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Rev. Dr. Monte Canfield

Rev. Dr. Monte Canfield
Location
Newcomerstown, Ohio, USA
Birthday
December 28
Title
Rev. Dr. Monte Canfield
Company
Retired
Bio
Retired Protestant Pastor and Theologian, jointly credentialed in the United Church of Christ and the Moravian Church. Education: BA, MA, M.Div, Thd. Public Service: NY State Office of Executive Development, Management Intern; Federal Exec. Branch: Executive Office of the President, Budget Examiner, Bureau of the Budget; Interior, Director of Energy and Minerals, Bureau of Land Management; Non Profit: Ford Foundation, Deputy Director, Energy Policy Project; Congressional: Director, Office of Special Projects; Director, Division of Energy and Materials, General Accounting Office; Private industry: Vice President, Grow Group, Inc.; Chief Executive Officer, US Paint; Owner, the Energy Center, St. Louis. Christian service: Pastor, First Congregational UCC, Ottawa, Illinois; Pastor, St. Paul's UCC, Port Washington, Ohio; Pastor, Moravian Church, Gnadenhutten, Ohio.

Rev. Dr. Monte Canfield's Links

Memoirs and Biographical (also see Motorcycling Memories)
Musical Tribute Essays, Playlists, Videos
Motorcycling Memories
The Christian Calendar Series
Essays on the Exodus and the Ten Commandments
Reflections on Faith
JULY 14, 2009 3:15PM

The Fat Boy that Didn't Fit

Rate: 34 Flag

 

 
harley_woman




I wrote this as fiction to protect the guilty.

It was a hot evening in Newcomerstown.  Chilly Willy's weeknight rush was over. Families had eaten their grease laden burgers and fries, topped that with cones or sundaes for desert, and hurried back home in their air conditioned cars to watch UFC Unleashed on TV.

Cones melt quickly in that kind of heat so I was sitting eating a small bowl of soft serve out back under the canopy that was over a bunch of picnic tables. Nobody else was out there.  My butt was on the table and my feet on the seat bench.  I was turned toward the street keeping an eye on my new Bonneville Black. First summer I had it.  It gleamed. Black and chrome.  Simple elegance. 

I heard loud straight pipes from four blocks away. A Harley. I couldn't see it, the Middle School blocked all sight in that direction. I listened as it pulled off the red light in front of the grocery store and I expected it to turn right at the next block and ride to the biker bar two blocks north.  Instead it kept coming and stopped at another red half a block from where I was.

When the light turned I heard the distinct Harley "clunk" into 1st, and the roar as the bike peeled away from the intersection, on its way, I figured, over to West Lafayette.  But, just as the sound got almost to me it changed and was coming right at me.  The rider pulled in next to my bike and shut down the engine.  Thank God for the quiet.  Harley Fat Boy, not quite new and well kept.  Long straight pipes with no other obvious modifications.

The rider was wearing jeans, death's head t-shirt, open denim vest, engineering boots and a doo rag on his head.  Tattoo on one arm.  He was maybe 5' 9", 180. He took the doo rag off and shook down his hair and ran his fingers through it.  I thought nothing of it.  I wear a helmet, have long hair and do the same thing. Something about the careful way he did that made me look again.  He was a she.

She got off, looked at my bike and then at me.

"That your piece of shit?"

I didn't answer.

She walked over to me and stood on the sidewalk between me and the bikes.

"I axed you a question."

"I don't respond to insults.  Better I keep my mouth shut.  Never quite know what will come out when I am pissed."

"Well, listen to you. You some kind of tough old man, ain't you?  Everybody I know calls Triumphs a piece of shit."

"Then you need to get around more, find out there are more brands than Harley."

There was a small smirk at the left edge of her lips.

"Hell.  If I told anybody over at the Touraine Club I had a Trumpet they would kick my ass out."

"There are more places to drink beer than the Touraine.  But you may not have noticed. I don't know why all you Hog riders run together like a pack of lemmings anyway, wear the same clothes, parrot each other's prejudices, pimp your bikes exactly the same way, and put on straight pipes that you have to know piss off all the non riders as well as a lot of riders like me."

