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MotoMuse - Ride like a girl

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18 contributions to MotoMuse - Ride like a girl
Important announcement 📣
Over the next few days I’ll be archiving the MotoMuse Skool community for a little while. This season of life has forced me to slow down, rest, and really reprioritise where my time and energy go. As much as I want to keep building everything at full speed, I’ve realised I can’t do it well if I’m constantly running on empty. MotoMuse isn’t going anywhere. I’m still building it—just at a slower, more sustainable pace until I have more time, more energy, and eventually the ability to delegate and grow the way I envision. In the meantime, I’d love to stay connected with you over on my social media. I’ll be keeping those as active as I can and sharing some riding content, tips, and updates there. ❤️ When MotoMuse Skool reopens, I’ll send an email to everyone so you’ll know exactly when we’re back. Thank you so much for being here and for supporting this little dream of mine. It genuinely means more than you know. This isn’t goodbye—it’s simply a pause while I build a stronger foundation. See you on the socials, and I’ll be back. 🏍️
Important announcement 📣
2 likes • 1d
Luce — this might be one of the most mature calls a creator can make, and I really respect it. Building on empty doesn’t last; building on a solid foundation does. The fact that you can step back, protect your energy, and still keep the vision alive says everything about how much MotoMuse actually means. I feel this one. My own bike project has spent the last stretch buried under the day job and the plain need to keep earning, and it’s a strange thing to watch something you love sit on the back burner. But a dream doesn’t die because it slows down — it waits, and it comes back stronger once you’ve got the room to do it right. So rest well, ride when you can, and keep us posted on the socials. When MotoMuse Skool reopens, I’ll be right here. This isn’t goodbye for any of us — it’s a regroup. 🏍️
🎉 We’re Only 7 Reviews Away…
MotoMuse is just 7 reviews away from our very first community giveaway! 🖤🏍️ If you’ve ever submitted a bike review on the website, thank you — you’ve helped build an incredible resource for women trying to figure out what bikes actually suit real riders. If you haven’t yet, now’s the perfect time 👀 Every review helps another rider: ✅ Choose a bike ✅ Understand real-world comfort and fit ✅ Learn from someone who’s actually owned it And every review submitted goes into the draw for our first giveaway once we hit the milestone. Whether you’ve ridden your bike for 10 years or 10 days, your experience matters. Drop your review here:👉 motomuse.com.au Let’s get these last 7 reviews and unlock our first giveaway! 🎁🖤 Who’s going to help us get over the line? 👇🔥
🎉 We’re Only 7 Reviews Away…
2 likes • May 30
You really emphasized how important it is to be able to lower a bike, especially for women who are on the shorter side — and I couldn’t agree more. It’s such a crucial topic. Being able to properly reach the ground makes a huge difference in how safely and confidently you can handle a motorcycle, especially for riders under 5’7” (170 cm). This deserves way more attention than it usually gets! 👏🏍️
1 like • 30d
I clearly heard her say: okay Guys — not okay Girls ☝️🤩🤩🤩
Brains trust - long form content or 1 on 1
I’m tossing around a couple of ideas for MotoMuse as we grow and I’d love your honest feedback. Would you be more interested in: 🎥 Free long-form content (YouTube-style videos) covering topics like: - Choosing the right bike - Confidence building - Bike fit & comfort - Lowering motorcycles - Buying from dealerships - Beginner rider tips - Real rider stories and reviews OR 💬 Small-group or one-on-one sessions where you could ask questions specific to you, your bike, your confidence, your riding goals, etc. (This would likely be a paid option if I go ahead with it.) OR 👀 Both? Most importantly: What would you want to learn? If MotoMuse could help you solve ONE motorcycle-related problem right now, what would it be? No wrong answers. I’m trying to build what YOU actually need, not what I think you need. 🖤🏍️👇
Poll
4 members have voted
Brains trust - long form content or 1 on 1
2 likes • May 30
