Originally Posted by
DarkStarr
You are right about the risk factors with the bike. I could only hope that if a wreck is bad enough to put me in the hospital, then that it'd kill me on impact.
But I'd rather not think about that

^ That type of thinking gets you into trouble. This way of thinking seems to be a major contributing factor to all of your problems. The risks are pointed out to you, but you chose not to think about it.
Since you choose to keep the bike and not think of the risks, here's one more issue to think about. If you do wreck and it does not kill you, you can expect to have serious physical injury. Broken bones, skin grafts, cranial fractures, loss of limbs, or paralysis.
From what I can tell, you're 20 years old. I'm assuming that either you have health insurance or are somehow covered under your parent's health insurance.
Make damn sure that whatever life/health insurance policy you have covers injury/death while operating a motorcycle. Some insurance carriers put an exception to "dangerous" activities and explicitly state that they consider motorcycle operation to be a "dangerous" activity and hence any injury suffered while motorcycling is not covered. I'm stressing this again. In your current situation, one wreck can put your future into a deep shit hole real fast.
Originally Posted by
DarkStarr
I am making sacrifices by selling off two of my vehicles, when I could keep all 3 and just make the minimums on everything. I found a way to get myself out without completely losing sanity.
and then you go on to say...
Originally Posted by DarlStarr
I love having 3 vehicles, heck, I'd love to keep both the Prelude and the bike, but I'll sacrifice one of those and I'm choosing to sacrifice the Prelude.
Which is it? You selling off two or you selling off just one?
I understand the "love" of having three vehicles, look at my sig. I'm able to do this because I cleaned up my act in my 20's. You're in your 20's now. You're in a financial hole you dug for yourself. Use some common sense and you'll get yourself out, and set yourself up for a better future in 5 to 7 years.
I work for a college. I see young adults in your age range every day. Regardless of gender or race, young adults boil down to two types. The ones that lean life's lessons the easy way by using common sense and listening to qualified people around them. Then there are the knuckle-heads who have to learn every life lesson the hard way by making every mistake in the book before they learn.
Which type are you going to choose to be?