Welcome to the forum, Grateful Guy. You're going to love it: lotsa great guys here.
Wow, just checked in here to see if there were any other responses to this thread. Surprise surprise. My how times have changed. Because I struggled so much with being comfortable when I ride, I sold the FJR. My Leukemia seems to be stagnant which is a good thing. If my doctor was right, it may be another 10 years before It becomes serious. Time will tell. I'm still kicking though I'm not on this forum much. Good news is that my good friend Mark bought my FJR, and rides it often. It found a good home with a close friend, and I get to see it now and then. I now ride a 2018 Gold Wing and it fits me better. I find long days in the saddle aren't nearly as difficult as they were on the FJR. Comparison? FJR was SERIOUSLY both cheaper to buy and to maintain. However, it's hard to put a price on being able to continue to ride. I reached a point where the FJR just wasn't working. Every trip over an hour left me with a stiff neck: the riding position just wasn't comfortable for me. Riding should be a joy, not an endurance contest.
I just completed a 6k ride this summer on the Honda and what a blast it was.
I almost got to meet three people along the way:
--a cement truck driver who really wanted to be in my lane in Johnson City, Tenn,
--a confused driver who didn't know what lane he wanted to be in... in downtown Chicago one rainy night in July,
--and a local driver who hit his brakes to make a turn in front of me just as I was looking off to my left: only took a couple seconds: my fault. However, I didn't actually meet any of these drivers thanks to the fact that the Lord was once again looking after me and as the old saying goes, it just wasn't my time. Seems like I'm having close calls all too often, but I've never hit another vehicle on a motorcycle, thank God. So now I'm over on another forum, the GL1800 riders forum, and going by my same handle, garyahouse. I've been posting up a storm over there. Just happy to still be riding, and hey, even enjoyed reading this entire thread again just now. Forgot just how many amazing things happened to me on that 50cc ride just over 9 years ago now. And at 67, happy to still be able to ride.