Take the Ride

My brain is right back in high school, sitting cross-legged on a chair at a desk where my open textbook lies. Except this time, it’s six years later, and my classroom is in a small town airport. My textbook? The Washington State Motorcycle Safety Manual.

Owning a motorcycle was something I wanted to do at seventeen years old—at least, I thought I wanted to do. Before then, I had never been a particularly risky person, until the eighteenth birthday I spent jumping out of an airplane. For me, a motorcycle just seems like a good way to get around. A really cool way to get around, but also a really dangerous way to get around. At seventeen, I quickly realized I wasn’t mentally or even physically prepared for that kind of responsibility. I pushed my dream into the pipe and let it rest.

I kept my reckless, two-wheeled ideas tucked away for a few years while I moved around and went to school. Well on my way to my twenty-fifth birthday, I moved back to my parents’ house near Seattle and quickly found myself in a quarter-life crisis. My job—an unpredictable life of freelance and fashion—was not satisfying me in the ways I had grown used to in Minneapolis. A big part of that was feeling trapped in a small town far outside the city. I had my mother’s car to borrow whenever I wanted, but with three people sharing it, “whenever I want” became “whenever it’s available.”

Not as often as a girl who goes out for coffee every two hours would like.

Soon after moving, I became a pretty dedicated lurker of the Instagram biker chick community—girls who wore more patched denim than flame-embossed leather, and rode little retro café racers instead of couch-sized Harleys. Girls who looked just like me in their leather jackets and Vans and skinny, ripped-up ankle jeans. Girls that gave me an ear to listen to the seventeen-year-old voice inside me: you can do that too. You can be that girl and find that road and feel that freedom.

I’m not sure why I never thought to take a riding skills class, but part of me assumed operating a motorcycle would be quite literally as easy as riding a bicycle. Coming from someone who has never operated anything with a clutch, my assumption was ridiculous, but who expects you to know details about a pipe dream? After finding a beginner’s class right in my county and an open weekend, I paid the surprisingly affordable class fee and started to get hyped. Google had given me a way. All it took was a "how to ride a motorcycle" search and I was on my way.

The thing I’ve heard most from my friends and family is that motorcycling is very dangerous. I answer with zero sarcasm: guess what? I know. It’s just about the riskiest way to get around on the road, but one thing a lot of the world has found is that it’s worth it. I’m a 25-year-old girl diving headfirst in a male-dominated industry (this, in itself, is a story for another day), and I want to find out too.

And I will, the next day in class, when we have our first range session, and I find myself seated on a very low-power 125cc Kawasaki Eliminator—massive and dramatically unfamiliar to me—all geared up and expected to go.

Home Sweet Hotel: The Hotel Ivy

I was more excited to stay at The Hotel Ivy than I've ever been to stay at any hotel ever. It has such a presence in the Twin Cities—it feels like the most elite of elite places, and before the opening of their beautiful new bar, Constantine, it almost felt too exclusive to step inside. Which is silly, of course, especially considering one of my friends in Minneapolis lived in one of the adjacent condos. However, I finally got to experience some time in the lap of luxury myself a couple months ago when I was in town for an event. Four girls, two nights at the Ivy, and a ton of fun. 

Home Sweet Hotel: The Hotel Ivy | truelane
Home Sweet Hotel: The Hotel Ivy | truelane
Home Sweet Hotel: The Hotel Ivy | truelane
Home Sweet Hotel: The Hotel Ivy | truelane

The Hotel Ivy is dog-friendly, with a small fee, but some of the best freebies were the morning news and in-room Starbucks coffee. The concierge was more than welcoming as he checked us in at the front desk, and honestly, the thing that made me feel the best was when he asked which paper I'd like delivered in the morning. I must have looked like a Wall Street Journal person. Quite flattering.

Their website proclaims "you are assured that every aspect of your stay is flawlessly addressed," and that was definitely the case for me. We had to switch rooms upon arrival (we seemed to be missing a bed!), and it was resolved within ten minutes just a few floors down.  

Home Sweet Hotel: The Hotel Ivy | truelane
Home Sweet Hotel: The Hotel Ivy | truelane
Home Sweet Hotel: The Hotel Ivy | truelane
Home Sweet Hotel: The Hotel Ivy | truelane

From the sparingly elegant lobby decor to the tailored, upholstered headboards, no detail seems to have been missed at this five-star Minneapolis establishment. I can't tell you how many times I've strolled by on my way home from work or somewhere else and wished I had a reason to stay. Now that I finally have, it'll be hard to settle for anything less.

Thank you to The Hotel Ivy for hosting our stay.