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crustacean menstruation station
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I wonder how you continue riding, just months after your crash.
Is it the passion? The joy of riding?
Arent you afraid of sitting on a motorcycle again?
Im asking cause I had some close calls before and since then I am kinda afraid to ride.
Asking myself. Is it worth the risk? Is it even such a risk compared to other things?
.....
Is it the passion? The joy of riding?
Arent you afraid of sitting on a motorcycle again?
Im asking cause I had some close calls before and since then I am kinda afraid to ride.
Asking myself. Is it worth the risk? Is it even such a risk compared to other things?
.....
Yes, there is a lot of passion behind my interest and love for motorcycles and riding. It what keeps be going, through sad summers and stormy winters. I vowed to myself, albeit when I was 15 or 16, that I'd never own a 4-wheeled machine. So, though I don't know what it's like to own and daily a car, I know that the bond I develop between me and my bike is special. I can't really describe it.
I depend on her to get me everywhere and do everything, and she needs me to continue running--she needs me to complete her chassis, so it's like this mutual mechanical love, heh!
More concretely, owning and operating a bike is cheaper than a car, is more efficient, and is much more fun! So even after a crash like mine, I still wanted that in my life.
Perhaps me being on a bike now is part of my stubborn and determined attitude; I didn't want the crash to change anything, i wanted it to be merely a story. And while that's true for riding, it ain't true for my knee. . . yet. I wont even let the crash take Sarah away from the world.
To answer your question clearly: The motorcycle isn't what hurt me, it was a human. You can never control or predict a stranger. But you can learn to control the bike better. In my down time, I was watching videos about new riding techniques that I have since incorporated, and hopefully I can use them the next time evasion is needed.
You pick yourself back up, smarter and stronger. Don't let fear destroy your resolve <3
I depend on her to get me everywhere and do everything, and she needs me to continue running--she needs me to complete her chassis, so it's like this mutual mechanical love, heh!
More concretely, owning and operating a bike is cheaper than a car, is more efficient, and is much more fun! So even after a crash like mine, I still wanted that in my life.
Perhaps me being on a bike now is part of my stubborn and determined attitude; I didn't want the crash to change anything, i wanted it to be merely a story. And while that's true for riding, it ain't true for my knee. . . yet. I wont even let the crash take Sarah away from the world.
To answer your question clearly: The motorcycle isn't what hurt me, it was a human. You can never control or predict a stranger. But you can learn to control the bike better. In my down time, I was watching videos about new riding techniques that I have since incorporated, and hopefully I can use them the next time evasion is needed.
You pick yourself back up, smarter and stronger. Don't let fear destroy your resolve <3
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