Maybe it's cos some of us started riding at a very young age rather than when we were older, I dunno. I first got on a bike at 12, I didn't own a car until I was 28. I rode everywhere, in all weathers, for all my needs. For me the thought of being without a bike horrifies me. I totally get other people being able to give up, but not riding genuinely makes me unhappy. Bikes are part of me/my youth, something that's mixed up in all those teenage/early 20s memories. Lol when the doc told me my left hand might never work again I was looking at all sort of conversions (no clutchless bikes then) rather than giving up. But that's just me, I find it inconceivable.
Having said that nothing wrong with giving it a break. It's just not for me.
Reading your post though I'm struck by the impression of going on the same/similar routes and not feeling it. Sounds like you need a change of routes/places as much as anything else. There are places I ride for the road/ride, others for the place itself, scenery etc. I try and mix things up by sometimes picking a new destination and having a purpose to the ride so to speak.
Rockburner wrote: Mon Aug 18, 2025 4:48 pm
Buy a hack.
There's a lot to that. I note the OP says about having a clean bike and it's something that spoils my ownership of bikes in recent years to an extent. I avoid riding in bad weather now as my bike is mint and I hate cleaning bikes. When I only had a bike they got washed once a week/maybe a fortnight but they were ridden in all weathers so bolts got furry, things got mucky and it didn't matter as they were a fun tool to be used, like a car but way better. Now I'm overly precious and it does spoil things. Ideally bikes are there to be ridden not idolised, not that I practice that now. But I should.
So maybe buy something with a few miles, not mint and use and enjoy it rather than worry about how clean it is, it's liberating. It's partly why I'm eyeing a F800 winter/take the Mrs out on bike for cheap so I don't care about actually using the bugger