Riding a bike is one of those things that’s a very physical experience, so if you haven’t ridden, then there’s a lot you will naturally not be aware of. I love motorcycle scenes in stories, but over the years I’ve noticed that scenes written by non-riders almost always make the same mistakes. They’re ubiquitous in fact, to the point that if you haven’t been there to learn the contrary yourself, it’s natural to assume that’s how it actually works.
The first thing to know about motorcycles is that when driving, the motorcycle performs as an extension of you. It’s almost cybernetic, the way your mass and balance fuse with the machine’s, the way it transmutes your sense of your surroundings and the surface you’re driving on, and the sense of the bike itself and how it’s performing.
Most notably, the driver’s center of gravity becomes the central steering mechanism. At speeds faster than around 10 mph, the driver steers primarily through shifting their center of balance. If you want to turn left, you lean your body left. You’re actually tilting yourself and the motorcycle to take curves and corners.
When carrying a passenger, then, the passenger needs to shift their center of gravity along with the driver’s. It’s like taking the ‘follower’ position in partner dancing. You lean WITH them; not less, because then your weight counters theirs and they end up not turning (which can be highly bad if, say, the road does not go that way), and not more, because then the bike could tip right over.
Being a good passenger on a bike is not a huge learning curve for most people, but there is a learning curve. And some people have more of a knack for it than others. Some people are natural back-seat drivers, for whatever reason overly pushy, eager, demanding, or determined that they know better than you, and have a habit of making it hard on the driver. I’ve had people tell me they hate riding pillion even if they’re good at it, because they don’t like how out-of-control it feels. I detest it myself, in fact; I’d far rather be driving, and it’s a constant struggle for me to just follow along and behave myself.
This means, though, that carrying a passenger who weighs significantly more than you can be a tricky business. I weigh about 110, and when carrying a rider weighing significantly more than that, it’s awfully easy to crash if the passenger tries to back-seat steer. (A way to mitigate this, especially for new passengers, is to simply take 15 minutes or so to bump around quiet local roads at low speeds so that the driver and passenger can familiarize themselves a bit with minimal risk to themselves.)
Now, undoubtedly the #1 most-committed mistake I see from almost everybody who writes about motorcycles (and for that matter, a lot of unsuspecting new passengers try it in real life) is the ‘wrapping arms around the driver’s waist’ business. It’s so common that this line is practically required by law when somebody’s writing a motorcycle scene, but seriously: DON’T DO THAT. <–The all caps there is not for shaming; it’s for emphasizing the safety issues. It’s not only uncomfortable for the driver, it’s potentially dangerous. It makes it hard to steer, hard to breathe comfortably, and easy to get jerked off balance and into a crash.
In a similar vein, holding onto the driver via grabbing their clothing is ill-advised. This can lead to getting jerked off balance, having seams dig in painfully, and being choked by fabric.
What to do instead: The rider sitting pillion should brace their hands on either side of the driver’s waist.
I know, if you’re in it for the sexual tension, this sounds less sexy, but I’m here to tell you that’s a filthy lie. A passenger who’s sitting properly is basically molded onto the driver’s back. Riding with/being a passenger on a bike is a startlingly intimate experience. There’s a lot of trust and teamwork involved, which takes place at a kinesthetic level. It feels a lot like dancing, as I said before, or maybe partnered sports, where the collaboration is happening at a physical, bone-deep level that often skips right past the conscious intellect.
Now, sometimes (you may’ve seen this on the road) you’ll have passengers who prefer to hang onto a part of the bike–bits of the frame, maybe, or a ‘sissy bar’/seat back sticking up from the back. It’s not uncommon, but it’s a bad habit because the passenger is never quite as in-tune with the driver this way, and if something happens–a tire slips in a puddle, for example–their weight moving in the wrong direction can end up jerking the bike out of the driver’s control.
