Posts Tagged Burgman 400

25 random things.

I’m usually late when it comes to memes, and I had actually posted much of this on my Facebook notes way back in February. But I realized I never posted them here.

So, for your entertainment/amusement/shock/whatever, here are twenty-five random facts about yours truly.

  1. I have severe social anxiety; I have to force myself to leave my apartment. I also deal with arrested development disorder and dysthymia (long-term depression).
  2. I do not own a car. I ride a 2007 Suzuki Burgman 400 maxi-scooter. I also own a 2004 Yamaha Vino 125 scooter that is retired in my ex-wife’s garage after riding it over 25,000 miles. In the event of my imminent bankruptcy, HSBC Bank will get it back.
  3. I purchased said Burgman in September of 2007. I’ve ridden it over 20,000 miles since then.
  4. I’m a Disney freak. I spend nearly every weekend in Walt Disney World. When I lived in California (until 2000), I spent almost every day in Disneyland. I would bring my handheld PC with me to work on my invoices there.
  5. I once rode my Vino 125 from Lakeland, FL to Daytona Beach to attend a F.A.I.T.H. Riders chapter commissioning. It was a four-hour backroads trip that required me to leave at 4:30 in the morning in order to arrive by 8:30 AM. They made me trailer the bike home. The trip has become somewhat of a F.A.I.T.H. Riders legend.
  6. While I receive a lot of compliments on my penmanship, I don’t like to write by hand. You will rarely get a handwritten letter from me.
  7. I was bullied daily from the second grade through high school. It still affects me at the age of 37 (see #1).
  8. Because of the aforementioned bullying, I intentionally flunked a semester of P.E. in high school by refusing to change out of my street clothes into my P.E. uniform (t-shirt and shorts). When I made up the semester my senior year, it was the only time I ever got an "A" in P.E.
  9. I am genuinely afraid of answering a telephone (see #1 again). The best and quickest way to reach me is by e-mail. It drives my girlfriend nuts.
  10. I first learned how to play guitar. Then I learned how to play keyboard by matching the sounds of the notes on the guitar with the notes on the keyboard. I then learned to play in church by ear. My friend, the church pianist, would play the song and I would figure out the chords by ear to play on the keyboard.
  11. I met my now ex-wife in an AOL chat room. The first time we met face-to-face was the night we got engaged. She also told me she was filing for divorce in an e-mail.
  12. In spite of my severe social anxiety, I love public speaking and especially sharing my story with others.
  13. I was told at my mother’s funeral in 1996 that I should consider a career as a writer for Hallmark.
  14. My musical tastes range from classical to smooth jazz to country to gothic metal. I do not like rap.
  15. I am a huge Mylène Farmer fan. Laurent Boutonnat is a songwriting genius.
  16. I will often turn off a TV or radio program or commercial where the protagonist is in an embarrassing or compromising position (or is otherwise generally behaving like an idiot) out of embarrassment for the person in the commercial.
  17. I am convinced that most of the drivers in my area received their driver’s education at the Richard Petty Driving School.
  18. I don’t drink because I don’t like the taste of alcohol, although my girlfriend/fiancée has turned me on to local wines. However, I haven’t had any since she returned to California from her last visit (in February).
  19. I first met my current girlfriend in junior high school; then we lost touch for 20-plus years until 2008 when she found me on MySpace several months after my divorce.
  20. I do most of my grocery shopping at Walmart at 3 or 4 AM. It’s the center of Plant City social life.
  21. I am not much of a reader. Reading books puts me to sleep. Maybe it’s because of all the scholarly texts I had to read in bible college. Since graduating Bible college in 1996, of the many books I have started to read, I have only finished two of them—Mark Lowry’s “Live Long and Die Laughing” and the biography “Rachel’s Tears” (the story of one of the Columbine victims).
  22. I’m a visual, hands-on learner. I’d rather just use the product to learn it or work with examples.
  23. I am self-taught with HTML, PHP, VB, VBA, DocBook, and TeX/LaTeX.
  24. Since moving to Florida I consider any temperature below 70°F to be "freezing."
  25. I write nearly all of my correspondence using LaTeX rather than Word.

