So since speed kills, riding a gutless 250cc increases your chances of survival then, I suppose?![]()
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Your beliefs don't make you a better person, your behaviour does.
In an emergency, you tend to fall back on long term ingrained responses, as your survival instinct tries to take over. If your default setting is crap, your emergency responses will be crap because there normally isn't much time to think, which is why it's more important to learn proper riding techniques early on, and build on them through your riding life, to give yourself a fighting chance if it all turns to shit !
“- He felt that his whole life was some kind of dream and he sometimes wondered whose it was and whether they were enjoying it.”
This does seem to cover it well enough.
I have an example of the very same condition occurring.
Good friend of mine brought another bike after 10 years out of the saddle.
He was a crap rider before and nothing changed when he returned, except he thought he was way better than he was.
Still alive but has been broken up a couple of times.
He still doesn't get it!![]()
Trumpydom!
"So if you meet me, have some sympathy, have some courtesy, have some taste ..."
"Those who would give up essential liberty to purchase a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety." - Benjamin Franklin (1706-90)
"I would rather be exposed to the inconveniences attending to much liberty than those attending too small a degree of it." - Thomas Jefferson (1743-1826)
"Motorcycling is not inherently dangerous. It is, however, EXTREMELY unforgiving of inattention, ignorance, incompetence and stupidity!" - Anonymous
"Live to Ride, Ride to Live"
Guy I know came into some money, decided to buy himself a bike not having ridden in several decades on account of marriage, buying a house, kids, life, etc. I asked his wife would he like to read some of the riding related books I had. "He'll be alright he'll figure it out."
Next time I saw her, only a couple of weeks later, I asked how it was going. The answer was that the bike was away for repairs.
"What happened?"
"A dog ran out."
Obviously I wasn't there and I didn't see it, but I can't help feeling that a more "with it" rider might have kept the plot upright. Apparently in an emergency situation you only get about 1/3 of a second to decide what to do. Better to be trying to recall something that you read last month, than something you vaguely remember from thirty or more years before.
And thanks Katman, your punctuality was appreciated.![]()
There is a grey blur, and a green blur. I try to stay on the grey one. - Joey Dunlop
By general consensus we are a country of crap drivers, If that is the case why would we be great riders. The statistics, whether this is a blip or not, tend to suggest we ride about as well as we drive.
Just sayin
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