Yesterday, I got completely soaked on the way home from
work. When I set off in the morning on my trusty scooter, it was a beautiful
sunny day.
When I say “beautiful sunny day” you will of course
interpret this relatively.
By the time I arrived at work, it had started to rain and it
pretty much didn’t stop from then on. In fact, I don’t think it has stopped
yet.
That morning, I did not put my waterproofs on. For some
reason, I have developed a bizarre aversion to putting my heavily-armoured and
waterproof overtrousers on. It has just become another one of those things I
avoid doing even though I almost always feel better after having done so – like shaving or touching ham.
So I just had on normal work trousers and a leather jacket –
of a style one might refer to as a “blouson”. Plus helmet and gloves, OBVS.
- If you put the helmet on and your hair or face are already a
bit wet, the whole “won’t steam up” pinlock magic doesn’t work.
- The pinlock insert itself has, over the course of a year,
wriggled itself a bit loose from the visor being put up and down – and where it
has ground against the windscreen, both have scratched at the top and bottom,
leaving me with two regions I can’t now see properly out of.
I don’t suppose you get too many reviews of wear and tear on
crash helmets, but that, dear friends, you can have for free.
Anyway, back to yesterday morning when I was deciding what
to wear. The sun was shining (see disclaimer above) and it is June. How bad could getting a bit wet be?
As the day wore on and the rain came down more and more
heavily, but instead of becoming gloomy at the prospect of a soaking my inner
Stoic took charge.
“You’re going to get very wet going home, but there’s no way
you can avoid getting wet; you can only
get
so wet; and as soon as you get
home, you can take the wet stuff off. C’mon it’ll be fun,”
Emperor
of Rome Marcus Aurelius was whispering into my ear.
Knowing that it was an unavoidable certainty rather than
something I had to worry might happen, off I went home rather more cheerful
than
pathetic fallacy
might have suggested.
By the time I got to my bike, I was pretty soggy. By the
time I had cleared Westgate, my trousers were wet through.
Well, I thought, if this is what I’ve been fretting about –
if this is as bad as it gets – getting wet really is something only IDIOTS are afraid of.
O reader, knew I then what I now know of the extent and
hideous process by which one can become even
wetter I would have balked at my overconfidence.
I trundled merrily along,
zipping
in and out of traffic and laughing maniacally (in my head) at the poor
benighted car-drivers who would have to sit in their queues for an hour or more
– just because they were scared of a little bit of rain!
Soon, though, a cold discomfort spread to my inner thighs...
At this point, I suppose I should warn you that if the
thought of my inner thighs is upsetting to you, it would be advisable to stop
reading now – as further, more graphic reference will continue to be made to
those regions which, if I were an aircraft, would be generically titled “undercarriage”.
That is rather unpleasant, I thought. It’s not unlike that
feeling you get after you’ve been swimming and then sat around in your trunks
for a while – you think you’re dry, you stand up, and you realise that certain
areas are in fact still very wet. Unpleasant, but tolerable.
But shortly afterwards, as I drove through Horsforth (I had
decided to go home a slightly different way! I know!
Mi vida loca!) I felt what
can only be described as a
clenching
sensation – reminiscent of a prodded snail retreating into its shell.
I don’t know if anyone here has ever dipped their testicles
into cold water, but it is not something I can recommend. Gradually, the rain
seeped through my undergarments and dug its icy talons into my beleaguered
nutbag.
At the same time, let me add, I was grappling with the fact
that I had put my helmet on AFTER getting wet – and so my visor was steaming up
from the inside, as well as covered with droplets of rain on the outside.
Seeing the road and traffic ahead was already pretty difficult, without the
added distraction of intense scrotal chilling.
But, man’s capacity for enduring suffering is great. And
soon I got used to it. I won’t say that I liked it – but, hey, adversity breeds
strength of character, doesn’t it?
Plus, water goes down. Once it’s there, it’s got nowhere
else to go.
OR HAS IT?
I shall spare you too detailed a description of what
happened next, suffice to say that under certain, possibly very specific
circumstances, water can move upwards. How?
CAPILLARY ACTION!
My face froze as I felt the rainwater creeping up my bumcrack. Slowly but inexorably – like a glacier –
it made its cold passage.
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Epilogue:
In the intensely frustrating manner of HP Lovecraft, I dare
not – must not – say any more. You would all go mad from reading it.
But, I for one will never NEVER leave my waterproofs at
home again, and when I look into the cloudy sky forever more will I struggle to
suppress a shudder.