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View Full Version : My name is Cadd and I'm a moto-holic...


07-11-2008, 09:15 PM
Yes, my name is Cadd and I'm a moto-holic.

How bad is it? Well people ask me sometimes why I ride "those damn things" and I took some time to think about why. The thing that became most evident was that logical reasoning had long fled any excuses I could muster.

I started riding because I wanted cheap transportation. I already had a car, but it only got 20 MPG at best & gas was a whopping 26 cents a gallon. I'd ridden bicycles a lot, and took to MC's pretty quickly. I've ridden consistently about 30 of the past 39 years, and sporadically in between. There were a few years where I didn't own a bike or my bike(s) were torn apart & I couldn't afford to fix them. There were several years that I either did not own a car at all, or my wife drove the one car we had while I rode.

The "cheap transportation" thing was misleading. I spent much less for gas and far more for everything else; but for the cost of a pretty slow car I could have a pretty fast bike. Now I ride because I've become obsessive-compulsive in my old age.

I can hardly bear to take the car unless it's pouring rain --particularly if I'm going solo. I can't stand to let anyone else work on my bike. I can't bear to have my bike torn apart for long, so maintenance chores like changing tires are done in marathon sessions without stopping to eat or wind my watch. I buy spare parts way in advance of when I'll need them so I don't have to wait. I've changed a lot of things on it, but I keep every part, screw, and washer hoarded away "just in case".

It hurts to look at it when it's filthy, but I don't wash it enough because I know I'll be out getting it dirty again very soon. Besides, when I do clean it, my wife complains because I'll spend three or 4 hours. A half-mile ride to the liquor store turns into a 5 or 10 mile ride just because I don't want to take it out without warming the engine fully.

My cars and boat are used less & less each year, until I should probably sell them all (except for one beater to drive when it pours rain) so they don't just rust up solid. I have to restrain myself from running out to spend my life savings and my retirement account on new motorcycles; but I don't because I know that my income after retirement won't allow me to buy them at all unless I save the money now. The only time this one ever failed to start, (dead battery) I was pissed at myself that I don't have another one sitting there ready to go.

I do fear death. I do fear injury. I know that my number could come up on any given day. I've never had an even semi-serious injury on a bike--a few bruises or a tiny bit of road rash being the worst of it-- yet my greatest fear isn't dying but getting old enough or injured enough that I'll never ride again. When I roll my bike out of the garage every morning I look up at the sky and pray a little: "Not today, Lord...OK?" Still, knowing that one day I might bite the concrete does nothing to caution me. Not really. Oh, I don't ride like some young squid that thinks he's made of titanium, but I still ride in some hairy traffic and under some slick conditions.

No, there's not much logic left to my reasoning. I ride because the alternative is more frightening than the potential dangers out there. The alternative is not riding. I shake a little just thinking about it.

I know this old guy, in his mid 70's now. He's been riding since he was a kid, and raced bikes as well. He's crashed so many times that he has injuries that cannot ever heal. He limps. He's bent. His fingers are permanently curved and won't straighten any more. He can shoot a pistol and he can work the levers on a bike. He rides sport bikes nowadays, and his back has assumed the necessary shape to lean over the tank all day. When he gets off the bike it's still that shape. I think about him often and wonder if that will be me in another 25 years?

Or will I just suddenly blow a gasket from eating too many cheeseburgers and plow rigid into the back of a dump truck?

I'm a moto-holic, and there's no going back for me; and as far as I can tell, there is no cure this side of the grave.

scion0
07-11-2008, 11:40 PM
Welcome Cadd!

skeeter
07-12-2008, 01:13 AM
More than infatuation, true love.

ruruson1
07-12-2008, 02:00 AM
"AMEN" I'm kinda tearful now...

misunderstood
07-12-2008, 04:57 AM
Everyone at the MA meeting (Moto-holic's Anounomus) is asleep now. http://s2.images.proboards.com/grin.gif

racinchef
07-12-2008, 06:24 AM
Very well put. We don't seek remediation or even justification, we want;
<marquee>SATISFACTION</marquee>

cactusjack
07-12-2008, 06:32 AM
Yes, my name is Cadd and I'm a moto-holic.

Hi, Cadd!

