Black Mamba, Nutty Slack, White Nancy, Sworn Secret, Wren’s Nest, Tiger Rut, Silver Magnet, Dizzy Blonde, Village Idiot, Brassed Off, Battle Cruiser, Blond Witch, Alchemist Ale, Weapons of Mouth Destruction, Matron’s Delight, Dragon Slayer, Old Stoatwobbler and Monkman’s Slaughter.
At around 10:40 I decided I’d had enough and started the fifteen minute walk back to Stockport Bus Station to catch my bus home.
Sadly, I was walking a little too slowly and realised that I would miss my bus if I didn’t run. I was carrying my souvenir pint pot in a plastic bag. I decided to run.
Running is something I used to do quite a lot and I was quite fast in my youth. Sadly, these days, I am neither fast nor fit. Something kicked in and I managed to sprint to the station with not much trouble. At the far end of the station I could see my bus. I would make it.
At this point my clumsy gene kicked in. As I ran across a kerb, I tripped.
I was hurtling at quite a fast pace and realised what had happened. I found myself lurching forward. Had I not been carrying a pint pot I might have made it with my pride intact. Half my mind was determined to save the glass so I foolishly adjusted my body so that I didn’t smash it.
I found myself careering out of control towards the floor, my arms whirling like a demented windmill. The laws of physics refused to yield and I sprawled headfirst into the pavement, the shattering of my pint pot ringing in my ears as it lost the battle with the concrete.
The word that escaped my lips, dear reader, is not one that I would like to publish in this post.
My bus was still there and I had to reach it, so I got up and started running again. That was when I discovered the consequences of my fall.
My right hand had scraped along the concrete and taken the top layer of skin off an area the size of a 2p piece.
My right elbow was bruised.
My right elbow was grazed.
My left knee was bruised.
My left hand (the hand carrying the pint pot, the hand that had failed in its sworn duty to protect the pint pot, the hand that is probably pissed off with me because I am right handed) was injured.
The shattered glass had escaped the bag and cut my left hand in a few places. I stood up and started running again and noticed blood splattering as I ran.
I stopped and stared at my hand in disbelief.
There was no pain – just blood. It looked as if I had dipped my hand in a bucket of the stuff.
I made the decision to continue my run for the bus but as I did so, I identified the cuts and sucked them to try to stem the bleeding.
I reached the bus just as he was pulling off but he took pity on me and let me on.
With my bloody left hand hidden behind my back, I managed to extract the coins I needed with my right hand (which was also cut) and paid the driver.
I ran upstairs hoping that there was nobody there. There wasn’t – I was alone.
I examined my still bleeding left hand and realised that all of the blood was coming from just two cuts. The rest of my injuries were minor scratches.
I found a discarded newspaper and tore strips off it to add pressure to the cuts – and thankfully after a few minutes they stopped.
All of this was too late because by now my jeans were blood-stained and I had nothing to wash the blood off my hands.
When the bus arrived at my destination, I plunged my hands into my pockets and walked downstairs. There was a trail of blood spots from my injured hand.
I thanked the driver who stared at me as if I had just walked off a spaceship and said “Take me to your leader.”
When I arrived home, I was about to tell Mrs PM the entire sorry tale but she beat me to it.
“WHAT’S HAPPENED TO YOU?” she said looking shocked.
It was then I caught my reflection in the mirror; my mouth was covered in blood. I looked like a crazed vampire. No wonder the bus driver was terrified.
My attempts at sucking my wounds had deposited great smears of blood onto my face.
Mrs PM thought I had been in a fight with a rabid vampire.
I cleaned up my wounds and as I applied a couple of plasters I told my sorry tale to Mrs PM. She struggled between sympathy and trying not to laugh.
The next day at work, my colleagues were merciless.
“You drunken oaf!”
“HA HA HA HA HA HA HA! You idiot! HA HA HA HA HA HA!”
And I swear that I wasn’t drunk, dear reader. Even my beloved children were merciless.
My eldest lad, who has just turned eighteen pointed at me, laughing and said “FAIL!!!!!!”
