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Author Topic: Time To Go...  (Read 1221 times)
DDT (12)
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Sometimes ya just gotta go...

Winter Springs, FL - Occasionally...


« on: November 24, 2017, 07:49:33 PM »

I departed my dear ol' sister's place with not a clue where I might go next. I was toying with the idea of returning to Florida, simply because I felt I should... for no other particular reason, though... just 'cause I ought to...
 
As I was pulling out of the subdivision where my sibling receives her mail and stores her stuff, it occurred to me that I could always use another Penn burger, and that would at least get me rolling in some direction... about a fifty-mile ride over to Decatur, but more than enough for us (my fat lady and me) to return to that special place... that mystical, magical spiritual realm we call riding...
 
Ever notice how most riders 'own' machinery, while many fat lady associates actually have affairs with mechanical beings? Might not seem like much of a distinction to a lot of folks, but for those of us who do fit into that category, it makes all the difference!
 
CF Penn’s was sold last year, so it is no longer an 'original family' owned business. It has offered a fairly consistent product since 1927, but for some reason it just didn't seem quite the same this time... familiar, of course, and still worth savoring, I suppose, but...
 
We do have a little history... that place and this sentimental trekker. I had my very first hamburger there in June of '62, when Bobby Dempster introduced me to that establishment, and I've eaten there at least once every year since, so...
 
Not sure if it was just me reacting to that profound change in the normalcy of my universe, or if there truly is something a little different now, but... I only ate two this time... That was itself a bit of a change, as I've been devouring three... occasionally more... on a single visit... for decades. I tell folks I do that because it's fun afterwards to sit around and listen to my arteries harden!!!
 
After grazing at the grease bar for a spell, I took a picture of the entrance... I was thinking I'll continue returning once a year just for nostalgia reasons and to uphold tradition, but I have probably lost that 'special thing' I've had from the beginning, that which has had this unique eatery so highly placed in my archive of favorite destinations... Time marches onward...
 

 
I threw my leg across ALI's saddle and headed for the stop light a few yards away... Which way should I go? Well, I haven't been down Bank St. in a few decades, how about that? OK!
 
It certainly has changed, but nowadays mostly it's just tired old buildings and store fronts made over into upscale office buildings for lawyers and other professionals... Nothing like it once was with primarily retail department stores and shops... It had begun showing signs of aging and decay, though, by the time I'd come along, and it had been regarded as 'the old part of town'.
 
That street had been the main ‘downtown’ street when the city was first built nearly two centuries ago. Oh well, more progress, I suppose... There does seem to be a 'cycle' for all downtown areas, and this section was just going through its own phase of that never-ending cycle...
 
Funny about change, cycles, loss of the old, introduction of the new... I think we're threatened by 'change' because we know what we've had, but we don't know what lies ahead. Our familiarity, stability, sense of order, and predictability are altered or removed, and we don't know what to think about what might be next... Progress by definition involves change... however, all change is not progress...
 
We also connect and/or associate times of our lives, special memories and important events with locales and fixed objects... When those go away, or at least are significantly altered, it's as though part of who we are is being assaulted or diminished in some way. Our natural inclination is to resist, or certainly to regret, the changes being made, but most changes are not bad, actually...
 
I thought about how CF Penn’s was undergoing change. That iconic eatery that became for me far more than just a place to grab a so-so burger now and then... It was a connection to my past, to a time and place with profound significance for me; it was a symbol of who I had been and a reminder of the journey of my life to the person I had become... it was a bridge of sorts between the two. That connection was being eroded…
 
Change is the natural order of things. Mountains erode away in time, rivers alter course, oceans ebb and flow… people come and go. Perhaps we place too much stock in the symbols that anchor us, and think too little about the healthy, vital aspects of change that give us hope for a brighter tomorrow. The need for rejuvenation that can come only with change. Perhaps it’s time for me to let go of CF Penn’s… ummmm, maybe next year…
 
At the north end of Bank St., I was confronted with another choice point. From the stop light doing its job, I could see AL HWY 20 up ahead, a road travelled many times in another era but not the stretch heading west by this traveler in half a century at least… care to guess where I went next? Nothing at all was familiar about it… more change… progress again… Essential, of course, but gone was any residual connection I might have had.
 
