This doesn't look like a $500 bike, in fact I decided to look it up - $19,000 before taxes and customization. That is about 17 years of catastrophic health insurance!
Thanks for noticing. I love that bike. But it will never be the same as it has $14,900 of damages to it since the frame bent at the triple tree. And you are far wrong on your price estimate. That bike cost me over $40,000 and is built on a 2009 frame with parts ranging from 2008 to 2009 along with many custom fabricated parts.
Now, if you read in a past post why I have such a bike and a house of my own, it is because I made more in one year than I bet you will ever make in any one year of your life; unless of course you are on par with the Kennedy's or Trump or are one of my peers from my old industry who are jealous I went to pursue a dream and you are stuck in an office all day on the phone for 10+ hours making your $1,000 a day. And I would never go back to that grind! I wash my hands of that business.
That is my past career so I prefer to keep it there. I just brought it up again since you seem to be jealous of those who maybe be or have been financially successful. And so so you have even more of an idea of what I was. I owned a Lotus Esprit once back in 2001 when I was a young that I paid mostly cash for... does that anger you? It cost me over $80,000 for such a car. I of course sold it in 2002 when the economy crashed around me since I had employees to take care of since my biggest client ended up in a building unexpectedly. And by me selling that car and other luxury items my employees got paid their salaries (the right thing to do!!!). But I won't bore you with that. Maybe someday we'll meet in an airport so I can entertain you with all the boring stories of rags to riches and back to rags.
Being a CFI is my current career. So I prefer to focus on my last 14 months as a CFI. I live my life on my CFI wage. After all, I sold all my past assets and all else I owned except the house, truck, and bike in order to live for over a year and go to flight school full time at the school of my choice with only taking out a $30k loan. I came out of school and still am debt free except for that loan and a secondary loan I took against the bike to help me through my time of unemployment as a non-working CFI post graduation.
And the bike is current. Lets talk about that some more since it is a current item in my life (or shall I say was). That bike was purchased and took over a year of production to build and conceive with the help of the dealer and Harley in making some custom fabricated parts. But it was paid for back in 2007 right after I made the leap to flight school (August 2007). I did not take delivery of the bike until May 2009 since it took that long to design and build even though it was paid for over a year prior.
The bike was my REWARD for making the leap from a terrible career that paid me well to the best career ever that pays me nothing. It's a custom bike that is worth half of what I paid for it because it is a custom bike. No one wants a custom bike in the used market as they depreciate like a falling rock. And again, that was paid for long ago! At a time when I had very good medical coverage may I add.
How about putting a picture of my truck up as well. It does not anger you that I drive a 2006 Toyota Tacoma X-Cab with all the bells and whistles. I bought that in 2006 for cash. Well, actually I traded in my 2004 or 05 Mini-Cooper S convertible and gave the dealer $4,000 in addition to the car to drive that truck home. It was actually the Mini that I paid cash for. But either way, I had no loan on the truck ever. The truck still books for around $13,000 to $14,000 trade-in value and I still have it in my driveway. Such a luxury for a CFI. But then, why would I get rid of it when it's reliable transport and I plan to keep it for another 5-10 years since it's a Toyota and it should run until either the gas pedal gets stuck or it gets 200,000 miles on it (which ever happens first). And I earned this in my last career. I did not buy this as a CFI.
And my house. The house I purchased in 2003. The house that the mortgage cost the same as reasonable rent cost here in San Antonio. So why would I sell the house when it cost me no more than renting an apartment here? Selling it would have been stupid since the payment cost me no more than rent. So the house I bought in my old career angers you too.
So the house and truck make absolute financial sense and no one can argue that one. It would be dumb to sell the truck and get a unreliable $3,000 car. And it would be dumb to sell a house when it cost no more than rent. It's not exactly a mansion. The bike is a weird variable. I agree on that. So lets visit that again.
Lets look at my last 2 years of my life now. What did I purchase? I bought food. I bought two movie tickets. I bought some clothes from Walmart which I am wearing now. I paid my vehicle insurance (by the way, you realize motorcycle insurance is only $15 a month before you go down that route and I save much more than that each month in gas at $3 a gallon). I paid my mortgage (which we'll call rent since it cost the same). And I do have internet and a cell phone since those are essential in today's society.
But I do not have cable TV since I can not afford it. I eat fast food more than I should because I can not afford even Denny's at times. And I did not pay for medical insurance. I had medical up until about 12 months ago but I had to cancel the TV and the Insurance due to my student load dropping at the school. And since I did not want to have a no pay, I just cancelled it since the $130 insurance and the $50 cable TV had to go. I could not cut nothing else since there was nothing else to cut! So I am no different than any other CFI over the last couple years. I live like a CFI does. Month to month. It's all we can do.
And do not hold my past success against me. You may still wonder why I kept that bike. It's simple. That bike was a trophy I kept from my past success as a business partner. It was what I held onto as a reminder of past success and the success I planned to have in aviation in the future. It's all mental. I mental REWARD for meeting goals.
That bike is the only thing I held onto from my past that would be considered extravagant. After all. my truck is just a late model truck now and my house is a very modest two bedroom one bath house (which you already seen since you found my Myspace page). And admit it. That is a sharp bike. A modest house. And a reliable late model truck. So can a person not have one trophy from his past success which he also holds as a tribute to his future success he plans to have? I believe I earned that long ago. Oh, and I will earn it all back again!!!
And in my current life as a CFI, no such purchases are or ever would be made. It is not possible.
I hope someday when you earn success, you also reward yourself. And if things change, keep one trophy for yourself to remember what you are working towards. I hope this helps you understand a bit. And I hope you (and your family if you are married), someday can earn all your dreams as well.
So don't be so quick to judge. I would not wish this situation on anyone. And yes, even with insurance, things like this can happen to you. Long term job loss or the dental side of insurance, which is very weak for most everyone, can change your life quick. I just hope this does not happen to you or anyone else.
Now here is another fact. Some day I will build another bike. A bike greater than that one. And I will ride that same route. Why? I have a ride to finish and goals to accomplish. I hope this does not anger you. But if you fall down, you have to get up. This is the first time I am not sure how to get back up. But I will get up. And when I do, expect to see me on a new $40k+ monument once I can afford to do so. And whether that be one year from now or twenty years from now, I will be building that bike for you as well.
How will it be built for you too? Because that bike will be built now for a new reason. Not one to remind me of my past success. But this time. It will be built as a tribute to the human spirit. My human spirit and yours. That spirit that with god's direction allows us to pick our self back up and ride again! And fly again! And live again! :beer:
Oh yes. One last thing. Maybe someday we will fly together. We clearly come from different places in life and probably have most different views on things. But I bet we share the same passion for aviation. And with that, we have a starting point for conversation. I hope to learn about your successes someday, which means it's a story of how you overcome tough times as well.
