Friday, August 11, 2017

I miss LA














If you want to go anywhere north from San Diego, and the desert is not in your plans, you will eventually come upon Los Angeles.  30 years ago San Diego was distinguishable from Orange County as it was from LA, now it is one large multi lane parking lot at times.  No matter how you choose it, you encounter LA traffic, but there are ways to avoid LA.  When my friend Nick stopped by last night, he is riding to San Francisco Saturday, and his first trip out of San Diego, I told him I would put together a route to miss LA.  He is leaving at 6 in the morning to get an early start, sadly most of our metro areas start the same time, so here goes.  Any time I go that way I try to miss LA. 
For awhile we had commuter lanes that motorcycles were welcomed on, now too many are becoming toll lanes, where those who used to travel them but don’t anymore, are stuck in the traffic jam with the single car occupants, and sadly us bike riders, too.  No more free pass for us, and as we split traffic and look at the sparsely populated toll lane, we are worse off than ever before.  The HOV lane that was supposed to free us up now requires pay, the same as a car or truck.  So for now we lane split....Unfortunately I only found this out last Christmas on the 110 going into LA, where their multi-lane HOV lane suddenly without warning goes from free to pay as you enter the city downtown, with little or no chance to get off.  $100 fine or toll bill, but they were nice enough  to cut it down to $20.  Great folks at these toll roads....So I try to miss LA whenever I can, too much traffic, too much toll, not enough lanes.  It’s on its way to Orange County and Riverside, wake up San Diego, or part of our legacy will be “remember when we travelled the freeways for free?” 
But as much as getting to LA can be expensive, parking can be worse.  At a local event at Qualcomm here last week, parking for it was $38!  Valet parking at the hospital yesterday was $5, plus 50 cents an hour, and no one gets in and out on time.  A scam to me, and insurance won’t cover it.  My last trip to the ER I went by ambulance, I live three miles from the hospital, and it was over $1800!  Maybe the tolls on the HOV lane aren’t so bad after all...and so I try to miss LA, but also Orange, Riverside, and San Diego counties too.  And the ambulance.  Don’t even get me going on San Francisco, where last time there a few years ago it was $8/hour at a meter, and bikes couldn’t share a space!  It used to be you left your heart in San Francisco, now you leave your wallet too!
When CSN&Y sang about “and we’ve got to get back to the garden,” or their song Woodstock, they talked of escaping the city and its pressures, to get back to the country where it all began.  Before it became urban, then suburban, and the malling of America took over.  A physical place with emotional ties, but also spiritual ones.  For after the fall in the garden, after sin entered and we were banished, we have been looking for that Nirvana that once existed.  To the hippies is was free love, to developers it was homes in the country turning it into the suburbs, but to Christians it is heaven.  Getting back to the way it was before sin, and the only way back is Jesus.  Where upon death we will arrive face to face with God, how I long to walk with him as Adam did in the cool of the afternoon.  And there will be no temptation, as no sin can abide in heaven.  A far cry from here on earth, but maybe not as far as we think.  Or want to think.  Woodstock went from a peaceful farm to a major city without police, sanitation, or medical facilities overnight.  It turned into the one thing that everyone was trying to escape, and left a trail of disaster in its wake.  The music was great, but it rained, no it poured, and the mud and trash and limited toilets left a mess that took the few volunteers months to clean up.  I missed Woodstock, but went to Summer Jam at Watkins Glen, and I can testify it was horrible.  People ruining yards, 20-30 miles of traffic jams, some just abandoning their cars and walking.  We escaped on our bikes barely, and missed the show, but did see the Grateful Dead land in a helicopter where we were sitting.  At least I can say I saw them as they walked past and nodded to us...
But as for the garden, nowhere on earth will it be found, for as soon as you find that place, others will follow.  If only it worked that way with heaven.  The short time we spend here on earth in no way compares to the eternity in heaven or hell, and we get to choose.  But we don’t want to choose the only way to heaven, we want the things of God, we just don’t want God.  So many go to hell in rebellion, sad but even sadder are those who are stuck in religion or churches where the gospel is not shared, pick a theme from being good to good works to my parents are saved, they still miss heaven, because they deny Jesus.  Who still stands at the door knocking, if only they heard the call.  But while here on earth, we can have the things of heaven, as Jesus promised it to be “on earth as it is in heaven,” in the Lord’s Prayer.  Which we immediately try to change for our own goods, and miss out.  We come to Christ, but deny the spirit he has left us to get by here on earth.  We miss the love, the joy, and the peace.  We think peace is when everyone gets along, but true peace is only found via the spirit in Jesus Christ.  Don’t fall for the CO-EXIST bumper sticker, what it really means is agree with them, and compromise your values.  Which leads to denying Jesus.  God is love, more than a bumper sticker, but to those that don’t believe.....
The Interstate Highway System we travel today was an outcry from President Eisenhower, who after seeing how bad our infrastructure was, called for a better system.  God is interested in our infrastructure too, he calls it our souls, and so provides a free way to heaven.  No commuter lane, no lane splitting, no tolls along the way.  FREE, as in free.  But to get in you must get on, and Jesus is the only way.  No GPS headings to lead you astray, although we need to beware of false teachers, he made it one way.  Not multiple choice, and no essay to answer.  The next time you are stuck in traffic and wonder “is there a better way?” think of Christ, the only way.  Avoid the tolls of religion and the traffic jams of those who tell you there are many ways.  There are many ways to miss LA, don’t miss out on Jesus.  And you can come to him where and just as you are, sitting in traffic, or lane splitting.  Where the spirit of the Lord is there is liberty, a free pass to heaven, and all the benefits now.  I miss LA whenever I can, when I die I am glad I will not miss heaven.  I made the right choice, I’m going back to the garden.  Where I will walk with God, and I won’t need a commuter lane when I get there. 
Something and someone to ponder as you sit in traffic....so I miss LA, what do you do?
love with compassion,
Mike
matthew25biker.blogspot.com