
Originally Posted by
Mully
Not to try to scare you, but my brother-in-law decided (*ahem*) to sell his bike when they had their second sprog.
16 years on and he still hasn't been allowed to replace it.
Just putting that out there.
Best bit of advice I ever heard was: make sure you keep a bike - it might not be the flashest, but upgrading a cheap bike is easier to negotiate than buying a bike.
Or discuss with the missus - including a timeline for when you can get another bike (barring twins or some other horrible outcome). She might not want you to be without a bike in any case.
That's why I never got rid of mine!
A number of years ago now when I had 2 small kids, a large'ish mortgage, a wife, and only 1 income, money was very tight. The bike broke down and I couldn't afford to fix it, so it sat in the garage unused for a year and a half or so. The wife wanted me to sell it, but I said no, because I knew that once I had no bike then she'd never let me get another one, and I knew that in time things would improve and I'd get the bike fixed and be riding again. As things turned out, the money situation improved in time and I got the bike fixed. Then a few years later she did a runner on me, and I was so pleased I still had the bike, as it was time spent out on the bike that allowed me to get my head around what was going on and I ended up buying the bigger bike that I'd always wanted. Now the kids are pretty much independent and these days ...

Originally Posted by
slofox
...until I got rid of the kids and divorced the wife...NOW I can do what the @#%! I like. And do...
... I do this too 
So, in short. Keep the bike! Park it up for a while if you have to, but keep it, or you'll regret it in time.
The views expressed above may not match yours - But that's the reason my Dad went to war - wasn't it?
Life's journey is not to arrive at the grave safely in a well preserved body, .... but rather to skid in sideways, totally worn out,... shouting "man, what a ride"!!!
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