Wednesday, August 22, 2018

memories from before you could remember them























Watching a Mecum Motorcycle Auction on TV last night, I was amazed at all the gray hair in the crowd.  Guys like me or older, who have the memories of the bikes being auctioned off from when they were new.  Old guys on walkers who remember the first 1957 Sportster.  Criticizing the right hand shift.  Some who a few years later would have sold all hey had or didn’t have for the new Bonneville in 1959.  Some a few years younger, who couldn’t afford the big bikes of Harley, Triumph, BSA, Norton, and others, who bought Japanese, smaller in size, weird in appearance, but not in performance.  Then in 1968, BSA and Triumph Triples, who wouldn’t have hung out at the local shop just wanting to get a peek, or sit on one.  Only to be upstaged a year later by Honda’s 750, and that’s where I came in.  The first bike I lusted for other than the dirt bikes I played on, was the Mach III Kawasaki, 500cc of blue smoke, two stroke craziness.  Maybe the first bikes I could truly remember seeing in a showroom because I was there.  All the others existed before I rode, and those who rode and remember them are fading like their hairlines.  When did it first happen to you, what was that first bike you remember seeing and having to have?  The one just out of your fiscal reach, what would you pay for it today?  For just one last ride back to when it all first happened.....
As I hang out in shops today I am the old guy, my memories go back way before many of them were born.  They question how we ever kick started a 750cc bike, why would we ride a two stroke and mess with mixing gas and oil?  A tune up every 6000 miles?  Twin rear shocks?  Tubeless tires?  Only spoked rims?  And as the stories get passed down, they wonder how we did it, and how we are still around today to tell about it.  Mention TT pipes to today’s Triumph rider and get a “huh?”  Choppers were all Triumphs 50 years ago, and all shifted on the right side.  Lello had an old Kawasaki with a rotary transmission, about 100cc of fear, as it shifted N-1-2-3-4-N.  Then back to first again!  Unbelievable, I rode one.  Dunstall Nortons and Hondas, I put Dunstall Low Decibel pipes on my R90S, what a sound!  Sissy bars, psychadelic helmets, or no helmet at all.  Windjammer fairings, Krauser bags for my BMW, bungee cords and back packs, all signs of the time when I first started riding.  Things  can remember and relate to because I was there.  Anything before that was everlasting, as in before me.  I depend on those who rode before to keep it real, and those younger depend on my age to keep it real.  Sometimes a far distant reality than they care to relate to.
So how far back is everlasting?  For us it means time, but for God it means forever, as in an infinity of yesterdays, for no matter how far back we go, God was there before us.  Before the beginning, when he created the heaven and earth out of nothing, he was everlasting.  He has seen it all because he as been there for it.  With an everlasting love for us.  Before being formed in the womb, he loved us.  While we were yet sinners, Jesus died for us.  His memories and love for us are everlasting, beyond any dimension we can imagine or think of, to a memory greater than we can think.  Yet how often in the midst of our trials do we wonder if he knows or even cares?  Where is the everlasting love he speaks of?  Why do we try to compartmentalize his love when it knows no boundaries?  It is hard to think of God being compassionate when we are suffering, but we forget how much he suffered through Jesus to give us life, to reunite with us.  We need the white beards and gray haired men who have lived along life in Christ to remind us of how it was, so we can see how it still is, and how it will be.  Everlasting to the end, including now.  Right now.
We all live or have lived in a Golden Age, an age when it all was new and exciting.  When our first ride was too short, and our first time with Jesus far beyond words.  When we were the kids that we talk to today and lovingly share the past.  With an everlasting love from God, who we love because he loved us first.  A passion created by him for us, to include him, to make us whole, for he is holy, complete.  For some of us it was the first sub 13 second 1/4 mile, the first time over 100 mph, disc brakes that really stopped us, and Castrol Bean oil.  When a twin meant vee or parallel, when an inline 4 was news, and an electric leg to start it all became standard.  I can still remember my first non-electric leg bike, my 1981 KZ750, with tubeless tires.  What next we all wondered?  How we remember those times will tell of a passion we had, and some haven’t given it up, at least not yet.  But do we have a passion for Christ the same way?  Listen to the stories the testimonies, of worship teams with acoustic guitars, song sheets with no overheads, and fellowships in homes on weeknights.  Just you and God, and his people, wanting to get closer, the koineia we were searching for, that was there all the time.  Everlasting to everlasting, with us included.  Today, and to be shared tomorrow.  Memories we can share because we were there, but so was God.  We owe it to the younger generation to keep the memories fresh, with each ride newer and more exciting.  To respect those who had a Sportster that would part the hair on your chest, or put some there if you didn’t have any.  Until a 250 two stroke blew by.  Both bikes and riders got heavier, but the ride doesn’t change, unless we do.  From everlasting to everlasting, the passion may diminish, Jesus’ love for us never will. Anything before I as born was history, with a lot of it still being made today.  Don’t shut God out, the audience may change, his love never does.  Which may explain why us old guys never have just one collector bike.....some things are just too good to never let go of....like a relationship with Jesus.  Oh what fun it is too ride....
love with compassion,
Mike
matthew25biker.blogspot.com