CQ, that was a very introspective essay. I can honestly say I share some of the same thoughts on the subject.

VulcanE
07-12-2008, 06:36 AM
I'm with you CQ, I buy my parts before I need them, I save every nut/bolt I swap out. When, for what ever reason, I can't ride, I'm like a person suffering withdrawal pains, My wife says I get ill. When people ask me Why? I tell them "If I have to explain it, you wouldn't understand it, but your dog that likes to ride with the window down and his head sticking out the window, He understands!!!! http://s2.images.proboards.com/grin.gif

mrfuni
07-12-2008, 07:01 AM
Well Said Cadd...So hard to explain to those who do not ride...
Joe

caddman11
07-12-2008, 07:58 AM
You know, it just like to ride.

phenrichs
07-12-2008, 08:29 AM
Preach On Cadd!!!! We all think it and you have poetically put it in to words.

I too am a little misty eyed after reading this.

Thanks

oldbikers
07-12-2008, 08:52 AM
I just hope the good lord will allow me enough time to put the kick stand down when it is my time to go

07-12-2008, 10:11 AM
I just hope the good lord will allow me enough time to put the kick stand down when it is my time to go

I do too Oldbiker. I do too.

I worry a bit about having a heart attack while I'm on the bike, and particularly when I've got a passenger. Thankfully I never feel like that while I'm riding. Probably something about all the adrenaline rushing around in my system at the time. The truth is, it'll probably hit me while I'm behind the desk, right after lunch.

07-12-2008, 10:13 AM
Very well put. We don't seek remediation or even justification, we want;
SATISFACTION

Definately not remediation! Besides, they'd have to come with a net.

07-12-2008, 10:28 AM
To all:

I re-wrote that little musing a bit last night, but I originally wrote it over at Motorcycle-USA nearly two years ago. Frighteningly, it's even more true now than it was then. It's gotten worse each year since I started riding.

I think the greatest part of it all is the simple fear of mortality: the fact we all know, that someday we won't be doing what we can do now. I don't know if, when the time comes I'll be able to hang up my helmet quietly. Maybe it'll end more like that old movie The Last Run.* None of that really matters--how it will all end. The bare fact that it will is enough to swallow.

Now I'm gettin' freakin' gloomy. Forget all that crap, and until that day ROCK ON DUDES!


<* edit....The one with George C. Scott.>

radco
07-12-2008, 10:39 AM
I too am a Moto Holic,, Im also a Chrome a holic!!!!! BAD bad bad me .. I tried the 12 step program,, didnt work ::) 12 step away from the bike is not far enough..... http://s2.images.proboards.com/shocked.gif I feel your pain.. :'(.......Rich

socwkbiker
07-12-2008, 10:52 AM
Well said CQ! I got my first bike in 1989 but sold it when I moved to NJ in '90. Fifteen years later I got my Nomad and rediscovered just why I rode absolutely everywhere no matter what. There is nothing like that feeling and I too plan to ride until my body gives out. Reading your essay, I saw myself in parts, like saving every nut and bolt.

VulcanE, hope you don't mind, but I'm going to adopt your saying. That's awesome and so true!

skeeter
07-13-2008, 12:14 AM
I do fear death. I do fear injury. I know that my number could come up on any given day. I've never had an even semi-serious injury on a bike--a few bruises or a tiny bit of road rash being the worst of it-- yet my greatest fear isn't dying but getting old enough or injured enough that I'll never ride again. When I roll my bike out of the garage every morning I look up at the sky and pray a little: "Not today, Lord...OK?" .

Doing some work for a 70+ yr old man whos only vehicle at this time is his bike. I had known that he walked funny but never questioned but he told me. Left leg below the knee is paralyzed from a motorcycle accident. Right leg- lady hit him on his bike severing his foot. They reattached his foot quickly enough to save it but he lost over 2 inches of his leg. He had a heart attack 3 yrs ago and lost his job. He's sold his truck and is in the process of selling his house so he can move back to Hawaii and enjoy sun, surfing and ocean canoeing the rest of his days. He's owned 46 bikes.

I had a pretty serious wreck 2 years ago. Broken hand and a crushed vertabrae. I could hardly wait to get back on the bike.
Scripture to ease my mind, Romans 14:8