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Thread: Psycho auto-pilot

  1. #1
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    8th October 2007 - 14:58
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    Psycho auto-pilot

    Hmmm, I was wondering if anyone else has ever tried something like what I experienced today.

    Cruising through town towards the university in midday traffic my mind went wandering and I found myself riding along on auto-pilot. Not fast, not doing anything dangerous... really! Just that slightly detached state you can get if your mind is partially off somewhere elsewhere while you're pootling along on routine.

    Then all of the sudden the auto-pilot must have sat down for a more than a few tequila slammers with the imp of the perverse and next thing I know I'm just a passenger.
    I'd never pass a car in city traffic, on the centreline, around a blind 90° right-hander, with oncoming traffic - yet, I just did.
    It wasn't dramatic, it wasn't fast, none of the motorists seemed to notice and nothing happened - and yet it was so incredibly stupid I've been trying since then to figure what the hell I did that for - without thinking, at all.
    The whole operation went very smoothly and took a maximum of 10 seconds. And all the time I was thinking "this is stupid" - yet everything just went ahead, sorta without me...

    So yeah, that was todays scary experience (I hope) - anyone tried something similar?
    It is preferential to refrain from the utilisation of grandiose verbiage in the circumstance that your intellectualisation can be expressed using comparatively simplistic lexicological entities. (...such as the word fuck.)

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  2. #2
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    24th September 2006 - 02:00
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    All the time. Happens in city traffic where I've been so bored shitless by the stopped traffic that my mind wanders away. Next thing I'm up on the footpath, then aiming for gaps between parked cars to get back to the roadway.

  3. #3
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    Yeah sometimes... splitting. I find it easy for the speed to start creeping up and have to manually dial it back a bit. I'm fine tracking along but being on a quiet(ish) bike I can surprise cars, or at least they can surprise me by... changing lanes!

    Good that you're aware of it, and a wakeup call every now and then doesn't hurt
    $2,000 cash if you find a buyer for my house, kumeuhouseforsale@straightshooters.co.nz for details

  4. #4
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    Quote Originally Posted by Mikkel View Post
    Hmmm, I was wondering if anyone else has ever tried something like what I experienced today.

    Cruising through town towards the university in midday traffic my mind went wandering and I found myself riding along on auto-pilot. Not fast, not doing anything dangerous... really! Just that slightly detached state you can get if your mind is partially off somewhere elsewhere while you're pootling along on routine.

    Then all of the sudden the auto-pilot must have sat down for a more than a few tequila slammers with the imp of the perverse and next thing I know I'm just a passenger.
    I'd never pass a car in city traffic, on the centreline, around a blind 90° right-hander, with oncoming traffic - yet, I just did.
    It wasn't dramatic, it wasn't fast, none of the motorists seemed to notice and nothing happened - and yet it was so incredibly stupid I've been trying since then to figure what the hell I did that for - without thinking, at all.
    The whole operation went very smoothly and took a maximum of 10 seconds. And all the time I was thinking "this is stupid" - yet everything just went ahead, sorta without me...

    So yeah, that was todays scary experience (I hope) - anyone tried something similar?

    Not quite but when I was a puppy I went round a sweeping left hander whilst taking a power nap .Scared the bloomin shite outa me, since that day I've made it a rule to only sleep on long straightaways.

    Someone was looking out for you and me M, even if it was only mother luck.
    Oh bugger

  5. #5
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    8th October 2007 - 14:58
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    Yeah, thank fuck my number wasn't up. Just felt like bashing my bloody head in afterwards thinking that was too fucking stupid!

    The thing that concerned me the most was that during the whole chain of events - from setting up on the left hand side of the lane for the corner until pulling back left into the lane after having passed the car - I was thinking "nah, I won't do that, it's stupid..." and what did I do? Exactly that!

    Seems like the imp of the perverse had a good grip on me in those seconds.
    It is preferential to refrain from the utilisation of grandiose verbiage in the circumstance that your intellectualisation can be expressed using comparatively simplistic lexicological entities. (...such as the word fuck.)

    Remember your humanity, and forget the rest. - Joseph Rotblat

  6. #6
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    29th October 2007 - 00:44
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    Yea I get to aoto pilot too if it is heavy traffic and i'm tired and bored, I just start passing them, but I dont stop after I have passed one, I do all of them. Anyone got a medicine for that
    Don't Ride Faster Than Your Guardian Angel Can Fly !!!



    Hey Alan, Alan, Alan....

  7. #7
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    Wow guys! Amazing to think that you can "auto" on a bike.

    The only time I have ever experienced anything similar was when I was nursing, driving home after work. After I registered I used to do permanent night shifts. There have been times I have woken up in bed at 3pm and wondered how the hell I had got there? At this time the trip was Greenlane Hospital to Bucklands Beach. Not a small distance, some on motorway, against the traffic, and apparently I can do this trip and not actually register it at the time.

