Wednesday, September 3, 2014

faces along the highway























I had pulled into Zanesville, Ohio, and it was late.  I was behind schedule, a ticket and a road that just had to be explored took me off the route by a couple hundred miles.  An old tourist camp, the ones where they have little cabins, looked inviting in the dark, really I am a sucker for old neon signs, and for a small cash transaction, signed up for the night.  And then the guy behind the counter saw my Honda, and said “hold on,” and gave me back $10, and moved me to a better cabin, where I could park it on the porch.  Anything for a fellow biker...We had ridden on the ferry across to Victoria, and Bruce had made the reservations for that night.  When we saw they wouldn’t work out, the manager gave us back our money, and we went looking for a room.  After 10pm, the pickings were slim, but we found one.  And when the lady behind the desk saw the motorcycles, gave us the last room, a suite, for the price of a room.  And called over to the restaurant, who stayed open for us, and then the cook came out and asked about our trip.  While eating the manager came over and sneaked the spa key in my hand, telling me it was closed, just be quiet, “I know you could use a swim before bed.”  Strangers in a strange land, the language of motorcycles bridged any culture gap.  On another trip alone, I was eating at a Steak and Shake just north of Oklahoma City.  A young father with his son, about 4 years old, had been staring at my bike, and when offered a chance to sit on it, jumped at it.  His father taking pictures, and the little boy having a story to tell his mom when he got home.   A few seconds out of my life, meant a lifetime memory to a father and son.  Never heard of any yuppie doing that on his BMW.  But just add a motorcycle, and things happen...
Brett and I had ridden to Monterey for the Grand Prix, and were staying at a large Travelodge.  When we pulled in, other riders told us of thefts the night before, and jokingly we asked if we could park in our rooms that night.  “Of course,” and although taken by surprise, we did.  Riding down the hallways, he on a Ninja 750, and me on my FJ1100, we slept with our bikes that night, one at the end of the bed, the other between the beds.  All of us safe and secure, and a little woozy after sniffing gas fumes all night, but bright and ready for the day at the races.  Saying goodbye to the guy who had slept with his GSXR1100 tied to his leg outside, packing a gun across his chest.  We both would have stories to tell later....It was pouring and dark going across New York state, we had chosen the Turnpike because of the weather. Coming up to the tollbooth, a leather jacketed arm came out and waved us through, a courtesy to us in the rain.  And we never got a chance to thank him.  Earlier on the trip, I broke of a footpeg on my Sprint ST, and stopping in a Chevy dealer with a Honda motorcycle store in the back, told the mechanic of my dilemma.  Going through the trash, he found an old handlebar, cut off the end to foot peg length, put on old grip on it, and using a set screw attached it.  Promising he couldn’t say how long it would hold.  And finally being replaced when we got back home, over 3000 miles later.  Footpeg intact.  And one last Sprint St story. We were riding along Skyline Drive in Virginia, and stopped at on overlook.  Parking next to another Sprint, the owner told us of how this was his backyard, he rode here often, and if we wanted to follow him, he would promise us a great ride.  Which we did, which he did, we passed countless cars going way over the 45 mph posted, never felt unsafe, and when he turned off, a simple wave was all that was needed to say thanks for the ride.  And of course there was the manage at Johnny Carino’s outside of San Antonio, who when he found out we ride, gave us one meal free, and offered to take off the next day to show us the roads of Texas Hill Country.  Faces along the highway of life we travel, simple moments in time, non-scripted and invaluable.  Names and faces long ago forgotten, but the memories never die.  The stories only get richer, and the rides never seem to be as frequent as needed.  If you ride, you know.  And even if I could explain, you would still have to understand, you still need to get out and find out for your self.  You cannot live life on my memories, they are that personal and precious.  And best seen from behind the handlebars.
Now some may call us lucky, and some others may get jealous.  “Why can’t I do things like that?”  First you need to get out.  Second there is no such thing as luck.  Luck would mean random thoughts and actions, that no one is in control.  Yet those of us who know Jesus know that isn’t true, God has everything under control.  They are called divine interventions, God already had the right manager in Victoria who liked bikers, and who would extend courtesy to us.  God knew of a father and son eating at Steak and Shake that day, and knew of a rider who would make their day.  He had the old handlebars in the trash so a mechanic could fabricate a new footpeg, and had a Chevy dealer with a Honda franchise out back to make the day complete.  Too often we think of God only in emergencies, and wonder “where was he?  If God cares, how did this happen?”  Yet he never left us, he went down that dark road with us when we knew we shouldn’t.  He kept us safe like one night in Philadelphia when the headlight popped out of my BMW after hitting a pothole, in the ghetto.  Kids throwing rocks at cars, yet he kept me safe.  We can plan all we want, but yet fail to include God in the plans.  When he should be the very center of them.  And so man plans, and God laughs, not at us, but with us.  To show how much he loves us, to show how much he cares even about the little things.  He isn’t someone along the way, someone we meet and forget, but a friend who sticks with us forever.  And once we include him in our daily lives, we find more life than we could ever imagine.  He guides us Mom and Pop diners, he shows us the last room in town, that is just waiting for us.  He has paid the toll ahead of time, and is keeping us safe in the storm.  All behind the scenes, never interfering, but always present.  And yet we forget all about him, listening to others who claim God is just a religion of rules, never seeing the freedom in the spirit that gives life.  Trusting to luck, a philosophy, rather than trusting in truth.  He is the tour guide of life no matter which road you are on, and knows the best places to eat, to sleep, to ride, and has the next memory just waiting for you.  All because he loves you...and without asking for anything in return.  And so we wait patiently for his return.
Short trips or long, alone or in a group, God has blessings waiting for you.  Don’t trust to luck when you can trust to Jesus.  Proven over and over.  Just like a trip my old friend John Duffy took once on his old GT380 Suzuki.  He averaged over 63 miles per gallon, had great weather, and one night near exhaustion in Texas, found himself asleep and bundled up, safe and secure next to an off ramp, wondering how he got there.  But God knew, and still knows today.  Don’t be asleep at the wheel, or even the handlebars, God never rests, never sleeps, never slumbers.  One night in Zanesville, another in Texas, another Victoria.  And so I ask, who plans your next ride?  Faces on the highway, I am glad I don’t face life without the face of God shining on me.
love with compassion,
Mike
matthew25biker.blogspot.com