I was toying with the idea of riding over to Florence, AL, the town my family had lived in before moving to Decatur. I did ride over there on a different road about twenty years ago with my sister, but I didn’t even recognize the town that time…

I wasn’t committed to this ride, it was just something to do… Then, I spotted a road sign for HWY 101 heading south… I didn’t recall even knowing that road existed, let alone have any memories of what might lie in that direction… We turned southward onto it… until it ended about fifteen miles later…
 
I stopped to see where we might go next. The day was getting late, so whichever way we went, we needed to find lodging fairly soon. Hmmm, Jasper, AL has motels… as best as I can recall… pretty sure… oh heck, let’s just go see! It did.
 
Sunset caught us still out on the road. The sunset itself was rather nice, though, so I stopped and took a picture. Funny about picture taking… I’m getting better at it, and I am remembering to do that more frequently… However, I still have much to learn, and doing a better job of it is proving rather illusive for this novice.


 
It was getting dark, and we were still out on the road… I was keeping a careful eye out for critters, but I knew it was probably foolish for me to be there. Then I spotted a motel sign on a billboard letting me know all was well, and very soon we would find refuge! Another day of riding, another most enjoyable time with my girl… our girl… I do love it so…
 
DDT
« Last Edit: November 25, 2017, 06:54:21 AM by DDT » Logged

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The emperor has no clothes
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« Reply #1 on: November 24, 2017, 10:44:04 PM »

 cooldude your story brought a song by the "Pretenders" into my head. "They paved paradise and put up a parking lot".
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Rams
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So many colors to choose from yet so few stand out

Covington, TN


« Reply #2 on: November 25, 2017, 02:18:59 AM »

I'm reminded of something my Dad told me once.   He said this the first time I returned home on my first leave from the Marines.   I said something about I couldn't find some friends and that something had changed.

He responded that although you can always come home, it'll never be the same once you left.   Things change and although they may remain the same in your mind, while someplace else, time marches on.

He was right.   Communities, friends and everything slowly evolve and it's rare something is actually as you remember it.    My rememberer ain't as good as it used to be but, there are some things worth remembering.   Hmmm, now what was her name...................................
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Learning the majority of life's lessons the hard way.

Every trip is an adventure, enjoy it while it lasts.
Robert
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S Florida


« Reply #3 on: November 25, 2017, 05:37:41 AM »

Life a strange thing as long as we are in step with our surroundings we handle change ok but, if we are out of the scene and come back then the shift is sometimes a bit much. I think its as much a change in us as a change in the surroundings.

We have changed, we will never be the same from one moment to the next. Like a movie, miss to much and you have hard time getting into it again.

The learning to accept change and make it what you want is also paramount to life. Ride the changes like a surfer on the waves.

The bible says
Jas 4:14  How do you know what your life will be like tomorrow? Your life is like the morning fog—it’s here a little while, then it’s gone.

I have seen so many changes in places, people,situations, politics, and the list could go on, but what it has given me is the understanding to appreciate those who are in my life and the times I have.

They are not mine really, they are Gods, given on loan to me to share and experience what this life has for us, but in the end and not of my timing they could be gone.

I appreciate the memories and like you DDT I go back to the places that I knew and found some there and some gone. But it made me think what am I really missing, the place, or the people, the atmosphere of the place and I realized it was really the people, the dynamic that had changed. When the people change then the place changes most of the time. From the bum on the street to the business owner that no longer has his business to the house that a family has lived in for years sells the house and the new owners change the place.

So its really the people we miss, just like ants we work, move, build and then another comes along and they or we are gone and the place changes.

I cherish the memories and am truly thankful for those in my life now and in the past regardless of their good or bad influence. Really they were the product of  decisions, a reflection of my needs and their needs, with all the experiences and emotion that goes along with it and now a mosaic that makes up my life and who I am now.

I love going back to the old places and remembering and seeing the changes that some have done and get sad when I see its not up to what it was before. But it reminds me my road has not yet finished and there are some awesome new roads to explore or some old roads with new twists. It never gets old even day to day week to week the changes are sometimes memorable.

I always find something new even on roads traveled so many times. The air smells change and rain or damp smells the change of seasons the animals, trees and plantings all change and this realization is like an update in a computer that resets my memory of the place and time.

Although all my memories are not what one would consider good though in revisiting some places, I found that it was a reminder that the bad doesn't last forever, most of the time life goes on and we find that place in the sun and how much we have changed. What a comfort that changes can be for the bad or good.