I figured that would piss her off but I was sick of her attitude, sick of Harleys, not too happy with the redneck Harley owners in town with their 'monkey see, monkey do' attitude, and damned sick of being awakened every night by drunk Hog riders roaring home from the Touraine Club.  Frankly, I just didn't give a shit what she thought. She could try to beat up this old man if she wanted.  And maybe she could.  I half way expected her to give it a shot.

Instead she says, "Hold that thought," and walks into Willy's.  She is out in a minute or two with a huge vanilla cone with sprinkles! Sprinkles?  Talk about ruining a carefully cultivated image!

She walks up to the table, and sits down on end of the table opposite me.  And starts eating her soft serve, which is melting fast in the heat. After she is pretty sure she can say a word without having it drip, she looks at the two bikes sitting there side by side.

"You know, you are the only person I ever met who told me straight out what I have been axin' myself for quite a while now."

I didn't look at her.  It might make her clam up.

"I used to ride on the back of my husband's Glide but I got sick of looking at his back and finally told him I wanted my own bike.  Took him two years to get worn down enough to agree.  I went looking on my own and I told him I really liked a 650cc Yamaha V-Twin.  Fit me real nice.  Easy to maneuver around in parking lots, just my size.  I sat on a pretty red up at Apex in Philly."

"You didn't get it, from the looks of that Fat Boy."

"Hell no, Tom had a fit.  Said that no wife of his was riding no rice burner.  It was a Harley or nothing. And he didn't want me on any Sportster.  Sportsters are, he says, for wimps. So now we are making payments on a used bike that cost twice as much as the Yamaha, is hell to move around when it isn't running, a bitch to turn in curves, doesn't fit me and is too damned loud."

"Other than that you like it, huh?"

This time I did look at her and she smiled.

"Yeah, other than that.  That and this tat that I didn't want, wearing a vest that I don't like, these stupid t-shirts that say that I am someone that I'm really not, and riding with pipes that embarrass the hell out of me.  And, yeah, I don't like never having a beer here in my own home town anyplace other than the Touraine."

"I imagine that would feel just a bit confining."

She changed the subject.

"Your wife ride?"

"Yeah, as I got fatter she got more and more tired of looking at my growing back.  She started riding in '04.  We do a lot of touring.  She has racked up over 35000 miles since then.  Loves it."

"What does she ride?"

"Kawasaki Vulcan 500 parallel twin cruiser."  

"Isn't that small for the interstate?"

"Actually, we ride at least half of our trips on two lane highways.  We take our time and enjoy the sites.  And, no. Its not too small at all.  It will cruise all day at 65-70 with a full touring kit of windshield, tank bag, seat bag, rack bag and saddlebags loaded with gear. At my age I don't want to go any faster than that anyway.  Besides, her bike has a top speed of 125 so she is only using a little more than half of its potential."

She just looked at me, saying nothing, gave a small nod and then she was up and off the table.  She threw the rest of her sodden cone in the trash can and stood on the sidewalk looking at me again. Her attitude seemed different.

"Well, nice to talk to you.  And your bike really ain't bad.  I just kind of get in a rut, you know?"

"Me too."

She walked to the big Fat Boy, swung a leg over it, stuffed her hair under her doo rag, thumbed the starter and the engine roared into life.  Over the din she yelled at me.

"Thanks.  Tom don't know it but after he gets a couple of beers into him tonight I am going to encourage him to have an attitude adjustment.  I got me a sweet little red Yamaha in mind that he needs to reconsider."
 
I live on the main drag into town. About two months later I was sitting on my front porch and heard this straight piped Harley coming down the highway from a mile away.  It turned off US 36, cranked it up for the one block to our street, turned in and roared down the street toward me, and I saw that  it was her bike.  From a distance she looked different, no doo rag for one thing.  As she got closer I saw that she was a he.  He was  wearing a full double breasted leather biker jacket, zipped up, in the summer no less.  I was starting to think I was developmentally challenged when it came to identifying the sex of Harley riders.

It was her bike alright, but it wasn't her.  Old Tom must have had that attitude adjustment.

