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This Week's Story, June 1st, Feel the Freedom!
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Topic: This Week's Story, June 1st, Feel the Freedom! (Read 939 times)
mhershon
Gosling
Posts: 234
This Week's Story, June 1st, Feel the Freedom!
«
on:
June 01, 2021, 10:14:54 AM »
Feel the Freedom
Now and then a new rider, a future commuter fresh from a motorcycle training course and glowing with enthusiasm, comes to me for advice.
"What would you tell me?" he or she will ask, handing me my pipe, brushing crumbs from my cardigan. "Give me the benefit of your years in the saddle."
I brew a pot of herbal tea and arrange a few Milano cookies on a good china plate. I fill the bowl of my pipe, tamp down the tobacco and light it. Perhaps I clear my throat. I frown. If the new rider is still there, I begin to speak.
I paint (if I may say so) a vivid picture of the Freedom we all Feel, the joy that comes with eventual mastery of the spirited machine, the sun-soaked run to glory that is motoring on two wheels. Here's what I say.
I say: Things are gonna happen that'll scare you and piss you off. They happen because car people are clueless, careless, angry, impaired or all of the above.
Let those things go. Once they're over, they're over.
See, things don't always happen one at a time. While you're fuming, gesturing or shaking your head at the last guy's stupidity, the next guy nails you. The next guy, by the way, is the first guy's kid brother, following him to Wal-Mart in the second (of the family's three) three-quarter-ton Ford pickups.
There are millions of those guys in their Fords. Unless you can afford to live in Carmel, California, and never leave that civilized village by-the-sea, you cannot escape them. And frankly, though it boasts no Wal-Mart, Carmel has hazards all its own.
Fact is, I say, one city's pretty much the same as the others, as spooky, just as demanding of our vigilance, particularly in December. There's nowhere to run.
Because your bike is not a safety capsule, not a Volvo, your survival as a rider depends on luck - oh, and on focusing your attention on what's right there in front of you. Behind and next to you too, 360 degrees. Three-eighty in December.
As Keith Code says, you only have so much attention, so much focus pie to slice, and no focus to waste. No way do you have any mental energy to spend being upset at stupid drivers. Stupid drivers are, as we agreed, a given.
What can you do? If you see one of those guys near you in his pickup, Jeep CJ or faded-paint big ol' American sedan, you can and should get away from him. Switch to a different lane and give other drivers a shot at you. You might be safer. Who can say?
It is helpful to be aware that there are certain cars typically owned by guys who cannot drive (Volvos, Saturns) and others that attract viciously aggressive guys (Cherokees, Camrys, BMWs), but your hard-earned awareness is no shield. It won't work every time like the legendary cross that repels the vampire.
Don't assume that the guy in the lowered Accord with the Yoshimura sticker in the window is your friend. Don't assume anyone in a vehicle with doors is your friend. If you see your minister, rabbi or priest on the road, wave but keep an empty lane between you. You want to go to heaven, but not today.
As wary as you are normally, ride twice as scared at bridge tollbooths, near convenience stores and in school zones. Why?
The road surface next to the tollbooth is treacherous slick. Sometimes it's too slick for your boot sole to find traction. Your foot slips, you're down in an instant, you need help to get back up, and the horns are going in a microsecond.
At the 7-Eleven? No one decides if they're gonna stop at a 7-Eleven until the last second, so no one has time to signal or brake gradually. Gas pumps in front of the store? Worse yet. Who realizes they're low on fuel until the little panic light comes on?
And school zones? Traffic laws do not apply in school zones. Laws of physics do not apply in school zones. Human kindness cannot survive in school zones.
Better to be a gunpoint hostage in a passenger aircraft losing altitude and streaming fuel than to ride absentmindedly, 15mph through a school zone. Guys with bombs or box knives will have more mercy than those soccer moms.
Perhaps (I say, only half-serious) we should be bombing the suburbs rather than middle-Eastern targets. More terrorists per square mile in the ‘burbs. Target Land Rovers and mommy vans; Never waste a bomb. But enough fantasy...
Don’t trust eye contact, I say.
