
Our story tonight is called Bike Bus, and it’s a story about a joyful ride to school on a spring day. It’s also about a dog enjoying a sunny patch on the lawn, neighbors on porches, music playing from a bike basket, paper sack lunches, and the joy of a trip taken together. We give to a different charity each week, and this week we are giving to a group and movement that inspired tonight’s story. They are called Bike Bus World and they transform communities and our planet through the simple act of riding bikes to school together. AquaTru Water Purifier: 20% OFF with code NOTHINGMUCH. Beam Dream Powder: 40% off with code NOTHINGMUCH. BIOptimizers’ Sleep Breakthrough: Use code NOTHINGMUCH for 10% off any order! Cymbiotika products: 20% off and free shipping! Moonbird: Save 20% on the world’s first handheld breathing coach! NMH merch, autographed books, and more! Subscribe for ad-free, bonus, and extra long episodes now, as well as ad-free and early episodes of Stories from the Village of Nothing Much! Search for NMH Premium channel on Apple podcast or follow this link. Listen to our daytime show Stories from the Village of Nothing Much on your favorite podcast app. Join us tomorrow morning for a meditation.
Chapter 1: What is the story of Bike Bus about?
Chapter 2: How can Symbiotica products enhance wellness?
Something I have gotten so much better at in the last few years is taking care of my body, lovingly nourishing myself. getting all the sleep I need. I even floss now. And Symbiotica products are a big part of this grown-up self-care. Whether you're trying to boost your energy and mood, improve digestion, or just function like a human, Symbiotica has something for you.
I've been taking their vitamin C every day. In fact, my wife and I went on vacation, and we packed their liquid travel-size packets in our carry-ons. It was truly the easiest thing I've done to keep up with my health. Symbiotica is as clean as it gets. No seed oils, preservatives, or artificial junk. Just high-quality, real ingredients that actually do something.
I feel so good knowing I'm taking care of my body. Yeah, it's even better than flossing. Symbiotica. Symbiotica. Wellness made simple. Go to symbiotica.com slash nothingmuch for 20% off plus free shipping. That's symbiotica.com slash nothingmuch for 20% off plus free shipping. Welcome to Bedtime Stories for Everyone, in which nothing much happens. You feel good, and then you fall asleep.
I'm Katherine Nicolai. I write and read all the stories you hear on Nothing Much Happens. Audio engineering is by Bob Wittersheim. We give to a different charity each week, and this week we are giving to a group and movement that inspired tonight's story. They are called Bike Bus World, and they transform communities and our planet through the simple act of riding bikes to school together.
You can learn more about them in our show notes. If you are looking for even more, nothing much, you can get our premium ad-free feed with dozens of bonus and extra long episodes for about a dime a day. And I think that's a steal. Our stories are brought to you through a lot of hard work.
There's no AI on our team, just me writing all the time, Bob refining the audio, and others doing the behind-the-scenes work. So if you choose to subscribe, please know how grateful we are, how supported that makes us feel. You can subscribe through the link in our notes or go to nothingmuchappens.com.
Now, this technique works by engaging your brain just enough to keep it from wandering, but not so much that we keep it awake. The story becomes a sort of lullaby. So please, just follow along with the sound of my voice and the calm shape of our story. Before you know it, You'll be waking up tomorrow, feeling replete and refreshed.
I'll tell the story twice, and I'll go a little slower the second time through. If you wake later in the night, don't hesitate to turn a story back on. You'll drop right back off to sleep. Our story tonight It's called Bike Bus, and it's a story about a joyful ride to school on a spring day.
It's also about a dog enjoying a sunny patch on the lawn, neighbors on porches, music playing from a bike basket, paper sack lunches, and the joy of a trip taken together. In the village of Nothing Much, I'm sure they never have to worry about their tap water. Unfortunately, like all of you, I live in the real world, and I don't always trust what comes out of my tap.
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Chapter 3: Why is AquaTrue a good choice for water purification?
Chapter 4: Who is Katherine Nicolai and what is her role?
I'm Katherine Nicolai. I write and read all the stories you hear on Nothing Much Happens. Audio engineering is by Bob Wittersheim. We give to a different charity each week, and this week we are giving to a group and movement that inspired tonight's story. They are called Bike Bus World, and they transform communities and our planet through the simple act of riding bikes to school together.
You can learn more about them in our show notes. If you are looking for even more, nothing much, you can get our premium ad-free feed with dozens of bonus and extra long episodes for about a dime a day. And I think that's a steal. Our stories are brought to you through a lot of hard work.
There's no AI on our team, just me writing all the time, Bob refining the audio, and others doing the behind-the-scenes work. So if you choose to subscribe, please know how grateful we are, how supported that makes us feel. You can subscribe through the link in our notes or go to nothingmuchappens.com.
