The only reason I can think of for always wanting to be 12 was so I could  get into the James Bond movies.  The nasty, older-16-girl behind the ticket  window would always ask your age, and if you didn't look it, wouldn't let you  in.  But when I finally got to be 12, with it, brought a change in my economics,  for the 50 cent ticket now went up to 75 cents, and brought about early fiscal  turmoil as I had to readied how to spend the dollar my mother gave me to go.  I  needed more income to finance my new, lucrative lifestyle, so I did what a lot  of other kids my age did, I sought work through YES-Youth Employment Service,  and cut yards, making $4 a week-not bad when you are 12.  And my first contact  with networking.  I just didn't know it.
 My friend Bill also signed up, and this is where he met Mr. Eysmann.  Bill  cut his yard. Mr. Eysmann was a very rich man, who was a true entrepreneur.   Having only a daughter, Allison, Bill soon became the son Mr. Eysmann never  had-and I'm sure taught him lessons he wished he didn't have to learn.  I saw  the personal, hand written check for $4 million dollars he wrote to buy  Polychrome, where he got Bill and I jobs.  When Bill got arrested for wheelying  in front of Bambergers, and landing his front wheel on the trunk of a police  car, it was Mr. Eysmann that got all charges dropped.  It was Mr. Eysmann, who  when two weeks into the fall semester, we decided to attend Rutgers and all  classes were closed, who got us into all the classes we wanted, and paid for  them.  He also saw to it that Bill was given a proper head start, and set him up  with a loan to buy Mrs. Eysmann's 1967 baby blue with white interior Cadillac  convertible.  And placed $1000 in an account there for him, in a bank he owned.   
 Mr. Eysmann had but one child, Allison, who was Daddy's little girl.  A 10  from the neck down, she balanced out to a 4 from the neck up.  Always  overdressed, and at first obnoxious to Bill-they acted like brother and  sister-she and I got to be friends.  For all her sophistication, she was quite  naive-I'm sure the way her dad wanted, and when I decided to move west in  November of 75, she asked me to visit her at Wellesley, to say good bye.
 Wellesley was an all girls college then, and a visitor, particularly a male  had to be screened, just to get on campus-let alone in the dorm.  But Allison  made the proper arrangements, and I was allowed to stay in a guest room, far  secluded from female contact, and properly chaperoned by her resident assistant  the whole time.  She had told me she would buy me dinner, and I envisioned a  steak after riding all day in the cold, but was restricted to anything I wanted  in the cafeteria, food wise that is.  Which was interesting-here I am the only  male, shoulder length hair, leather jacket, and on a motorcycle-quite the  opposite to the Harvard boys who were being shipped in that Saturday night for a  mixer.  A dream, as the co-eds had only me to flirt with, and did.  I was like a  prize to Allison, who watched, and when it got to adventurous-to her, would  remind them that I was with her-for the weekend.  Sorry ladies, but to these  secluded young women, I was an outlaw-Harvard lads didn't ride, I was Brando and  McQueen on my bike, and James Dean in my leather-a rebel with a cause and not in  a blue blazer with a crest-hairdo by helmet, and the only game in town, at least  at dinner, but chaperoned by Allison, and her RA.  A cool no preppie could ever  dream about-"Dad, how come that biker in the leather jacket and long hair is  getting all the girls." With the agreement to leave early enough so they could  get ready the next day for the Harvard lads.
 Now I had no physical interest in Allison, I know Bill did, and the fact  that he couldn't do anything because of Mr. Eysmann used to drive him nuts.  But  to me she was a Jewish princess, secluded from the world, and who knows what I  was-all I could attest to was being a Christian for less than 90 days, and not  sure what that meant either.  And Allison and I had talked about Jesus openly,  in fact that was most of our conversations-this wonderful thing had happened to  my life, and she saw I wasn't like Bill anymore-although I think she secretly  had the hots for him-another true bad boy crush.  But that night in the guest  room, with chaperone along, I shared Jesus with them.  Long after lights out,  the RA had some authority back then, and for one of the first times cared more  about the woman I was visiting than anything sexual.  I don't know where Allison  is today with Jesus, but I know there was some heavy seeding going on that  night-as this 90 day old Christian biker evangelist was sharing his heart, and  what was in it. Except the what was really a who.
 I don't know the scripture, I think it is in Romans, but it says that what  is in your heart, comes from your mouth.  My interpretation, but accurate.  And  that night my heart was on Jesus.  And at an early stage in my walk, learned to  trust Him for words, and that He would give them to me.  I wasn't in church, but  I was in the word-and that made all the difference.  I was leaning/trusting Him,  and not even realizing it.  Truly God takes care of those He calls His  own.
 Today you may be like the Black Sheep-ministering to a group of unsaved HOG  members, who have work, a home, and many bikes-why would they need God?  You may  be ministering to a man who sinned-and can't forgive himself, and wonder why he  doesn't get it.  You may be facing a situation that unless God intervenes is  hopeless-and guess what-He is right there with you!  You are not alone, and He  has provided a way out-and also the right words for you.  It was no coincidence  me being at Wellesley that night, I was the means that God used to evangelize  that night.  And it is no coincidence who you will encounter today-God orders  your steps, and a divine encounter is just around the corner-maybe right now!   Trust Him, and if His words come from your mouth, thank him for a changed  heart.  
 And if you happen to be on the receiving end, thank Him, too.  Your room,  your cell, your buddy seat is never empty as long as you let Jesus into your  life.  Even in a woman's dorm.  And to all you Harvard lads who would do  anything to spend a night in the girls dorm at Wellesley, let me tell you  something.  I did!  I was even invited back!  And it was better than anything  you could imagine!  Eat your hearts out!  And it's nothing a gentleman would  share with others.  But if you really want to know-all I can say is you wouldn't  believe it.  Better than I could have imagined!  Maybe if you ask, I 'll tell  you sometime.  But I warn you-it's not what you think.  Might even change you  heart.  Consider your heart.  And when done, give them to Jesus.  From what I  see, you guys need Him too.  And maybe a leather jacket and motorcycle wouldn't  hurt either!
 Let "for God so love the world, He gave His only son" into your life  today.  And watch where it takes you!  It took me to Wellesley-who knows where  it can take you.  You know, I never did hear how that mixer with the Harvard  lads went.
 love with compassion,
 Mike
 matthew25biker.blogspot.com