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Riding to Walt Disney World®.

I played around with the idea of mounting my video camera to the Burgman to see how it’d fare on a ride into Lake Buena Vista/Bay Lake. Looks like it needs some improvement to reduce the vibration. Also in the video—my first time in “The Land” to see some of the fascinating innovations in land and crop management being done by Disney.

Oh yeah—you get to ride GM Test Track with me, too. ;-)

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Watch life happen—on public transport.

I was able to purchase the Burgman 400 in my last entry from Sky Powersports here in Lakeland, at a base sticker price that was below the dealer’s cost. Because I did not want to put a pay-off lien on the new scoot, rather than trading in the Vino 125, “Little Brother” now has a “Big Brother” in the garage. I sped (as if you could on a 125cc scooter) up to the dealer on Saturday, depositing the first portion of my severance package at the ATM on the way, dropped off the Vino for its 24,000(!)-mile service and a new set of front brakes, and rode home on the new Burgman, paid for in full. Wasn’t sure how I was going to handle going from a 229-pound scooter to a 480-plus pound maxi-scooter, but it is actually far more comfortable and confident to ride and easier to just relax and enjoy the trip while not having anxiety over every nook and cranny in the road. The increased wind resistance from traveling at 65 MPH versus 45 MPH will take some getting used to. It will go faster, but 65 is about my maximum comfort zone as I adjust to the larger bike.

However, the time came yesterday when I had to go pick up the Vino from its service, and with my wife now working, no means to get there except the Burgman, which I obviously could not ride back along with the Vino.

So, I did something I hadn’t done since I left southern California 7½ years ago: I took the local public transportation system (known here as the Citrus Connection) from the south side of Lakeland up to Kathleen on the northwestern end of the city. Of course, it required me to walk a few miles from the house all the way to Christina to find a northbound bus stop across from the nearby Home Depot (not recalling that I could have walked a mile or two less to the Wal-Mart in Mulberry) in the 95° heat and humidity (which is when carrying a large bottle of Gatorade® comes in handy), to realize the first fact about this system, that it tends to run late at certain stops, like the one that I was waiting at (the 4:08 arrived at 4:29). However, I did get to the central transportation hub early, where the drivers pulled in and waited for the remaining busses to arrive so everyone could make their needed transfers before the second-to-last route of the day left the station. A very fun and pleasant experience, actually, that brought back memories of riding the OCTA all over the place when I didn’t have a car in the early 90s. The busses were spotless; the other riders (mostly young black people and elderly people) were well-behaved and pleasant to be around and sometimes chat with, contrary to the image produced by the still-very-prejudiced South. It surprises me at times how much people miss out on because of prejudices and stereotypes. One can gain so much ministry experience simply laying those things aside and being willing to listen to people talk.

Taking the local public transit also offers a chance to watch life—reality—happening. The blond-haired professional woman closing a deal on her cell phone at the transit terminal. The elderly couple sitting up front chatting about how the city’s changed over the years with an elderly woman seated across from them. The black high school student catching up on her assignments as she heads home for the day. The black man behind me trying to catch a glimpse of my iPhone from two rows back while I’m following the bus’ progress on Google Maps so I know when to pull the signal cable to be let off at the next location. Looking out the windows to watch people driving by, unwinding from their days, chatting on their cell phones, trying to put on make-up for a dinner date. The occasional die-hard biker slung back on his raked-out chopper enjoying the breeze. It’s stuff you just don’t get to see when you’re having to pay attention to the traffic around you.

So I arrived at the dealer and rode the Vino 125 to its semi-retirement home in our garage, where it will still see some use, but not nearly as much as it has seen over the past 24,000 miles. I’m looking forward to the open road again once the weather begins to dry up for the winter and the temperatures become a little more comfortable. The larger engine also means that I at last get to join my F.A.I.T.H. Riders friends on their ministry trips, something I am most looking forward to.

Keeping the rubber side down and the shiny side up…

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