yes. i now pretty much ride year around, but the break between my first two years was like that. i too was a little shocked. so what is the reasoning for it?StillTry'n wrote:Have you experienced this?
MZ33In nursing school, the first semester of clinical rotations exposes a lot of ineptitude, confusion, and hence, anxiety. The faculty were always patient and laid-back about this (no patient was ever in danger), saying "You'll get it." Most students did not find this reassuring. Finally, one professor said, "we don't know why, but something happens over the summer, and what seems overwhelming and insurmountable now will be straightforward and clear to you in the fall. Wait and see." Damned if she wasn't right. Of course there were new challenges, but something percolated over the summer, and not one of us was the clumsy idiot of the previous year. We didn't just pick up where we left off--we had grown.
+1jaskc78 wrote:i'm gonna vote with Dean on this one--the mental practice makes all the difference in the world. i ride year-round, but even just running errands in my truck or the days that it rains or any other reason i'm not on my motorcycle, i still watch out for the same traffic situations and see my way out, picture what i'd do on the motorcycle, or even just imagining that i'm on my motorcycle and what lane position i'd choose to be most visible, etc. i can't imagine it's an uncommon thing at all for motorcyclists to still think like motorcyclists even in a car.
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