Mid-life crisis? No, just practical
I’m sure it’ll smack of guy-in-transition-mid-life-crisis, but I have the new-found desire to buy a motorcycle.
And while I am a guy in transition and I am nearing middle age, I look upon this idea from a practical standpoint.
Gas is nearing $3.50 a gallon and I drive a 4Runner that on its best days gets 20 mpg in the city.
(I will not bitch about paying that much for gas; I need it and I use the 4Runner as it was intended and I have the dings and dents to prove it.)
There are just days where I wonder if I could do more for the planet. Reduce greenhouse gasses. Reduce traffic congestion.
Yes, I should ride my bike to work. But with the distance between work and home, it just isn’t practical.![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgvo-jryUK5GoKDO0Q2BjX7eh5v18qdFhQE5Y4shQRESIZ9aHwC0-ZCMinwLIqwKb-r2ztpkeA1O0g0SrbmMVFx-LTfJuIMnb8J2CJIahGtxrdnkYqAXL7MFDgCt4OIty_O0Zfekg/s200/S83K7.jpg)
So, motorcycle.
(And it just so happens that my bestest friend’s family owns the Suzuki dealership in town.)
Couple of problems.
I am scared shitless of motorcycles.
Because I don’t know how to ride one.
“Dude, all you have to do is get the hand clutch down and the pedal,” that Meat-eating Robot said. “You drove a stick in the Rodeo and the Tacoma, right?”
Yeah, but not very well. I drove five-speed vehicles for 12 years and managed to kill them at weird moments.
“I did not know that,” the Robot said, laughing. “Really, dude, you can do it.”
So I ponder the possibilities.
And the chicks who dig motorcycles.
In leather bustiers.
It could happen.
And while I am a guy in transition and I am nearing middle age, I look upon this idea from a practical standpoint.
Gas is nearing $3.50 a gallon and I drive a 4Runner that on its best days gets 20 mpg in the city.
(I will not bitch about paying that much for gas; I need it and I use the 4Runner as it was intended and I have the dings and dents to prove it.)
There are just days where I wonder if I could do more for the planet. Reduce greenhouse gasses. Reduce traffic congestion.
Yes, I should ride my bike to work. But with the distance between work and home, it just isn’t practical.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgvo-jryUK5GoKDO0Q2BjX7eh5v18qdFhQE5Y4shQRESIZ9aHwC0-ZCMinwLIqwKb-r2ztpkeA1O0g0SrbmMVFx-LTfJuIMnb8J2CJIahGtxrdnkYqAXL7MFDgCt4OIty_O0Zfekg/s200/S83K7.jpg)
So, motorcycle.
(And it just so happens that my bestest friend’s family owns the Suzuki dealership in town.)
Couple of problems.
I am scared shitless of motorcycles.
Because I don’t know how to ride one.
“Dude, all you have to do is get the hand clutch down and the pedal,” that Meat-eating Robot said. “You drove a stick in the Rodeo and the Tacoma, right?”
Yeah, but not very well. I drove five-speed vehicles for 12 years and managed to kill them at weird moments.
“I did not know that,” the Robot said, laughing. “Really, dude, you can do it.”
So I ponder the possibilities.
And the chicks who dig motorcycles.
In leather bustiers.
It could happen.
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