Mediocrity may make things dull, boring or even low value but it is not a crime. Except when you’re a motorcyclist. A mediocre rider is not only an unsafe rider but is also someone who diminishes the image of motorcycling itself and of everything associated with it. See the majority of riders around you. Don’t worry, for now you can leave out the poor compulsion-bound commuters and just include those ‘passion-driven’ enthusiasts. The one’s who always talk knowledgeably about bikes and biking, who deliver ‘gyan’ on good riding practices at the drop of a hat, who give the call for joining up for weekend rides with a ’cause’ and the ones who spread their 4-day ride into the mountains to over 8 weeks of shrill photo-filled social media rhetoric. These are the pure-bloods of motorcycling. Among this exalted lot, check out how common this trait of ‘mediocrity’ as motorcyclists exists. See their bikes. Those glowing club stickers proclaiming their association with the elite don’t really gel well with a dirty, rusty and loose drive chain. The clutch lever has enough free play to put a kindergarten playground to shame. The tyre tread is almost worn through in the middle while the discussion is focused on tyre compounds and tread styles. The front disc brake judders at work while the rear brake pedal takes a dive into oblivion before the braking even begins. There’s concern for the lack of respect shown by the newbies for the veterans while that sawn-off free-flow exhaust arrogantly shrieks awake the whole neighborhood. The mediocrity actually lies in their inability of not seeing any of this making them a mediocre rider.
For this amazing lot, acquiring riding skills is more about being able to throw tips and show tricks in the peer group rather than it coming from solid knowledge, sustained practice and substantial experience. The bike is serviced just the day before leaving on a long ride and the careless mechanic with the IQ of a chimp along with the greedy profit-hungry corporate are scathingly blamed when our hero sits stranded by the highway. There’s more. Mediocrity lies in not being situationally aware while riding and getting zapped by man, animal or vehicle whose presence should have been obvious if the mind was actually on riding. It lies in those ear-phones stuck into one of the five major sensory organs, belting out useless music that plays no part in telling them what’s happening around them. It lies in the erratic and unpredictable riding pattern in which direction and speed decisions are more of a personal or ‘mood’ choice than being a traffic and situation dictated action. The list can go on.
The rider first needs to rise above this mediocrity before motorcycling gets considered as an equal and dignified means of fun and transport. The concept of decency in riding applies as much to the rider as it does to living as a member of society. This decency takes him above mediocrity. Each rider becomes the ambassador and custodian of motorcycling whenever he chooses to swing a leg over the saddle and gets rolling on two wheels with an engine in between. He must project motorcycling as a thoroughly safe, useful and fun thing. He must learn the value of situational awareness, of the difference between paying attention and being aware. That the former comes after the latter. Twisted way of saying that you first need to be aware of the danger to actually go about paying attention to it. He rides his own ride, which definitely is not about blindly copying someone else’s riding. It is about riding at one’s own skill level and not anybody else’s, however ordinary your own riding might seem to be.
The rider today must learn to invest into motorcycling. To invest time, money, emotions, attitude, commitment and the urge to learn into their ride and riding. Social or peer approval and admiration can just be an illusion. A lesser fool amongst absolute ones can seem pretty intelligent. But sooner or later the ride will take the fools. Good riddance except that motorcycling gets bloodied and gets nudged closer to Satan. Mere seat time on a bike is no certificate of skills and knowledge. Someone with 15 years of riding could have just 1 year of experience – repeated 15 times over. Let your skill decide your pace rather than your pace showing up the limits of your skill. Stay humble and you’ll find yourself learning.
The issue is not about being ordinary. It is about being mediocre. With enough opportunity, reason and resource there for the taking as a rider these days, what with the internet, the widespread well-connected riding community, the fabulous machines and steadily improving roads, there is no reason except for the presence of these rats of mediocrity for motorcycling to still be presented as a risky nuisance that needs way tighter controls than driving does. The need is to rise above mediocrity. And even if one remains an ordinary rider while at it, motorcycling will definitely be seen as extraordinary.
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