YouTube videos, no question! 🎬 Long-form content is where real learning happens. You can pause, rewatch, absorb at your own pace — and the topics you listed (bike fit, lowering, dealership tips) are exactly the kind of stuff that deserves proper visual explanation, not a quick chat session. One-on-ones are great, but they don’t scale — one good video can help thousands of riders at once. That’s the real power of what you’re building here. Would love to see more of your videos. Keep creating! 🏍️
🏍️ REAL LIFE RIDER QUESTION 🏍️
What’s something motorcycles have changed in your everyday life that non-riders probably wouldn’t understand? 👇
🏍️ REAL LIFE RIDER QUESTION 🏍️
2 likes • May 27
I look forward to my after-work ride all day and try to get through my to-do list as fast as possible just so I can still squeeze in a ride before it gets dark 😄
3 likes • May 29
One more thing I've been thinking about — and I'm curious whether you feel the same way. I genuinely believe that motorcyclists make better car drivers. Not because we're more talented — but because riding forces you to develop a completely different level of situational awareness. When you're on a bike, you are constantly scanning. You read the road surface, you watch the gap between parked cars, you notice the driver two vehicles ahead who is about to do something unpredictable. You anticipate, not just react. Your margin for error is so much smaller that your brain simply has no choice but to pay full attention — every single minute. Get back into a car after a long ride and you notice it immediately. You're calmer, more patient, more aware of what's happening around you. You stop tailgating. You start leaving space. You actually look at the people in the vehicles next to you instead of staring at the bumper in front. Riding doesn't just teach you how to handle a motorcycle. It teaches you how traffic actually works — and once you see it that way, you can't unsee it. Does anyone else feel this way? Or is it just me?
Never Fear, Never Forget Respect
Hey everyone — we all share the same passion and I want to take a moment to pause and remind ourselves: we share a dangerous hobby and we should never lose respect for that. The guy who got me into riding at 30 — he was 38 at the time — is gone today. Went into oncoming traffic in a corner. He was a really good rider with enormous experience. So whenever you throw a leg over your bike, never lose respect for the machine. This is a hobby that can kill you, and it takes a lot of time, money and practice to do it safely. Never leave your bike solely to a mechanic — always keep an eye on it yourself, like a parachutist who packs their own chute. Get the best gear that's still comfortable enough to actually wear — whatever suits the weather or your preference — but always the best you can afford. And on the road, never ride more than 80% of what you think you're capable of. One more thing — never ride in fear. If you're genuinely afraid, get off the bike and don't get back on. But that's different from respect. Fear and respect are not the same thing — lose the fear if you can, but never, ever lose the respect for the machine. This post is for Oliver — my best friend who can't read this anymore. 🖤
2 likes • May 29
Yesterday I heard that my neighbor's grandson was killed in a motorcycle accident. I didn't know him personally, but news like that hits differently when you ride yourself. It stays with you. I'm not posting this to scare anyone. I'm posting it because I genuinely care about the people in this community — and because we all share a passion that has a bright side and a very real dark side. Gear Good protective gear is not optional. Helmet, suit, gloves, boots — every single ride, no exceptions. It won't make you invincible, but it gives you a fighting chance. Ride at 80% On public roads, never ride at your limit. Always leave a margin. That buffer has saved lives — including people who didn't even know they needed it. Inspect your bike Regular checks are your responsibility. Tyres, brakes, chain, lights. Do it yourself, do it consistently. Don't wait for something to feel wrong. Keep learning Skill fades without practice. Take a training day, ride different roads, stay sharp. Overconfidence is one of the most dangerous places to be on a bike.
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Tom Taylor
3
14points to level up
@tom-taylor-3685
Engineer turned trader. bipolar.alpha is my systematic framework for reading market direction — macro-driven, data-first, no guesswork

Active 1d ago
Joined May 20, 2026
INFP
Germany / Cyprus