    Cant imagine the same trip on a bike.
    Quote Originally Posted by Gubb View Post
    Nonono,

    He rides the Leprachhaun at the end of the Rainbow. Usually goes by the name Anne McMommus

  8. #8
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    Been there and done that before.

    It tends to happen when Im tired. I just drift off and I loose focus and find myself doing things or missing things that I shouldnt be. That one day may kill me so when I become aware of myself drifting off I tend to start singing really loudly or yelling inside my helmet to wake up.

    If a good set of corners are coming up though I find its just as effective to blast around them.

    Otherwise I just pull over and do some jumping jacks in full leathers. No easy feat.

  9. #9
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    Quote Originally Posted by Mom View Post
    Wow guys! Amazing to think that you can "auto" on a bike.

    The only time I have ever experienced anything similar was when I was nursing, driving home after work. After I registered I used to do permanent night shifts. There have been times I have woken up in bed at 3pm and wondered how the hell I had got there? At this time the trip was Greenlane Hospital to Bucklands Beach. Not a small distance, some on motorway, against the traffic, and apparently I can do this trip and not actually register it at the time.

    Cant imagine the same trip on a bike.
    No, that's not what I meant by auto pilot. It's nothing to do with fatigue or being unobservant...

    What I meant by auto-pilot was just that you go through the motions without thinking actively about what exactly you're doing. Relying on observance and routine to take you from A to B.
    Eyes scanning the traffic ahead, your brain processing the information and reacting in relation to it. All while your mind is thinking about all the stuff you have to do, what to have for lunch, how to find the money for your next bike, etc.
    I'm guessing most people won't be 100% ON when they're commuting on well known roads outside peak rush-hour.

    What scared me was that when I realised that I was about to execute a potentially dangerous maneuver I somehow couldn't snap out of it and just went through with it.
    It is preferential to refrain from the utilisation of grandiose verbiage in the circumstance that your intellectualisation can be expressed using comparatively simplistic lexicological entities. (...such as the word fuck.)

    Remember your humanity, and forget the rest. - Joseph Rotblat

  10. #10
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    Oddly enough, Mikkel, I know exactly what you mean. I'm sure I've done the same thing myself a few times, although I can't remember specific instances.

    The feeling is very familiar, though.

    And I don't do it any more. Perhaps it has something to do with a heightened sense of paranoia and a continual awareness of the physics and pain of crashing?

    One way or t'other, I'm finding that as the years go by, I grow more hyper-alert on a motorcycle, not less. You'll probably experience the same thing.
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  11. #11
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    Quote Originally Posted by Mikkel View Post
    I'm guessing most people won't be 100% ON when they're commuting on well known roads outside peak rush-hour.
    I reckon that's the key. When we're the most comfortable we should be the most concerned. At least that's what I've found as a learner. Every time I get confident and start to think I'm the man I get caught out by doing something dumb that I couldn't imagine happening even a week before.

    There's a lesson in that but I think most of us were dodging class that day
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  12. #12
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    I used to do this when I was younger, especially when driving my car.
    But after scaring myself shitless a few times, I soon got out of the habit of doing it.
    As I have gotten older & a few grey hairs I realise that with slower reflexes and faster bikes there is NO time to daydream.

  13. #13
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    do it all the time, love it.
    if we think long and hard about riding, there is a chance we would do the smart sensible thing and sell our bikes to preserve our lives. so I dont chance it with thinking while riding.

  14. #14
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    16th December 2005 - 18:54
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    Ive gotta feeling that I do this sorta thing more than the average motorcyclist and that gaps that I take, most people wouldnt take in a million years
    I dont even think twice about it, just sometimes afterwards when Im off the bike I think it could be viewed as "risky"
    Confident the aprilia rsv4, IS the one

  15. #15
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    A couple of things.

    This incident didn't happen at high speed, control and manipulative riding skill were not factors. Only poor judgement - but even that is not true, I knew it was a bad idea as I did it. And still I couldn't stop myself from doing it!

    Also, it will never be possible to ride a 100% all of the time. (100% is e.g. when you're cornering knee to the deck, tyres at the limit of their grip - and the focus that goes with it). If you ride at 100% you get tired very quickly. I'm sure a lot of people can confirm this - lowering your pace 10 km/h while on a long ride makes a big difference as to how fast you wear yourself out.
    It is preferential to refrain from the utilisation of grandiose verbiage in the circumstance that your intellectualisation can be expressed using comparatively simplistic lexicological entities. (...such as the word fuck.)

    Remember your humanity, and forget the rest. - Joseph Rotblat

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