I am no longer reckless like I used to be. I know SB wishes that I still had more of the old wild streak but after a few years of living, I have discovered that I am impeded by knowledge of risk. In my twenties I didn't think about how fragile the human body really is; I certainly didn't consider what I had to live for or more importantly, what I would have lost. Now I know. I can look back at my wonderful life and my beautiful love and feel a twinge of pain at the thought that I might have missed it all. I could have easily missed it all because my old joie de vivre was synonymous with reckless stupidity. At the age of 23, when I almost drowned in a flash flood, my thoughts as I was fighting to keep my head above the raging water were simplistic: anger, bewilderment, exhaustion. I hadn't experienced enough of life to feel regret or sorrow. There was nothing to be missed. Oh how things have changed. I now look before I leap. I use logic over adrenaline (usually).
But I was young enough once. I was young enough to live for the moment, head empty of all thought except that rush of joy. Today as I turned down a ride on M's new, red Ducati I remembered a very late night in Texas on the back of Burt's Kawasaki Ninja as we flew down I-10 at 140mph. I recall my somewhat hysterical laughter as a combination of air differential and acceleration dragged me backward while I gripped frantically to his waist with my numb fingers. What a rush that was. How frightfully stupid. Exhilarating. Back then I didn't know that the feeling was soon going to be diminished by caution signs. I would have bottled that joy had I known.
But I was young enough once. I was young enough to live for the moment, head empty of all thought except that rush of joy. Today as I turned down a ride on M's new, red Ducati I remembered a very late night in Texas on the back of Burt's Kawasaki Ninja as we flew down I-10 at 140mph. I recall my somewhat hysterical laughter as a combination of air differential and acceleration dragged me backward while I gripped frantically to his waist with my numb fingers. What a rush that was. How frightfully stupid. Exhilarating. Back then I didn't know that the feeling was soon going to be diminished by caution signs. I would have bottled that joy had I known.
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I'm just glad as hell that everything I did didn't end up on Facebook or on someone's iPhone or camera ...