So as I ride I update the old information, explore and experience the new and sometimes wonder if this is for better or worse? Most of the time it wont matter to me, because today I'm here tomorrow I'm gone. I look and see what those around me have built and what they are doing. Its like a glimpse into a fish bowl of another s life.

Its another memory made.


Forrest Gump - "Life is like a box of chocolate"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CJh59vZ8ccc
« Last Edit: November 25, 2017, 06:01:33 AM by Robert » Logged

“Some people see things that are and ask, Why? Some people dream of things that never were and ask, Why not? Some people have to go to work and don’t have time for all that.”
Misfit
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Colorado Springs Colorado


« Reply #4 on: November 25, 2017, 06:49:49 AM »

Another great story. Thank you for taking the time. As always, I'll be looking forward to the next one. Nice work!  cooldude
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John Schmidt
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a/k/a Stuffy. '99 I/S Valk Roadsmith Trike

De Pere, WI (Green Bay)


« Reply #5 on: November 25, 2017, 08:12:57 AM »

Enjoyed the trip down memory lane, brings to mind thoughts of what I call my "home town" in Iowa. Recently I was trying to recall the name of a particular restaurant on Central Avenue....the main street in the center of town. I got on Google Earth and started at one end of Central and "strolled" the length of it. It's like a ghost town compared to over 60 yrs. ago when I finished high school, the restaurant is now gone....in fact the entire building is gone. I then looked up the "new" house we moved into when we first moved there. The house was one of four new homes on that block, I was going into 8th grade. Dad and I built the detached garage the following year. As I "strolled" past via Google, it became evident that entire neighborhood is now on the "wrong side of the tracks."  Our once new home is now an unrecognizable shack with junk all around it, same for most of that area.

I guess it's true what has been said before; "you can't ever go home." Like you, my connection to the past is gone....connections to youthful romances, cars and bikes in various stages of disrepair, late night rendezvous at the drive-in with buddies after we dropped off our dates(all those old buds are now gone as well). I was able to look up the address of my old main squeeze in HS and found it via Google. Looks like she did OK with her now dead hubby...who never made it past 70. She dumped me after nearly three years, was pregnant within six months. Based on my activities with her I knew it wasn't mine. Still can't help but smile a little.  Wink
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solo1
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New Haven, Indiana


« Reply #6 on: November 25, 2017, 08:17:23 AM »

Really nice story, Bruce!

I most certainly miss writing NEW stories about riding. However, all of my memories about riding are still intact, just can't post something new here any more.

I keep coming back to here mainly to read your 'adventures in riding." It adds spice to this forum.

Your 'hamburger' comment reminded me of a home nearby where I lived as a child.  The front of the home had been converted to a store front with shutters. When it was open, 'Harmons hamburgers' served some great hamburgers.  
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old2soon
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Willow Springs mo


« Reply #7 on: November 25, 2017, 08:30:15 AM »

Always amazed/dismayed at the things I used to know and then when I ride where I grew up and the first house wife one and I bought and brought offspring into the world-when memory and reality collide it often ain't purtty. But I also realize change is extremely fluid at the very least. Just seeing the three different houses I've occupied here in Willow Springs Mo. at one time or another lets me know bout that fluid thing. An older gnarly First Class-E-6-once told me you do in Fact have choices even in The Navy. You can lead or you can follow or you can git the hell outa the way. RIDE SAFE.
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Today is the tommorow you worried about yesterday. If at first you don't succeed screw it-save it for nite check.  1964  1968 U S Navy. Two cruises off Nam.
VRCCDS0240  2012 GL1800 Gold Wing Motor Trike conversion
DDT (12)
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Posts: 4120


Sometimes ya just gotta go...

Winter Springs, FL - Occasionally...


« Reply #8 on: November 25, 2017, 07:41:27 PM »

Thanks, everybody, for sharing some of your own experiences and thoughts on this... It is something I ponder now and then, as it seems to aid me in the pursuit of balance and perspective... In dealing with and understanding my own feelings and reactions to what all is happening around me. Life is a continuing educational journey, and I enjoy taking stock from time to time... I also enjoy sharing my thoughts with y'all, and especially hearing in return of your own observations, too. Your contributions add depth and insight not otherwise available to me, so... Thanks again!

