Okay, now here's part two of the TJ bike story. I left the passenger center was recommended to go on the north side of B Walco, the largest lake in Japan. And I went to Amanohashidate that day, which, wow, that's amazing that came out in the transcription that they said was like the third most beautiful place to see in Japan. I went as I am, it's okay. I definitely wouldn't have put it in the top three, but it stands out in the story because they had built it up so much as like, okay, it's a hill overlooking the city, but then the dragons need to turn your head upside down and dragons tail maybe it's good for kids, but I was like, Yeah, whatever. Maybe just so frickin tired. ride my bicycle all around. Had I gone via train, maybe be different, but it was okay. The cool thing about this part of the country is there not many trains and while it was spread out I was again on my own free time do whatever I want. I had a train a train went by. It was only to train cars as I Oh, wow. I'm going to take a picture of that. So I waited until the next train and waited and waited and waited. And a woman was like what you're doing because she went home and came back or whatever she went by you like what you're doing, like waiting for the train. She's like, the next train is not going to be for another 45 minutes. I said, Oh, really? I was like, Oh, that's okay. I'll just wait. And she's like, okay, and so she went, apparently home, came back with some big ass strawberries. Like they were enormous like, like five strawberries had barely fit into a pint container. Wow, thank you so much. And I just like eat these strawberries with my hands. I'll read from the juice everywhere is so so great. And delicious. thanked her never you know, exchange information with all over again. But nice little gift. Thank you Miss strawberry strawberry grower. And the train came by after loud I took a picture. I have no idea where that picture is. Oh, I do know that picture is that's interesting. That's a different story. are a hard drive and magic smoke oh gosh that's so frustrating. So you Yeah. Brain brain come back. So dry riding my bicycle around to the topic of the coast and came back. Have no idea where I was except new kind of I know that city I just mentioned, and Overby Walco but again, we didn't. I didn't have Google phone or no GPS running around tracking me. And I don't remember really writing much in my map book at that time. Thing and look for that. But I got down to I think Nagoya. Yeah, that's right. And saw my friend Karen, who I had met on peace boat. And she basically, Maria put me up for a few days. But then, like, turns out she was like putting up with me for about a week and she's like, Yo, Rob, you gotta go. And I was like, holy shit. I'm sorry. You're right. Because you know I was just being in there and using the internet at the university a lot. But you know, she she didn't know she was single and just want to travel in space and so i i left and from Nagoya I saw a city on the map called Toyota. I think it was intrigued by the car company name and the city name and made my way down to Hakone and up and down some starting to get hilly again. Got to Hakone and there's the next day was scheduled to eat lunch with now I just summarized like five days, I think in two seconds here. The next day was scheduled to eat lunch with my friend whose name I forgotten in odo water, and the map shirt said it was a straight shot from auto water from Hakone to go to water. So cool. I want to get there quick because I'm tired. And the though the map said the road was straight. The road said the road was curvy. What a mean is the map had only very what's on even a loss of word here but the scale on the map didn't couldn't possibly show how curvy This road was it just like basically straight but as hella curvy and reality. And I went on the first curve and bike bike TJ bike being overloaded brakes were tired. I was tired. I went off the road and kind of into the the soft mud embankment. And, you know, like, you're kind of blown into the mud, not mud, but softer. And was i Oh, better be careful. But apparently I wasn't careful. And that in that moment, I mean, that was the new the guidance from from God being like, Hey, man, don't go down this hill. But I persevered. I said right next time if it happens again. I'll stop. However, next time. It wasn't a sophomore embankment it was a car and I went I had gone you know, think about riding on the on the left side of the road. As cars. Traffic circulates on the left. Generally in Japan, car traffic does what traffic doesn't always anyway, doesn't matter. The curves were so curvy and the bike was so overweighted that I went into the right hand side of the road and the car was coming up and I was like oh shit. And yeah, I pulled back toward the left but didn't quite make it and I hit the very back edge of the car. Push me down sideways to the left. And like boom, onto the pavement or asphalt and then like hot or had a wreck. I lifted up my bike, put it on the side of the road. My heavy ass bike that I picked up. On the side of the road I sat down say what is my shoulder hurt? Putting my right hand on my left shoulder is like, oh, that's the wrong shape for my shoulder. bone was broken, the clavicle was broken and it's like, "welp.." and I looked up at the trees and looked up at the weather. I said today is a beautiful day to break my shoulder. Even though it had been like a couple of weeks, I'm sure guessing since I left the Vipassana meditation center. I still had the meditation vibe in my in my being and I was still meditating, like up to an hour each morning. And I can't say that I did meditate that morning. I have no memory of that. But I but I remember telling the story is like because I had done Vipassana. Even though I broke my shoulder, I was aware of the situation around me. Say huh today's a nice day to break my shoulder. Beautiful whether checking the rest of my body is like like nothing else is hurt. There is no pain anywhere else my there is no yours and nose or everything's all working fine. It's just my shoulder say okay. And