Eye contact with a driver who COULD pull out or turn across your path is NOT a guarantee he won't do just that. Probably he'll look right at you and do it. It’s not his fault, really: He's legally blind. He can't see you in your Hi-Viz Lime Yellow ‘Stitch jacket, your high-beam blazing right in front of him. Now, because your motorcycle is stuck under his car, he'll be late getting to Wal-Mart - IF the cops let him drive away from the scene with no license or proof of insurance. What a hassle for him. He'll still be there, tapping his cane, long after the EMTs have taken you, lights and siren, to the trauma center.
Here’s what I say about taking care of motorcycles: Keep oil in the crankcase and the right air pressure in the tires. You depend on the machine to keep you upright. You depend on its controllability, especially when you're a green rider yourself, not controlling it any too elegantly.
Do your own work when you feel competent doing so; Let someone else do jobs that scare you. When you're working on your bike, avoid interruptions. You need to concentrate, to keep your mind on the task at hand.
Don't think that after a month of riding, you've mastered this motorcycle thing. Precisely half of us riders are below average in skill. In your first year or so on the bike you almost certainly fit in that category.
That's not an insult, it's a statistical truth. We're not, all of us, good at everything we try. I hope you become a proficient motorcyclist, but if you don’t, I hope you stay healthy until you lose interest, or your insurance company refuses coverage, or your family intervenes.
I wish you years of happy riding, I say, and suggest that each of those years is the result of millions of cool-headed, sober, correct decisions. Now, get out there and Feel the Freedom. Or stay here out of the rain and have another Milano.
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jwinwi
Guest
Re: This Week's Story, June 1st, Feel the Freedom!
«
Reply #1 on:
June 01, 2021, 12:21:39 PM »
It's not getting any safer out there... Finding myself more and more selective about where and when I ride.
Was relieved to hear my 22 year old son say he has no interest in riding. Not planning to quit or sell bikes anytime soon but not sure if I'd be excited to start riding now.
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mhershon
Gosling
Posts: 234
Re: This Week's Story, June 1st, Feel the Freedom!
«
Reply #2 on:
June 01, 2021, 12:54:26 PM »
jwinwi, I feel precisely the same way. Can't just ride any old time or place...too scary. I'm trying to buy one of those instant-inflating safety vests; Can't do it! They're sold out everywhere! Revzilla says maybe in two months... Damn things cost as much as I used to pay for nice motorcycles... Sigh...
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Scout63
Gaggle Hero
Posts: 2692
Location: Orleans, MA USA
Re: This Week's Story, June 1st, Feel the Freedom!
«
Reply #3 on:
June 01, 2021, 09:55:07 PM »
How you distill all of that wisdom into one page is artful Maynard. I totally agree on not riding. I would quit if I could but I’m a motorcyclist. I restored a gorgeous v50 for my daughter and hope she never gets past riding it around the block.
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Ben Zehnder - Orleans, MA USA
LowRyter
Gaggle Hero
Posts: 16775
Location: Edmond OK
Re: This Week's Story, June 1st, Feel the Freedom!
«
Reply #4 on:
June 01, 2021, 10:00:30 PM »
My advice, learn to use the brakes properly and essentially for emergency stops, don't go any faster than you can see to stop.
After that I might discuss cornering, trail braking, staying out of blind spots, reading the road surface, downshifting, etc.
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John L
When life gets you down remember it's one down and the rest are up. (1-N-23456)
Chuck in Indiana
Gaggle Hero
Posts: 29633
Re: This Week's Story, June 1st, Feel the Freedom!
«
Reply #5 on:
June 02, 2021, 07:31:29 AM »
Quote
Let those things go. Once they're over, they're over.
Words of wisdom. I just think, "Ahh.." (short for asshole) and continue on.
Very nice, Maynard.. artfully done.
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Chuck in (Elwood) Indiana/sometimes SoCal
87 AeroLario
95 Skorpion tour
25 Triumph Speed 900
"Two things are infinite: the universe and human stupidity; and I'm not sure about the universe."
Albert Einstein
jwinwi
Guest
Re: This Week's Story, June 1st, Feel the Freedom!
«
Reply #6 on:
June 02, 2021, 07:47:44 AM »
... And don't ride faster than your guardian angel can fly.
Saw that somewhere recently. Not exactly practical advice but something to think about.
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This Week's Story, June 1st, Feel the Freedom!
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