Another thing I see a lot of writers do in stories that doesn’t work in real life: unfortunately, helmets are NOT easily swappable. They’re designed to clasp the head; a well-fitted helmet should not move on your head at all, even if you shake your head hard (though it also shouldn’t be tight enough to exert uncomfortable pressure). A helmet that fits loosely is useless at best and dangerous at worst. One that’s too tight is either painful or doesn’t go on at all. It doesn’t take much difference in the size of two people’s heads for one person’s helmet to not fit the other person properly. (And even if they’re the same size, that doesn’t necessarily mean it’ll be comfortable for more than short-term wear, but hey.)
Also, the stupid things are ridiculously expensive–especially the full-face models–so most bikers aren’t lucky enough to have a bunch of extras just laying around.
Another tip, both for writing and riding: riding pillion on a sports bike (those sleek ones where the driver’s crouched and leaning forward like a race jockey) is a miserable freaking experience. On a lot of models, you’re perched up there on something that barely counts as a seat and leaves you constantly feeling like you’re about to slide off the back; your legs are pushed up into a crouch; you’re hunched like a monkey over the driver; and possibly you’ve got a scalding-hot muffler pressed up against your calf.
(Pro tip: if anybody ever invites you for a ride on their bike and you’re wearing shorts, pay attention to where the muffler’s located in relation to the foot pegs.)
Now, what is it about motorcycles that makes some of us bikers go into a lathered-up frenzy at the idea of riding? It’s because it FEELS SO DAMN ALIVE.
Look. It’s like…life these days is, well, canned. We spend a lot of our time in pods–houses, cars, subway trains–breathing tinned air, walking around on pavement or carpet… But when I’m on a bike, it’s me and a 360 degree panorama of the world, and there’s nothing between me and it. Some people get off on the risk of that, but for me it’s a matter of immersion. When I ride, I can feel the cool humid air rolling down from under a forested hillside. I can smell the road dust, the oil, the exhaust, the herby scent of weeds and wildflowers on the roadside, the river I’m driving near, the shady scent of a forest, the roadside fruit stand…and I’m not talking in that wafty, broken-up way you get if you roll the car doors down. It’s like driving into a wall of scent, crashing through one bubble after another of temperature changes and smells and sounds and sights, and I have this bike underneath me that’s rumbling and vibrating and moving like it’s part of me, and it’s just the most powerful sense I’ve ever had of being in charge of my own life and not hiding from the world. I can see it, and it can see me, and yeah, that’s a bit dangerous, but it’s also real.
Thank you! This is incredibly useful.
I’m sorry but I’m having a full emotional meltdown over the fact that Ed, in this moment, understands that Stede needs a little extra reassurance. Ed understands that he needs to look at Stede, and nod, and smile, and touch him, and let him know that Ed knows he’s there, and is a part of the group.
Stede is never again going to be left on the outskirts of a social moment while everybody else laughs.
Just, compare this to the French party boat, and Calico Jack. Ed sees Stede, now. He sees the uncertainty and the grief of being left out, always left out, never interesting or fun or cool enough. He gets that, now, and he can do something about it.
What an incredible moment to give us.
Right, the lack of literary analysis on this website is kind of astounding. And I understand most people on here are young still or didn’t have the opportunity to study complex writing at a university level so let’s just take a second to review why everyone might be overreacting, and while sad, this was an excellent and moving ending for Izzy and the season.
Was it rushed? Yes, but that wasn’t the writing staff at fault. They did the best they could in so little time and still made it meaningful despite time restrictions.
Did Izzy have to die? Yes, he says so himself. Ed isn’t Blackbeard, in case you all missed that. Blackbeard is just “a good pirates tale” that is Izzy and Ed TOGETHER. Izzy can’t be Blackbeard without Ed because Ed is the face of Blackbeard. Ed can’t be Blackbeard without Izzy because Izzy is the personality of Blackbeard. As long as they’re both alive and together, Blackbeard will always exist. We get a little taste of this in season 1 when Ed is arrested, but without Ed’s softness, Izzy isn’t a good captain and without Izzy’s constant reality checks, Ed was going full manic pixie dream girl. You need both for Blackbeard.
