When filling out an application recently, it asked how many years have I 
had a motorcycle license.  Even my answer took me by surprise, 47 years.  Wow!  
Suddenly that makes me feel old!  Not really, just older.  And as the younger 
guy by a generation looked at my answer, he couldn’t figure out anyone riding 
for so long.  And as I looked around the multi-brand store, I stopped to pause 
and think how dealerships had changed.  One quick glance and I could see Honda, 
Kawasaki, Yamaha, and Suzuki.  With Can Am throw in, and Polaris.  All in one 
showroom.  A far cry from when we used to spend all day going from VIP Honda, to 
Rick’s Cycle and his Triumphs and Kawasakis.  Or a 20 minute ride to East Coast 
Sales and BMW and Yamaha, in the back of the bicycle shop.  Within our bike 
riding range there were no Suzuki stores yet, so we never got to Solo Suzuki. It 
took a full day, with arguments along the way of what to buy, how long it would 
take for us to save, and why would you buy anything else but a Honda?  We sat on 
bikes, with permission, and could proudly answer “of course I know how to ride, 
had a mini-bike for years.”  All at age 17.  We knew we had no chance that day 
of taking a new bike home, but the brochures were free, and many a bedroom wall 
was decorated with them.  For me it would be a new 1972 CB350 Honda, with even a 
calendar on the wall with the days counted down until I got my license, and 
would go and buy the bike.  Many hours of cutting yards, delivering papers, and 
shoveling snow were all about to be worth it.  My trip back to where it all 
began interrupted by the salesman asking “do you want to buy an extended 
warranty?” And I was back to reality.....
It is safe to safe riding has changed and it has changed me.  Five /5 BMW’s 
in the seventies cured me of them forever.  A Honda or two here and there, 
meeting the nicest people in between, and my first Z-1, bought used from a 
veterinarian who commuted 100 miles a day on it. The 1986 FJ100 bought on a whim 
when the price was too good to pass up, and riding it over 7000 miles the first 
week.  So much for the first service....and the first new Triumph that replaced 
it.  What was I thinking?  What am I thinking now?  If any bike could tell of 
truly being resurrected, Triumph would be it.  The old 650’s were hot until 
Honda’s 750, and many would have been left to rust if they didn’t leak oil so 
much.  Same with Harley, now the barn finds bring big bucks, back then they were 
just a big bike that was unreliable and expensive to fix.  Maybe some things 
haven’t changed.  Old for me is bikes from the sixties, for my sons the 
eighties, and for kids just getting their license, we’re all old.  to us they’re 
all young.  But in them we can look back and still see the excitement of when we 
first rode, our first bike ridden off the showroom floor, our first overnighter, 
losing our first girl friend because she wouldn’t ride, and a few of us 
fortunate to marry one who does.  Over one million miles of roads, meals, 
friends met, friends lost, new bikes and old bikes, quicker 1/4 miles, and more 
reliability.  Some left riding to get married, to some of us it was a part of 
our family, we mourned the selling of a bike like losing a pet.  With the 
memories far surpassing anyone who decided not to ride.  Some still read and 
dream, to us it started in the old bike shop, while some studied math, we 
studied 1/4 mile times.  While some planned on college, we planned or riding 
across the US of A.  We not only dreamed, we rode our dreams, I only hope the 
new riders can look back as I do after 47 years....maybe it wasn’t so long after 
all.
Any apple farmer will tell you that picking all the fruit on a tree makes 
for a larger harvest.  How much fruit does your harvest produce?  Does your 
passion for riding only extend to blipping the throttle to show how cool you 
are, or spending an afternoon removing 7000 miles of road grit from a trip?  Do 
you only pick the fruit you can reach, never venturing up higher, where the 
better fruit is?  Or do you only pick up what is on the ground, figuring “it’s 
all the same no matter its place on the tree?”  Some ride a month on a tank of 
gas, some of us fill up twice a day on a much larger tank.  But does your 
passion only relate to riding?  Do you have the same passion for Jesus after 
many years with him?  Do you look back on the good old days, how it was, and 
comment on how it is, how religion has changed.  Or do you show thanks that 
Jesus never did or does?  Over the years have you found a niche in your church 
or denomination, and despite the warnings, stay there, wondering what all the 
excitement about Jesus is all about?  
Paul warns us in Romans of factions within churches that appear holy but 
really cause dissention.  Practices and programs that they put in place so they 
know you are saved, meeting their requirements for joining, but falling short of 
Jesus.  “Only true Christians believe like us,” all others are not up their 
standards.  The are found serving in and for the church, but not Jesus.  
Bringing tithes into the storehouse, the church, but neglecting those in need as 
Jesus confronted them with.  Maybe you have been in a fellowship and didn’t fit 
in, and were asked to leave.  Seems scripture had no place if it didn’t come 
from their pulpit.  Or maybe you were on a church board and faced with 
excommunicating such a one?  Paul’s answer is simple, just ignore them, don’t 
give them time, a sentence, or as John says “don’t even say God bless you,” as 
their god is not God of the Bible, and saying such would only recognize their 
false one.  We are warned to be wise as serpents, but gentle as lambs, but know 
this, as Paul writes, we shall know them by their fruit.  And a good tree cannot 
produce bad fruit, so stay in the vine, with Jesus, and ripen and grow.  Maybe 
where you shop for a bike is important, but where you fellowship is more 
important.  Sadly with one example close to me.
I used to attend a church of over 7000, the pastor widely known and loved.  
But questioning him on communion once, if not saved you couldn’t take it at his 
church, he admitted that wasn’t scriptural, but he was using it as a tool for 
evangelism. When I commented that was like being invited to dinner, but not 
being allowed to eat after hearing what a great cook he was, he looked 
confused.  He had made his own standard for communion, just the opposite from 
the first one at the last supper.  Remember Judas was served communion...and we 
know his fate.  Jesus didn’t deny anyone, we do.  So be careful what you 
believe, and in whom you listen to.  For so long the truth has set us free, but 
the lie and fake news of religion goes on.
And so I buy into Jesus for all I can get, I want to be blessed, and I want 
to grow closer, to share him with my life, using words if needed.  Maybe that is 
why I am a long distance rider, and a long distance believer.  The more time I 
spend with him the more joy in my life, and the miles go by blessed.  So it was 
only natural that halfway down the application I tore it up.  Why buy a new bike 
when my old ones were sitting waiting to travel?  The young salesman didn’t get 
it, but I hope you do.  After riding for so long, I wasn’t about to say so long 
to an old riding partner.  That was a better bike than the new one.  Seems Godly 
advice works when riding to, and only works best if taken.  As in “taking a 
ride.”  Looking back, maybe it hasn’t been so long after all.  Just make sure 
Jesus in your life isn’t forgotten too long...with a simple prayer, “I hope 
today is your best day ever, and tomorrow even better.  Go out and show love 
others and make them feel better, it will make you feel better too.  There is 
nothing wrong with feeling better and helping others feel better too.”  The 
gospel in one thought.  If only you could see the grin inside my Arai!
love with compassion,
Mike
matthew25biker.blogspot.com














