Thursday, December 11, 2014

tires by the 6 pack












Coming out of the Christmas concert last night with our wives, Dick mentioned what a great night to ride.  The thermometer read 63 degrees, just right for a night ride.  And he was right, and we wish we had.  But yet we had made a concession and come in our cars.  What were we thinking?  I ran into a friend yesterday who is an LAPD SWAT officer. She has a Street Triple like mine, and was having some suspension upgrades done on it.  She has 91,000 miles on it, and has ridden it to the four corners of the US of A.  By herself.  Which is how she prefers to ride, she loves to ride, not stop for coffee.  And I‘m impressed, and you should be too, as she has a same year Moto Guzzi at home with only 80,000 miles on it.  My kind of rider... I also saw Ray yesterday pulling up on his Gold Wing.  Now before you think Ray is some kind of Wing rider with a plush animal on back, he was there to pick up his Hayabusa powered B King, which Mickey had just turboed for him.  It dynoed at 264hp, 200 more than the Bonneville I was riding.  Firing it up it sounded way cool, a nasty snarl from the exhaust.  But when concerned about the sound attracting the cops, was warned “don’t worry about the sound, worry about the burnouts and wheelies.”  It will wheelie in 6th gear, and will do burn outs half a block long.  When I told him to go home and order a 6 pack of rear tires, he laughed and said that was his next stop.  By the way, Ray is 71, and just had prostrate surgery.  Youth redefined. 
And I thought about another friend who has a life threatening illness.  Yet I the midst of it took of for Alaska on his own, on a bike with over 100,000 miles on it.  I thought of years ago meeting Julius Kagel, a legend among BMW riders, who only stopped riding at age 83 when a car ran a red light and killed him and his bike.  I am proud to say I once rode with him.  I thought of the time a hot shoe in Durango wanted to race me.  He was fast, and I finally agreed if I could pick the route.  “OK, Phoenix.”  We never did race, he wasn’t prepared for 500 miles of speed.  And as I look a the bikes in the garage, 4 Triumphs and a Suzuki, the Triumphs have over 280,000 miles them, and one being ridden in 48 states.  But adding in the oldest, the 1978 GS1000 Suzuki with only 30,000, I have over 300,000 miles of memories sitting here.  But they were bought to ride, and we do.  No idea how many miles on the dirt bike, some fun cannot be measured in distance, just time spent in the saddle.  So we ride, and trying to remember all the bikes I have owned and ridden over the years, I have ridden almost 1 million miles.  Many hours on the road, which may explain my helmet head, and hard of hearing.  But like my friends above, we ride.  It is woven into our life and lifestyle.  We have stories while others only have time to listen.  Some wonder what it is like, we cannot describe it.  Heavenly times are like that.  And yes we admit that we have chosen a dangerous lifestyle, but we live to ride, and ride to live.  We enjoy all that life offers from behind handlebars,  and when today’s ride is over, look forward to tomorrows.  Our Christmas shopping list is easy, it is all done at motorcycle shops.  Our leathers are worn, our hair is flat, and our cameras full of memories, only surpassed by the ones in our memories, which no film or camera could copy. 
An old saying tells us “I didn’t quit riding because I got old, I got old because I quit riding.”  Maybe that is why we will never grow up, never get old, but just get older.  We get out and ride.  Good advice, and found in scripture.  We are  told to not be only hearers of the word, but doers.  See, scripture does encourage us to ride, Jesus would have.  But yet when I encounter many after church, they talk of new books read, lessons on KWVE, and their latest small groups.  And although they are constantly educated, they aren’t out doing it.  They have only experienced Christ within the church, they never get out and take Jesus to the world.  This same group always wonders why I’m not at the men’s ministry, or serving at church.  Yet don’t get it when I answer about being out ministering while they are in class.  God has told me more than once, “if the seat of your pants is wearing out faster than the soles of your shoes, you have it wrong.”  I get it, I prefer to be a doer rather than just a hearer.  I want all that Jesus has to offer, and all the blessing he can give.  They are found out on the road, where he spent most of his time.  Out among the lost and hurting, not hanging out with the Pharisees.  They lived in bondage to the law, the next service, the next teaching.  If Jesus had never uttered a word, his life and style would still have led others to him.  It is like advice given to new fathers, “they won’t remember your words, but they will remember your actions.”  We remember Jesus on the cross long before we remember his final words on it.  So pick up your cross and ride.  Wear out some shoe leather, see for yourself what Jesus is talking about.  Log some miles with the lost instead of among the saved, you studied to find yourself approved, now go out and prove it!  Today may be the day you stop reading other people’s testimonies and making some of your own.  You will never know until you get out of church, and take the church out to the people.  Jesus got it, and many do today.  Jesus was a servant and was out serving.  Are you serving or being served?  Check please, maybe a reality check. 
A few years ago when Theresa was a new rider, she she was offered by a friend who is president of an international motorcycle ministry to trailer her bike to Hollister.  It was about 450 miles each way, and she told him no.  She was riding, wasn’t that why she bought her Bonneville?  Wasn’t Hollister a motorcycle rally?  So maybe it is the ride that is the destination, and how you get there is important.  My final destination is heaven, and I want the most from life I can get on the way.  Life is for the living. Let the dead bury their own.  II want to enjoy the life Jesus has offered me, and don’t wish to miss any blessings.  Or to be a blessing to others.  Get out and live.  Wear out some shoes, break a sweat.  Get your hands dirty.  Stand with a homeless guy who smells.  Whose feet are shoeless.  Whose home is no address.  Tell him about what Jesus has done for you.  Love and encourage him.  But first you must have the testimonies to share.  And they will listen when they know how much you care, not how much you owe.  Some quote scripture, I rather live it.
Ray and I left at the same time yesterday.  My Bonneville down 200 hp on his B King.  His license plate reads “it is good to B King.”  But it is better to know the King, Jesus Christ.  Pray for Ray, I love the guy, he is seeking, yet hasn’t ocme to Christ yet.  My last words to him were “wanna race?”  To which he replied jokingly “I left my title at home.”  Power is good, but only when used properly.  Jesus is the power, and the glory forever and ever.  Bring your title next time Ray, I’ll leave mine at home.  But I won’t leave Jesus.  He goes with me everywhere.  Worn out leathers and all.  Did I mention the Rocket 3 land speed record bike was there also?  465 miles per hour.  Suddenly Ray seems so slow.  You’ll never know until you get out and see.
love with compassion,
Mike
matthew25biker.blogspot.com