My youngest lad just laughed.
So there you have it, dear reader. Mr Clumsy is alive and well and living in Manchester.
What lessons have I learned? A simple one :
NEVER RUN FOR A BUS WHEN YOU ARE CARRYING A BEER FESTIVAL PINT POT. THERE IS ALWAYS A TAXI AROUND.
The truth is that smashing up my souvenir pint pot hurts more than the wounds or my pride.
What a pillock I am.
Brilliant story. Just a pity it wasn't the nutty bus you were on. Hope the cuts are healing well - pity about the pot though.
ReplyDeleteHi Pand,
ReplyDeleteThanks - the wounds are still there but almost healed - apart from the pride of course.
:0)
Cheers
PM
I remember a similar fall. Night time, unexpected visitors, walked around to the shop for cake to go with coffee. On the way home I tripped against something in the dark and twisted as I fell so as not to squash the cake or my face. The cake was fine, but my entire right side landed and scraped with some spctacular swelling and bruising showing up the next day. In spite of being barely able to move I went to work as usual, which probably saved me from stiffening up to the point of immobilisation.
ReplyDeleteHi River,
ReplyDeleteSounds kind of similar. I assume that your pride recovered.
:0)
Cheers
PM
You poor old bugger! All that humiliation and agony for a glass that probably cost around 50p....?
ReplyDeleteI do have the clumsy gene. Sigh. It runs in the family. My middle brother tripped over a sheet of newspaper (not the whole paper, just one sheet) and broke his ankle. On my way to a job interview I tripped in the road and arrived with blood running down both legs (didn't get the job either). Sigh. I have had to sacrifice pride on many a time.
ReplyDeletePride recovered to the tune of $2000 compensation payment from council, it was their fault, I tripped on broken off bollard that should have been removed already.
ReplyDeleteOh no, what a tragedy. Sorry to hear about your pint pot (they really should wrap up such fragile precious items better before they let you leave the place, I worry about the pint pot mortality rate). On the plus side, I guess it means my pint pot's that much rarer now.
ReplyDeleteBonjour Kath,
ReplyDeleteYep - poor old bugger!
And it cost me £2. Probably only worth 50p though...
:0)
Cheers
PM
Hi EC,
ReplyDeleteOh dear - sounds like you are worse than me.
I think we should never ever run.
:0)
Cheers
PM
Wow River,
ReplyDeleteThat's great. Sadly, I can't blame anybody but myself.
:0)
Cheers
PM
Hi Mark,
ReplyDeleteWe should never have had that last half pint.
I'm glad your pint pot's now worth a little bit more thanks to my clumsiness. Just think - you could probably get an extra penny for it on eBay.
:0)
Cheers
PM
Dearest PM -
ReplyDeleteWelcome to the klutz klub. Your membership has been approved.
Sincerely,
ME
President and specialist in falling going UP the stairs.
Hi Lady from Delaware,
ReplyDeleteFalling UP the stairs? That's quite an amazing achievement. Have you got a video perchance?
:0)
Cheers
PM
Dear Mr PM,
ReplyDeleteI am relieved to learn that your cuts and bruises are healing well (never mind the pride). 'INFECTION, INFECTION!!! Flesh eating staphylococcus!!!' came into my head when reading about you using newspaper and your mouth to stop the bleeding....
PM -
ReplyDeleteNo such luck, while many have witnessed my up-the-stairs feats of clumsiness, alas it has never been caught on video. But you can ask Mark about one such incident - I made my debut act in England last time I visited.
Hi drb,
ReplyDeleteFear not - I cleaned up my wounds and they have almost healed. I am fine. But given recent weird outbreaks of MRSA in hospitals in the UK, I guess it was much safer to do it myself anyway.
:0)
Cheers
PM
Hi Lady from Delaware,
ReplyDeleteI will ask Mark - and then I'll ask him why he didn't have a camcorder ready. Nice to know that you bring your clumsy gene across the pond with you when you visit.
:0)
Cheers
PM