MID-LIFE CRISIS REDUCED TO THE PURCHASE OF CYCLING EQUIPMENT
max1234
Posts: 71
The Daily Mash
http://www.thedailymash.co.uk/news/soci ... 009303131/
MID-LIFE CRISIS REDUCED TO THE PURCHASE OF CYCLING EQUIPMENT
WHILE previous generations favoured red cars, alcohol and affairs, modern men are increasingly limiting their mid-life madness to buying bikes they don't really want, it has emerged.
Do not disobey the God of Mid-Life Crises Research by the Institute for Studies found that 43% of professional men aged 35-50 have spent more than £500 on a bike without really knowing why.
Professor Henry Brubaker said: "Historically, men of a certain age have spent their disposable incomes on small fibreglass sports cars that the man in the shop described as a 'fanny magnet'.
"This would be combined with pointy shoes, brown leather clothing and a hip flask - the objective being an overall sense of virility that would impress 'dolly birds'.
"So it's interesting that today's middle-aged man is choosing instead to spend the disposable income generated by the job he hates on a Tungusku 9000 super-lightweight racing bike made from sort sort of space carbon and weighing less than a grape.
"And then riding around on top of it. Wearing spandex. And a plastic hat.
"Like a total bell-end."
He added: "Clearly these are not the actions of a sexual predator. Perhaps the bicycle fad expresses a suicidal urge to get flattened by a lorry before becoming fat and impotent."
Roy Hobbs, 41, who spent almost a grand on cycling equipment without having the faintest idea why, said: "I bought the bike, the clothes, and some sort of bottle in a holster.
"I dressed myself in the gear and looked at myself in the mirror and thought, 'What have I become?' I looked like a chunky wasp.
"Maybe I will take the bike into the garden tomorrow and smash it with a mallet, while weeping."
http://www.thedailymash.co.uk/news/soci ... 009303131/
MID-LIFE CRISIS REDUCED TO THE PURCHASE OF CYCLING EQUIPMENT
WHILE previous generations favoured red cars, alcohol and affairs, modern men are increasingly limiting their mid-life madness to buying bikes they don't really want, it has emerged.
Do not disobey the God of Mid-Life Crises Research by the Institute for Studies found that 43% of professional men aged 35-50 have spent more than £500 on a bike without really knowing why.
Professor Henry Brubaker said: "Historically, men of a certain age have spent their disposable incomes on small fibreglass sports cars that the man in the shop described as a 'fanny magnet'.
"This would be combined with pointy shoes, brown leather clothing and a hip flask - the objective being an overall sense of virility that would impress 'dolly birds'.
"So it's interesting that today's middle-aged man is choosing instead to spend the disposable income generated by the job he hates on a Tungusku 9000 super-lightweight racing bike made from sort sort of space carbon and weighing less than a grape.
"And then riding around on top of it. Wearing spandex. And a plastic hat.
"Like a total bell-end."
He added: "Clearly these are not the actions of a sexual predator. Perhaps the bicycle fad expresses a suicidal urge to get flattened by a lorry before becoming fat and impotent."
Roy Hobbs, 41, who spent almost a grand on cycling equipment without having the faintest idea why, said: "I bought the bike, the clothes, and some sort of bottle in a holster.
"I dressed myself in the gear and looked at myself in the mirror and thought, 'What have I become?' I looked like a chunky wasp.
"Maybe I will take the bike into the garden tomorrow and smash it with a mallet, while weeping."
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Comments
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Ha ha,
Myself included! to a point!
Is this not called a Buchanan moment though!0