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Wanna Ride On My Harley? Print E-mail
Wednesday, 21 December 2005



The Best Pick-Up Line for a Middle-Aged Man: "Wanna Ride On My Harley?"
© Jack Riepe 2004

Middle-age creeps up on a man like a bad hangover. In your 20s, it's a rumor. In your 30s, it's like the land you think you can see when staring at the ocean's horizon. But it begins to make its presence known in your 40s. You don't look as good in jeans as you used to, and your hairline may start to recede as your gut begins its downward droop. And even if you work out and play tennis, jog or pole vault, certain unmistakable signs give your age away.

I know a guy who does everything but pack himself in nitrogen every night in a futile effort to keep his stud appeal. He had a handlebar mustache like a moose's antlers. It gave his face a distinctive character. And while he's managed to stay fairly thin and keep a respectable head of hair, his signature mustache turned snowy white when he hit 50.

....

"I had to shave it off," he said to me, crying into a low carb, invisible calorie, no-taste beer one night.

"I tried everything. Shoe polish ... Grecian Formula ... Dye ... Everything looked stupid. And without coloring it, I looked like Captain friggin' Kangaroo. No matter what I used, it would leave black marks all over the lips, neck, and bodies of cooperative, passionate women. They'd laugh in my face and leave."

Since shaving off his mustache, however, he's cut out the middle man. Without that distinctive mustache, women now laugh in his face and leave without going home with him.

This guy - and a lot of others - make the mistake of trying to appear sexy and youthful by clinging onto props that can only weather and wither. They get tattoos, earrings, tans, and hair implants. And for what? They still look like scarecrows or fatties trying to be high school football stars. I have discovered the best approach to looking sexy and virtually immortal is to be identified with a symbol that is timeless ... like a Harley-Davidson motorcycle.

The Harley, once the icon of lawless nomads, has come to signify enduring youth with an undeniable sense of individualism and coolness. Nothing sounds like a Harley and nothing generates the throbbing, pulsating power of sexual rhythm (if you catch my drift) like a Harley-Davidson motorcycle. The problem with Harleys is that they don't give them away. In fact, those who sell Harleys understand they are selling Milwaukee Iron manhood extenders and price them accordingly. Introduction into the club requires more than a little jack.

Successful middle-aged men occasionally have this jack to spare. Since I collected wives in my youth (and college tuitions lately), the only jack I have is under the bumper of a rusting truck in my driveway. And yet I have developed a strategy that puts the Harley magic to work for me.

In the far reaches of Pennsylvania, there is a gentlemen's establishment that attracts a certain class of exotic woman. (The type who under normal circumstances wouldn't look at me twice. One, because I have that middle-aged beaten look; and two, because I am.) I put on my best pair of stressed jeans (accented with an oil stain and a few threadbare patches), tuck them into a pair of biker boots, and throw on a weathered leather jacket. I carry a Viking helmet (horns and all) under my arm and head out to this particular watering hole.

If you get there at just the right time, the crowd is inside and the bikes are largely unattended outside. I just stand around next to an unusual looking one. Sooner or later, a passing hot tamale assumes the Harley is mine and makes a comment, which is generally an invitation to get to know her better. When the bar closes six hours later and the bikes have all left, I claim my Harley was stolen and we head over to my place to commiserate.

Last week, things took a different turn. The lady in question was as hot as lava from the source. Tanned, long blonde hair, and eyes the color of conspiracy, she asked, "That your Harley?"

"Yeah," I said, looking away with staged indifference, thinking "Wow!"

"Does it throb?"

"Yeah," I said.

"Does it pulsate?"

"Yeah," I said.

"Do ya wanna take me for a throbbing, pulsating ride?"

"Yeah," I stammered. "In about six hours, when this joint closes. Let's go in and figure out the route we should take."

"Know what?" she asked. "You're not gonna take me for a ride on this throbbing, pulsating, manhood extender."

"Well maybe not right away," I stuttered ... "If you'd like to come inside for a while, however..."

"Know why? Because this Harley is mine," she said. And in an instant, she was on it and revving it to a prehistoric growl.

"Wanna ride on my Harley?" she shouted over the roar.

It's still the best pickup line I have ever heard.
# # #

A public relations specialist by trade, Jack Riepe is a regular contributor to the About Motorcycles site. He's the author of "Politically Correct Cigar Smoking For Social Terrorists" and haunts the back roads of Pennsylvania on a 1986 BMW K75.


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