n4mwd wrote:
I just laid it down on the street this morning ...
Well, it is good to know you now have that out of the way! For, you see, there are two kinds of motorcycle riders:
1) Those who have gone down;
2) Those who will be going down.
I went down once when I first began riding in 1965, and I did go down once more in about 1992 ... but at least now you have your first one out of the way!
n4mwd wrote:
Messed the bike up some. I think I have it mostly fixed now.
I messed mine up quite a bit that last time. I was going into a curve a bit fast and actually accelerating a bit to give my daughter riding with me a thrill, then my rear tire hit some loose grave at the edge of the road ... and the rest is history. But, nobody got hurt beyond a scraped elbow (my daugher) and knee (me).
n4mwd wrote:
I was wearing protective gear do I wasn't hurt much.
That is beautiful, and never ever ride any other way. Road rash takes a long time heal ... and the same goes for anyone else you might some day take along. And besides, cute "honeys" on the back with their butts in the air and those long legs in plain view can only *distract* the drivers of the very vehicles you do *not* want to have running into either you or your passenger.
n4mwd wrote:
I'm still stressing too much.
For me, riding anywhere either in or near heavy traffic was almost always stressful -- nobody wants to become a "splat" on the front of even a small truck. Go easy and take your time.
n4mwd wrote:
And now I freak out every time I try to ride it.
If you can find a large and relatively-empty, out-of-the-way parking lot somewhere, just go do some easy laps around it in about second gear. The idea is to come to a place where you and the bike are "one", so to speak, and that can come in time.
n4mwd wrote:
I suppose part of the problem is that I was raised up listening to "Motorcycles are dangerous" all the time.
Neither guns nor motorcycles *ever* kill people. Only people do that ... and that brings me to this hard fact I was told before I ever got on my first bike:
"If you *ever* get hurt on a motorcycle, it is *your* fault ... period."
Many people who whine about things other people do will *loudly* argue with that statement, but I am an Aspie who rode for nearly 35 years and lived to tell about it ... and now I pass that truth along to you. Only "defensive driving", er, "defensive riding" will keep you alive when some schmuck decides to pull out it front of you. So, assume full-and-complete responsibility for yourself from the very get-go and you might just make it to the end!
n4mwd wrote:
Most motorcycle accidents are caused by cars doing the wrong thing ...
... in combination with a rider either thinking or foolishlty claiming s/he had some kind of "right" to be in that same spot at that same time.
Yield, my fellow, *always* yield ... or you *will* lose for sure.
n4mwd wrote:
I drive a car with no problem and I used to ride a bicycle with no problem.
Borrow a bicycle and again practice on that a bit.
n4mwd wrote:
I turn the handlebars to the right and suddenly the motorcycle veers left ...
Do not steer with the bars. Steer by simply leaning in the direction you want to go and you will then quite naturally and proportionally push the bar on that side away from you a bit and make your turn just fine.
n4mwd wrote:
... a thing motorcycles do called counter-steering ...
Bicycles do exactly the same at any speed above a mere crawl.
n4mwd wrote:
So ... turning right was the wrong thing to do.
In your mind and mine, that is logically correct. But, some simple geometry reaveals something different I have learned to accept even though I *still* do not understand.
n4mwd wrote:
So anyway, I was wondering if there are any motorcycle riding aspies out there?
Not on anything like that thing you have that some of us old geezers call a "crotch rocket", but yes ... and I do give you my best!
_________________
I began looking for someone like me when I was five ...
My search ended at 59 ... right here on WrongPlanet.
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