There is a lot going on with this bike, and there always has been. I’ve seen it in print, at some pretty big shows, and now I am sitting on it at Michael Barragan’s shop in Burbank, California. “Patience” is parked right next to a recently scored ’34 Ford Coupe. Barragan is in the middle of articulating what happened on Sept 19, 2009.
“So I’m doing like 35-40 mph, hand-shifting/foot-clutching, riding west on Riverside Dr. when I come rolling up to the intersection of Buena Vista St. The Disney Studios are on my left and so is the 134 freeway. I’m headed to Bob’s Big Boy and I’m working out the kinks on this customer’s bike…I lift off the throttle as I come into the intersection because there’s this car waiting to make a left…”
I’m checking out Patience as he relives the crash. He’s holding onto a Camel cigarette and a Bic lighter and he uses them to gesticulate how the bike and the car collided that day.
“She hit me so hard, all of her air bags deployed. I thought she was going to hit me so I was trying to jump over the car. I almost made it but my leg got caught on the handlebar right here.”
He’s pointing at Patience’s throttle and riser, motioning how his foot was trapped and where it broke his leg. I’m cringing as he relives it. You know, like when you see someone get kicked in the balls—that kind of a cringe. He continues…
“I ended up at County Hospital, no insurance. I didn’t want to look at my leg. This Korean lady called 9-1-1 as I was sitting there in shock thinking, ‘I can fix the bike. I can fix it.’ In 20 years of riding this is the first time I was ever hit. I was starting to get scared so I called my dad. Thank god for my dad.”
I feel bad because I interrupt Barragan. He’s so engrossed in the story when I remind him I met his father in Japan a few years back, and he proceeds telling me how his dad really took charge and genuinely handled this debacle for him.
“The bike was going to Artistry & Iron in Las Vegas before I was hit. It was a $20,000 purse and I figured I would just send the bike I entered, even though I got hit on it! So my dad took the bike to the show. People freaked out, I mean he even put pictures of the accident all over the display. It was gnarly…”
I press him to get back to the hospital and the coma.
“All I remember was the clean white room. Man it was white. I started to fade off and have crazy dreams and was in and out of coma for almost two weeks. I woke up and had no idea where I was. My dad was there, and he gently brought me back into reality and told me what happened. I was rocked man; I mean all I could think about were my kids. I just felt like god was telling me to slow down for a while, so many times, and I just didn’t listen. I felt like he was saying spend more time with my kids, my family, my business, and I just wasn’t listening. So he took this car and slammed it into me and yelled, ‘I said stop!’”
He’s looking at his cigarette at this point, thinking of lighting it when I ask about karma.
“Lets just say it took me almost dying to look at my relationship and really try at it again. The accident shocked me into the next series of trying with my girl. I really started to slow down. I started to work on my patience. So I get out of the hospital and I figure I’d give myself a week before I went back to the shop. When I did get back to the shop I was so uninspired. How am I gonna make a living? How am I gonna to get back to this…”