What Racing and Riding Teaches us!?!?!

Pit_Monkey

Member
May 19, 2001
253
0
well for my first bike, 84 kdx 80 my step dad loaned me 700 bucks and i worked all summer to pay that thing off, then i decided to move up to a 125 but i broke the bike before i was able to sell it and therefore kept it. i recieved another loan for 2700 to buy my last bike the 98 yz 125 and again i worked all summer to pay that off. now i have been trying to sell that bike to buy my new one, 01 cr 125 but have been unsuccess full, and my mother offered to take a loan out from the bank in my name with her as the co signer for me to be able to buy the bike and when i sell my old one i will pay off the loan in one shot. but i have to make the payments regularly.i was actually thinking about this last weekendand i was amazed at how i went from having no bike to having a 01 cr 125(coming soon) in only three years and having two bikes in between to progress up to that point. ;)
 

Durt Cycler

Trial Subscriber
~SPONSOR~
Nov 13, 2001
1,173
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I had to work all last summer to buy my CR125. Hard construction labor with my dad but in the end it was worth the $1,450 I paid for my CR cause I love it and alot better then riding the old ratted out '90 RM125 -n- '87 KX80 I had. So far I continued saving up my money for extras for my bike. I also have money in the bank to help go out for a truck for me but that's a different story. :)
 

Jon Sosa

Member
Feb 19, 2000
60
0
What riding and racing has taught me?

Pit Monkey, consider yourself lucky! Your parents are supporting your riding, and that is much more than I got ever from mine! It's not that my parents didn't care or love me (just the opposite). It's that they never or refused to understand.

When I was 12 or 13, I wanted a RM 80 so bad I could taste it. My parents, especially my dad, wouldn't have it. Wouldn't even discuss it! I was even offering to use my Summer job money to pay for it. So I waited, until I was 20, and out of college (2 yr. community college). I went down to the local shop and got me a dual sport, then got a PE (off road, early version of a RMX). And then finally I got a '86 YZ 125 that was in a box! Literally it was in pieces, in a box! All of this while I was attending trade school. My parents never paid for one bike, part or entry fee. When my dad found out that I was riding down at the local track, well lets just say it ended short of getting really nasty. It's not that my dad was being a a**hole. It's that he didn't understand why the hell I wanted to go riding, and ultimatily racing. He only saw the danger in the sport, not the benifits. My biggest example was that when all my friends were out partying, and yes I did go sometimes. I was out practicing or training or just riding trying to better myself not only on a bike, but as a person.

I guess my situation is unique, but I hope this helps in someway. In my mind, even if I was injured, it was better than falling into the trap of drugs and alcohol. And that is a trap that would of been in my very near future if I wasn't into motocross, but thats another story.

So what did it teach me? Never give up! I'm 35 now and last yr.on a 4 yr. old RM I won my first race!

Pit Monkey, keep the Faith! And don't ever, ever give up your dreams!

js
 

Pit_Monkey

Member
May 19, 2001
253
0
see thats how my dad was except about price then i got a bike and he started to loosen up a bit. i wont give up i told them that. and about the drugs, the biggest reason why i dont do drugs it the cost not that if they werent expensive i would do them but i work to pay for all my stuff and i have no money to spare. if i blow 20 bucks on weed then i am out 20 that could go toward my new biike or parts or gas ya know also i am busy with what i do so i dont have time to do them and i have role models such as john dowd that i look up to and see that they didnt do drugs and they train hard and they give 110% and that keeps me on the right path too sinc they are the people i want to be competing with and want to be like.
 
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