The only time I've been over the bonnet of a car I just had minor cuts & bruises.
The only time I got hurt was when a crank broke.
The only times when I broke bones were once in the car, and another whilst walking.
In all the miles I drove, the occasion I got hurt was a quarter of a mile from home in a residential street, not racing down the motorway.
In all the years I spent walking, the occasion I got hurt was walking a grassy meadow in Essex, not in the mountains.
There was some risk compensation going on there: I was admiring the view on the hoof, something I didn't do in the mountains because it would have been too dangerous.
The scariest thing that happened in the mountains was when I dislodged a boulder, and thought it was about to kill someone else.
It doesn't stop me riding but it keeps me recording my rides and reporting bad and dangerous drivers and I wish more cyclists did this as ultimately it benefits us all.
Sadly, I sometimes think it just gives them more practice at finding reasons why it the cyclists' fault.
Taking the moral high ground sometimes comes with a high price tag.
So does backing down in the long run.
Having said that it’s not as if riding along the canal path is completely safe.
When I slipped on a muddy towpath I was lucky I went down an embankment into rhododendron bushes, and not into the drink.
humans are notoriously bad at risk assessment stats though, its the classic youre more likely to die driving to the airport than in a plane crash, which is fine and everyone still drives without a care in the world, but when you know someone who was killed in a completely random aircrash, there isnt a moment you dont step on the next plane you take and think about that or them. the stats become meaningless because you had a connection with it.
Availability Heuristic: People judge probability by how easily something springs to mind, not the actual risk of it happening.
People are also about 1000 times more sensitive to a risk that's imposed upon them than one they choose for themselves, which might make the chart look more like this:
My wife is absolutely spot on to be worried sick every time I go out but if I shared her concern then cycling wouldn't be part of my life and that ain't happening anytime soon.
If you've decided that the enjoyment you get is worth the risk, I don't see the point in re-examining the decision with every turn of the pedals. I had my share of near misses to make your teeth curl, but I regarded them as conversation pieces rather than something to worry about.
Same could be said for dying in the shower
My shower went with a big bang about 18 months ago.