Is Izzy a father figure to Ed? Yes, because you need to replace father figure here with creator. It’s just a literary stand in term. Izzy made Blackbeard to protect Ed because Ed is soft. You can see the same relationship reflected in Zheng and Auntie. Auntie is the brains of the operation and makes Zheng harder because she’s worried about her softness getting her hurt the same way Izzy sees it as Ed’s weakness. You can also think of it as Izzy=Auntie/Oluande=Stede/Zheng=Ed and the story probably makes a little more sense. It doesn’t matter if Izzy is in love with Ed, Frenchie, wee John, or any of the others, he is still Blackbeard’s creator and protector and therefore the “father figure” he has to learn to carry on without.
Why is Izzy’s redemption so meaningful? Because they switched places and suddenly he was the softness of Blackbeard and Ed was the harshness. Izzy finally saw why living life this way was so important to Ed, and he finally understood what he was keeping Ed from by forcing Blackbeard to stay alive. He finally understood that feeling of family and belonging that Ed was chasing all of these years. He finally understood Ed. Unfortunately, though, the prince doesn’t get to stay a pauper forever. Eventually he has to go back and apply the lessons he learned to real life, and for Izzy that was realizing for either of them to be happy, Blackbeard has to die. So he sacrifices himself to let Ed go free because he loves him. Izzy understands Ed’s unhappiness is because of Blackbeard and that was the whole plan anyway, to kill Blackbeard. It’s why Izzy was even on the revenge in the first place. So Izzy did what any good “father figure” would do and gives his life so Ed could live. We’ve seen people on this show survive worse, and I believe if he wanted to, he could have, but he didn’t want to survive. He even says “I want to go.” He made the choice. That single choice to put others first was the culmination of his redemption.
Couldn’t Izzy have just captained the ship and Ed still retired to his inn? No. The show has proven time and time again, only Blackbeard can lead a pirate ship. Ed and Izzy are crap doing it alone.
I know it’s just a silly little pirate show, but the writing is excellent, and if you just put a little thought into it, you can understand that Izzy dying was such an astounding and beautiful act of selfless love for everyone on that crew. He did his job as the new unicorn and set every single one of them free from Blackbeard.
I love Izzy Hands for not letting actively dying prevent him from being a bitch to Stede Bonnet one last time. Absolute legend.
In a universe where piracy is coming to its natural end, where the theme that the leads' lives revolves around is looking like a past they'll think fondly of, someone like Izzy hands - who is the motif of that theme, THE pirate incarnate - he doesn't fit. He's done his job, he kept piracy alive for his entire life, he kept the man he loves alive as best as he could, he came full circle to realising that there was joy and beauty to be found. But he doesn't want to fish, he fucking hates fishing, an inn sounds even worse. He is piracy, it's all of him. He was done. Izzy Hands' death is a call to everyone that the days of piracy are over, that they should remember him as someone who kept it going, who did his best with the resources he had, who died a pirate's death exactly as he wanted.
At first my heart sank when the closing scene began with the Revenge sailing away, because I thought Ed and Stede were still aboard. And we’d just spent two seasons watching Ed tell anyone who would listen (was anyone listening?) that he didn’t want to be a pirate anymore. It really started to seem like PopPop was the voice of the narrative (if you were ever good at anything, go back and do that —) and every damn time Ed tried to start off in pursuit of happiness they’d just hoist him back aboard ship and put a bloody sword back in his hand.
And then the camera pulled back and he was standing on his own front (terrifyingly rickety) front porch in the sunset with his true love on a quiet stretch of land. And now I’m at peace. Last season I was haunted by the last shot of Ed trapped, and grieving, and lost, and this time the last I saw of him was that smile. He’s not the seabird who flies on forever and never reaches land. He’s come to shore.