visual image observation
Posted: Wed Mar 24, 2004 7:11 pm
In the subconcious mind of the cager, the following thought process
occurs:
If a car or truck is approaching, it may kill the cager, so he/she
waits.
The cager will pull out in front of the motorcyclist, because if a
collision
ocurrs, the cager will be able to drive the dented vehicle to the
body shop
for repairs, while the motorcyclist lays dying in the intersection.
It's cultural. "My program is the only one ON THE PLANET that
matters; the
whole world better get the f**k out of my way". You see it in
supermarkets,
mall parking lots, the popcorn line at the movies, the waiting room
at Job
Service. Not to mention the demand for my doohickeys
I realized a couple of years ago (62 now) the folly of hurrying. I
cruise @
3500-4000 RPM any more. Kinder to the bike. I always have a bubble
of dead
air in front of me; yuppie gen-X cagers sweep past me, in their mad
dash to
A Minute From Now. I can enjoy a safer glance at the passing
scenery, and
the panic collision avoidance situations have dropped to near zero.
I'm amused by all the chatter regarding oversize brake rotors,
auxiliary
lighting, in the name of safety. I started riding more or less
continuously
when I got out of the Navy in '62. In all that time, I've actually
touched
another vehicle once; a 3 MPH bump and fall, up in Yellowstone. the
only
casualty was a tiny jar of sandwitch spread I had purchased at the
store up
at Tower Falls. I must be doing something right.
I believe the single most important influence to the safe arrival at
one's
destination is Rider Vigilance. I bought my '88 KLR new, put 68
kilomiles
on it before I sold it last summer, now I ride an '03.
Jake www.sagebrushmachine.com