Couple of weeks later I'm sitting on the porch again and this guy roars by on a full dress Glide, straight pipes.  Its far too big a bike for him.  Short hair, t shirt, tats.  Looked to be about  5' 6' or so, maybe 140 pounds soaking wet.  Following a half block behind him was the prettiest little bright red 650cc Yamaha V Twin you ever saw, decked out in full touring kit: windshield, saddlebags, luggage rack, and quiet OEM mufflers.  Had a nice purring growl to it.  Not obnoxious at all.  

As she rode by I saw that she had gotten rid of the vest and the doo rag and had tied her hair in a pony tail.  She had a grin from ear to ear.  I stood up and clapped as she went by.  She pumped  her left arm into the air, at the end of which were two fingers raised in a V.

 

1392 page views 2010 04 07

 

 


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I don't mind Harleys, except for the damn noise. Why do all these middle-aged riders need to make that ridiculous over-blown fart? Growing up in the UK I used to find it was only the kids with their first, usually extremely "pre-owned" bike that felt the need to make a lot of racket. After that they would settle down with something bigger, but with stock mufflers.
Even within your fiction you weave a message of tolerance. A true Triumph! rAted!
Great story, Monte! You earned your ice cream that day--you did her a great service!
I don't know whether to call you reverend or dude. I guess both will do. Fun story.
All things on two wheels are fun. Even those Vespa motos. Why limit the joy? monkey fingered. Motorcycles subreddit.
fact or fiction ... you are just you and I love that! :) RATED!
Great story! And I love the way you tell it, very natural, vivid characters, including yo-- I mean "the narrator."
Monte: it's not for nothing that you're a reverend. You manage to turn a conversation which starts out with 'is that your piece of shit' into something constructive. My hat's off to you.
Oh yeah- the 'fiction' label is not fooling anyone!
Great story, Monte. I love it when the author can inform the story with some expertise, which you do to very deft and transformative effect here.
Monte, classic Monte! This is a great tale, I could hear the roar of the Harley and smelled the dust clear up the mountain! Such a colorful, visual story you tell. Loved it! Daughter's boyfriend rides a Ducati, works for them and seems to have a future there, so I am held to the fire on preference for now.
Great story, Monte! We love our loud-piped Harley, but it's true that there is a lot of pre-judgment regarding bikes. I think it's better than it used to be and -- at least out here in California -- bikes are less "segregated" than in the "old days" when we rode our Yamaha 750 Special. Now everyone comes in on whatever fits them, and as you point out in this story, that's exactly how it should be.
I loved this story, Monte. For a rider, your feelings are very much like my own. Harleys don't impress me, and neither do their riders just because sitting on the stinking thing. I've been in a few biker bars after climbing outa my Mercedes. I always walk in and they look at me like I'm from another planet, and fifteen minutes later they're buying me a beer. :) Ain't life grand...?
what a fantastic story. i got chills, monte. thank you.
Thanks, everybody, for the kind comments. People are the same in small villages like mine or in the big cities I lived in most of my adult life. They get trapped into some sub-culture and have no idea how to get out. Sometimes a little nudge is all they need to break the mold.

Monte
Great story, Monte. But then, all of your stories are compelling message delivery systems. You set me to thinking about some things.
A wonderful story Monte, such a departure from what I usually read. I really enjoyed it!
I've been around the two wheeled world pretty much as long as I can remember. Although I've been riding Harleys for over thirty years, I'm not a Harley snob, though I know many who are. I don't buy into the biker lifestyle even though I know many who do, a lot of them are what I call sidewalk commandos. I know guys who dress the dress but don't walk the walk. Some of their bikes are ten years old with 7000 miles on them. Of course they look new with all kinds of expensive add-ons, but sitting in the garage does not a biker make. Most of those guys can't change their own oil.
I consider myself a motorcycle enthusiast. I do all of the work on my bike and put on some miles, but money woes have curtailed my normal mileage numbers as of late.
I also know those at the other end of the scale. Those who rack up thousands of miles each year. I get along with all of them for the most part. I've met some serious snobs in the sport bike world, too.
My guess is there are boils on the ass of every group including those who like Bingo.
Me? I mostly ride alone. Never cared for riding in packs. I believe in riding what you like or at least what you can afford. I love my Harley, but the wind don't know the difference.
Hehehe, I forgot to mention that I really enjoyed your post!
Excellent and emotional story, rated :-)

On a different wavelength -- If I feed this text into my Galactic Interpreter, this is the message I get:

"One must be forgiving with Earthlings. The Creator -- in his unfathomable wisdom -- drove them away from the Tree of Knowledge, so they don't have the ability of independent thinking. It's not their fault.