Now, this technique works by engaging your brain just enough to keep it from wandering, but not so much that we keep it awake. The story becomes a sort of lullaby. So please, just follow along with the sound of my voice and the calm shape of our story. Before you know it, You'll be waking up tomorrow, feeling replete and refreshed.
I'll tell the story twice, and I'll go a little slower the second time through. If you wake later in the night, don't hesitate to turn a story back on. You'll drop right back off to sleep. Our story tonight It's called Bike Bus, and it's a story about a joyful ride to school on a spring day.
It's also about a dog enjoying a sunny patch on the lawn, neighbors on porches, music playing from a bike basket, paper sack lunches, and the joy of a trip taken together. In the village of Nothing Much, I'm sure they never have to worry about their tap water. Unfortunately, like all of you, I live in the real world, and I don't always trust what comes out of my tap.
That's why I use AquaTrue purifiers. They use a four-stage reverse osmosis purification process. and their countertop purifiers work with no installation or plumbing. It removes 15 times more contaminants than ordinary pitcher filters, and are specifically designed to combat chemicals like PFAS in your water supply. The filters are affordable and long-lasting. I love this part.
My old filter had to be changed every month, and I forgot all the time. But AquaTrue filters last from six months to two years. Just one set of filters from their classic purifier makes the equivalent of 4,500 bottles of water. That's less than three cents a bottle. Plus, you'll save the environment from tons of plastic waste. And the water tastes really good.
I don't worry about PFAS or harmful contaminants anymore. Today, my listeners receive 20% off any AquaTrue purifier. Just go to AquaTrue.com. That's A-Q-U-A-T-R-U dot com. and enter code NOTHINGMUCH at checkout. That's 20% off any AquaTrue water purifier. When you go to AquaTrue.com and use promo code N-O-T-H-I-N-G-M-U-C-H.
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Chapter 5: What is the purpose of the Bike Bus initiative?
The intersection I guarded was only two blocks away, and now that the winter weather had broken, I always walked.
I could have managed it, even on the very cold days. but had found that it was better to keep my car near where the kids crossed in bitter weather. I had a collection of extra hats and gloves in my trunk for anyone who had forgotten theirs, even a box of hand warmers that I passed out when it was really brutal.
I'd played music from the car stereo on those days, to dance to when my legs grew numb, to boost the young ones' spirits on their way to school. But now that the days were warming and sunnier, there were other ways to keep the kids moving and cheerful.
One specific way that I loved to be a part of.
They called it the Bike Bus, and it consisted of a few teachers and parents leading a pack of kids, all on bikes, to school in the morning and back home in the afternoon. Our P.E. teacher had started it a few years before. after getting the idea from a colleague in another district, and had come to school safety and crossing guards to make a plan.
The owner of the bike shop downtown had stepped in to help as well. He'd even started a monthly bike maintenance and repair clinic at the school. where our riders learned to patch a tire to fix broken chains and adjust their brakes.
When it came to the actual ride each day, there were a few rules.
Everyone had to wear a helmet. We tried to keep the ratio of grown-ups to kids at about one to four. Kids needed to stay behind the leader, and everyone kept to the planned route. After that, the goal was just to have fun outside together. And boy, did we have fun. The bus driver, the grown-up in front, carried a speaker in their basket and played happy, upbeat music.
And watching the kids sing along as they zoomed past made me smile so hard that tears sometimes came to my eyes. Often, on days I wasn't stationed at my post, days I wasn't scheduled to volunteer at all, I found myself rolling down my driveway on my own bike. and heading out to help ride along.
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Chapter 6: How does the Bike Bus affect the community?
And the kids could choose each day. I saw a girl walking toward me and put up my sign to guide her through the intersection. She had a large black case with her, a saxophone, I guessed, by the shape. And as we got to the curb, she nodded a thank you. I wondered if she was thinking through a piece of music, or vocabulary terms, or dates for a history quiz. Next came a group of siblings, three kids,
two of which might have been twins.
They each had a brown paper lunch sack clenched in one hand and a book bag slung over a shoulder and joked with each other as they crossed the street beside me.
From down the street, the sound of music and bike bells came, And from the doggy door of the house on the corner, a spotted pooch shot out into the yard. She ran to the fence and sat down, her tail swishing back and forth behind her.
We all liked watching the bike bus pass.
I stepped into the intersection to block any cross traffic and waved to the bus driver to show all was clear.
There must have been 50 people in the bus this morning. I recognized teachers and parents and lots of the kids.
Some of the adults had trailers on their bikes with toddlers strapped in. And I noticed a few teenagers who I knew were guiding their little siblings to class before heading further on to the high school.
We smiled at each other as they all flew by.
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