DDT
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Don't just dream it... LIVE IT!

See ya down the road...
f6john
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Richmond, Kentucky


« Reply #9 on: November 26, 2017, 07:13:09 AM »

Who is hosting your photos? I need an easy to use service. cooldude
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Daniel Meyer
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The State of confusion.


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« Reply #10 on: November 26, 2017, 07:36:06 AM »

I think those of us that long for the long road...are better equipped to cope with changes...but we also "see" more change as we leave a place for some time. It continues to change of course...but those that stayed don't see that unless something dramatic happens.

We come back from even a short time away and the changes are readily evident. Sometimes for the better...sometimes not. Often the change we see outside is reflective of some of the change occurring inside ourselves...that that can be profoundly uncomfortable...or strangely reassuring.

And sometimes...we just have to go far enough away so that we can turn around and see what we actually have.

I'll see you on the road.
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CUAgain,
Daniel Meyer
Oss
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The lower Hudson Valley

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« Reply #11 on: November 26, 2017, 07:54:09 AM »

And sometimes...we just have to go far enough away so that we can turn around and see what we actually have.


indeed Daniel,  well said
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If you don't know where your going any road will take you there
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DDT (12)
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Posts: 4120


Sometimes ya just gotta go...

Winter Springs, FL - Occasionally...


« Reply #12 on: November 27, 2017, 04:21:25 AM »

Who is hosting your photos? I need an easy to use service. cooldude




I was using Photobucket, like many on here did. When that free service went away, I switched to a provider suggested by Serk...  Postimage.org ... and I've had good luck with it so far. It is easy for this non-tech guy to use, too! I can only speculate, but I wouldn't be surprised if at some future date they begin charging for this like Photobucket did... until then...

DDT




Daniel,

As usual, you've cut straight to the heart of the matter and succinctly nailed it! Your long periods on the long road have provided many insights for you, honed many more that you already had... Thanks for responding and adding more perspective and depth!

DDT



Oss,

He does have a way of doing that, doesn't he...?

DDT
« Last Edit: November 27, 2017, 04:23:33 AM by DDT » Logged

Don't just dream it... LIVE IT!

See ya down the road...
old2soon
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Willow Springs mo


« Reply #13 on: November 27, 2017, 06:02:38 AM »

And sometimes...we just have to go far enough away so that we can turn around and see what we actually have.


indeed Daniel,  well said
              Little more in depth for runnin that long road. Drivin that 18 wheeler as long as I did I had way too much time on my hands or too much time to reflect. I've stayed gone as long as 2-2 and a half months. BUT Uncle Sugars Canoe Club helped directly with the training for getting a job Done AND being away from home base as it were. Evan-you nailed it-looking back from a distance to see What you have. None of my homes have been palatial not did I ever want  a palatial domicile. Warm dry place good food loving wife and good kids. Little money in the bank go fishin or huntin or ridin then go back out to my office-pick a highway or a burg-I have at one time or another turned a wheel in all 50 States 2 Canadian Provinces and Old Mexico. Also in Japan and the Phillipines. AND Good Lord willin the crik she no rise I wanna add more miles to my Phatt Ghurl. I Wuz gonna ride her today on my P G R Mission BUT 3 miles of gravel-not today. Cage time But I WILL be there. I are the R C I C. And IF-yuk yuk-the weather guessers is close to cottectamundo I should be good to go on into December. Bruce-keep Ali in the wind as long as you feel safe doing so. I feel Extremely fortunate to still be able to throw a leg over and wurk the twistys when I feel like it. THAT is anudder gooder thingy bout where I live-twistys ain't That far from my front door!  cooldude RIDE SAFE.
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Today is the tommorow you worried about yesterday. If at first you don't succeed screw it-save it for nite check.  1964  1968 U S Navy. Two cruises off Nam.
VRCCDS0240  2012 GL1800 Gold Wing Motor Trike conversion
Atl-Jerry
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Alpharetta Ga


« Reply #14 on: November 27, 2017, 07:01:11 AM »

Your mention of Florence Al conjured up a Valk memory for me.  I stayed overnite there in June 2000 when I was enroute to Corinth MS to pick up my first blue/gray IS.  At the time, they were the only ones in the SE that had a blue/gray one and it didn't hurt that they offered about $2.5K off MSRP. 
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