Читать книгу First to Last: The Tale of a Biker - Dennis Lid - Страница 7
Оглавление“For where thy treasure is, there also will thy heart be.” (MATT. VI. 21.)
We spend our lives searching for answers. There are many questions to be addressed in life, but the most important one that must be answered by each of us is, “Where does my treasure lie?” The answer to this question is of the utmost importance, since it results in the culmination of our search for the Holy Grail. Do you know where your treasure is?
This is the tale of a biker… a soldier… a man whose life’s adventures are intertwined with the motorcycles he has owned and the experiences he has had. This saga will take you on a journey through the highlights, episodes and travails of that near-lifetime sojourn and the interesting events that occurred along the way. Perhaps when we have finished with this trek, you will be able to answer the key question in your own life – “Where is your treasure?” I think I know, at long last, where mine is.
It Happens to All of Us… The End of Riding Days
And so the journey begins – at the end. It happens to all of us sooner or later. Your time will come as well. It’s the dreadful event or occasion that ends your riding days. For some, it’s an accident or injury; for others an illness, and for still others it’s old age or just plain loss of capability or interest that brings on the occasion. Whatever the reason, it happens, and your riding days are over. It’s time to “hang up the spurs.” For a true rider, a real biker, an aficionado of the two-wheeled conveyance called the motorcycle, that happening would seem to be an absolute tragedy… like the end of the world – except for the memories, that is. We have spent so much time collecting those memories throughout our lives, and carefully storing them in our brain-cell databanks, that we are not about to forget them. The memories sustain us after the actions and adventures have past. We recall them at will to lift our spirits and help us carry on with life, or existence, as the case may be.
Consider a fellow like Evel Knievel, who has reached the point of no return. He has been a daredevil to the extreme all his life, and successfully so. Yet multiple injuries, age, loss of flexibility and estimations of consequences have caused him to finally lose the edge. Now he tutors his son in the art and technique of extreme daredevil riding and exhibitionism. His son has become his alter ego. The master dreams his dreams and relinquishes the reins of control to the younger generation out of necessity. His time has come. His memories, indeed, are sufficient to endure what lies ahead on the remainder of his life’s journey. Yet, I wonder where his treasure is now.
Sale of Last Bike
My time came in Japan about 12 years ago at the age of fifty-six. It was a fateful day in the fall of 1993 for yours truly, and all five-feet-eight inches of my brown-haired, blue-eyed, athletic, wiry and, otherwise, nondescript self. I remember standing on the sidewalk in front of the house watching a friend by the name of Jack Owen drive off on my last bike… as its new owner. Jack and I had been riding companions for many years in the Camp Zama Motorcycle Club of Sagamihara, Japan. It was a U.S. Army, Japan (USARJ) sponsored club located South of Tokyo – but more about that later. I was surprised that Jack bought my 1987 Kawasaki Ninja 750 R, since he already owned a Yamaha 1150cc Virago. Perhaps he wanted to try a sport bike with the front-leaning driving position for a change, or maybe he just liked the looks and performance of it.
One year later, however, he sold the Ninja and kept his Virago. I guess he didn’t like the front-leaning rest position after all. It takes some getting used to as compared to the upright sitting position of the Yamaha. The difference in posture equates to the difference between a sport bike and a cruiser. I never asked him why he sold it, and he never divulged his rationale. We parted company that day, and we had infrequent contact with one another for the next few years. The bike was the common denominator, you see, and when that link was severed, there was little basis for continuing our relationship. Work and other interests caused our paths to diverge and diluted our friendship. I eventually transferred to a new job and location back in the States and totally lost contact with my friend for several years.
As Jack drove the sleek, black, Kawasaki Ninja away from me and into the sunset that fateful day, he took a piece of my heart as well. He drove up the sidewalk and onto the road. I watched until he was out of sight, shading my eyes with my hand as bike and rider were silhouetted against the setting sun. Even after I could no longer hear the turbo-like drone, the heartbeat of the vertical four, I stood in place for a long time holding the check from the sale of my geisha, as I was fond of calling her. Now she was gone; there would be no replacement. The impact of that fact began to sink into my consciousness, as I stood there motionless. My eyes looked without seeing anything, like the “thousand-yard stare” of a warrior after the battle subsides. It dawned on me that the time had come to “hang up my spurs” and end my riding days.
It would take a while for me to really grasp the significance of that realization. After sharing the better part of my lifetime with the iron horse, what would I do without one? The weekends would seem to be a bit listless and empty; the camaraderie of riding companions non-existent. Good-bye to new motorcycle adventures, the adrenaline rush and the accumulation of fresh memories of the good times. Why then, must I stop riding now? The reasons that contributed to that conclusion will eventually surface during this journey of a biker’s tale. Part of it has to do with the challenge, the search, the quest that I mentioned earlier, but there’s more to it than that. All that’s left now, and since that fateful day, is the memory of the motorcycles I once owned and the great times I had on all of them… from First to Last. Yet, the quest for the Holy Grail continues. Perhaps it’s a relentless search until the very end – until one draws one’s last breath.