The Evil One, on the other hand (who also goes under the pseudonym: Mr. Darwin) gave them a substitute, the infamous "monkey see, monkey do" skills, and this is the only thing the poor creatures can use instead of reasoning. Hence the many human institutions that help them exist without much struggling with thoughts: political parties, self-help publishers, gentlemen's clubs, etc."

Please don't kill the messenger: I am just reading aloud the Interpreter's output record :-)
Fun story - I now know a whole different side of you, Monte!
pretty well captures the harley mentality.

i'll stick with my 2002 Honda Hornet 919, thank you.
Thanks for your additional comments, folks.

I should be clear that I have no inherent problems with Harleys as bikes. I do have concerns for the pack mentality of the Harley riders here in my village and I see too much of that elsewhere as well.

It is particularly noticeable in small town American where patriotism is confused with American made products and where a particular American motorcycle is associated with being one of the "in" crowd, which, by definition, means everyone else is out.

In such an environment there is great pressure to be "in" and great stigma associated with being on the outside. That environment does not lend itself to being open minded and thinking for one's self.

Monte
Man, Monte you even do fiction well! I know nada about motorcycles, but enjoyed this almost as much as your series early on...
RATED
Loved this, Monte. Great dialogue. The whole thing felt very real, which makes me wonder just what sort of crowd you're hangin' with.
I enjoyed this story very much. And good on you for telling her like it is, and her for listening.
Wonderful story, Monte! Further proof that it's always best to just be yourself. Well done!
Monte! this is great. You can truly write anything. I loved this (and hate Harleys too - just the noise they make). My brother has a Triumph and it's gorgeous.
Lovely post Monte...I love ya! And thanks for the Vespa shout out, BBE...that's my dream vehicle...and just my size.
Thanks for the addition comments, everyone. An embarrassment of riches! Much appreciated everyone and I think that I will take note and continue to see if I can write some interesting short stories now and then. Great encouragement from you to give that another shot.

Monte
I sat here, listening to that hog go by. I could feel the heat, taste the soft serve.

And just like having that ice cream on a hot summer night, this story was extremely satisfying.

Excellent, my friend. :-D
Aww, yeah. I love this story. Just plain sweet, as in suh-weet!
Had no idea you wrote short stories. Quite damn well, too...

Terse muscular prose, i think they call it...
Excellent post, really enjoyed it. Reminded me of a friend of mine in Memphis who rides with the Southern Crusiers. He is a Honda guy.
Thanks for the added comments. Much appreciated.

Monte
Good for her. Rock on, Monte!
Love this story. Never rode a bike and I've always found two adults arguing about "the" best bike remarkably silly. You let her argue with herself, and she won.
Thanks, Screamin', appreciate the read and comment. She should be proud. Amazing what it takes to defy convention, and a husband.

Jim: Some of the stupidest arguments are about bikes, just another version of "mine is bigger than yours." Sometimes when something is as electric and irrational as best motorcycle it is better to just plant a seed and see if it grows. Thanks for the comments.

Monte
What a fun, well-told tale! I enjoyed every second of reading it and was disappointed when it ended. Great dialogue here and a great ending. WELL done!
Thank YOU, dr spudman, for reading and commenting. Much appreciated.

Monte
What a great story! I'm tickled to death she found the courage to be herself. It was your words! Excellent and wonderful writing! A trickle of sweat went down my forehead as I was craving Dairy Queen and a hard breeze in my face! More of these stories, please?
Thanks, Fab. I am working on a couple more in my head but the words haven't quite come together yet. Not quite a writer's block, more a brain cramp, but I will get past it. Glad you liked this one.

Monte