Alright, so today I wanna talk about my whole adventure getting into motorcycle riding. It’s been quite the journey, let me tell ya.

It all started ’cause I always thought bikes looked awesome, you know? That whole image of cruising down the road, wind in your… well, helmet. So I finally decided, “Okay, I’m gonna do this.” First step, obviously, was getting the gear. Didn’t fancy becoming a road pancake. Got myself a helmet, a decent jacket, gloves – the whole shebang. Felt a bit like an astronaut suiting up for the first time, not gonna lie.
Getting Started – The Wobbly Bits
Then came the actual trying-to-ride part. Man, oh man. I found this empty parking lot, figured it was the safest place to look like a complete idiot. And I did. The first thing was just getting the feel of the bike, how heavy it was. Then, trying to get it moving smoothly? Forget about it. That clutch and throttle coordination was a beast. I must’ve stalled that thing, like, a hundred times in the first hour. Jerk forward, engine dies. Jerk forward, engine dies. My neck was killing me.
And the turning! That was a whole other level of confusing. Someone actually told me, and it stuck with me, “The hardest part was learning turning, you go in the direction the bike is pointing as you don’t turn as you would in a car, you do it by leaning in that direction you want to go.” They were spot on. My brain just couldn’t process it. In a car, you turn the wheel, simple. On a bike, you gotta lean, and this thing called counter-steering, where you kinda push the handlebar the opposite way for a split second to initiate the lean. Felt completely backwards. But they also said, “You’ll get it, it just takes practice.” And yeah, practice was key. Hours and hours of wobbly circles in that parking lot.
Braking too, that wasn’t straightforward either. You can’t just stomp on a pedal. You’ve got the front brake, the back brake, and you gotta learn to use ’em together, smoothly. Too much front, you might go over the handlebars. Too much rear, you might skid. It was a delicate dance, and I was clumsy as heck at first.
Finding the Groove
I kept at it, though. Day after day, a little bit of practice. Slowly, very slowly, things started to click. I remember the first time I actually managed to ride in a straight line, shift gears without a massive lurch, and then make a turn without feeling like I was about to topple over. Felt like winning the lottery, I swear.

Then I took it out on a quiet backroad for the first “real” ride. Wow. That was it. The feeling was incredible. You’re not boxed in like a car. You feel the air, you smell everything – the cut grass, the trees, even the exhaust fumes from other cars, haha. But it’s so much more immersive. You’re part of the environment, not just passing through it. Every little bump in the road, every change in temperature, you feel it.
Here’s what I learned through the process:
- Patience is everything: You’re not gonna be a pro overnight.
- Small steps: Master one thing before moving to the next. Like, just getting moving smoothly, then shifting, then basic turns.
- Respect the machine: It’s powerful, and you gotta be in control, not the other way around.
So yeah, that’s my story of getting into motorcycle riding. It was tough at the start, super frustrating sometimes. There were moments I thought, “Maybe this isn’t for me.” But sticking with it? Totally worth it. That feeling of freedom, the connection with the road… it’s something else. Still learning every time I go out, but that’s part of the fun, I guess.