If It Doesn’t Fit, It Gets Removed
A Record from Rebel’s Garage…
In Rebel’s garage, nothing is personal.
It’s mechanical.
If something rattles, it gets tightened.
If something drags, it gets adjusted.
If something interferes with performance, it gets removed.
No arguing.
No attachment.
No speeches.
Motorcycles, or, cars, anything with wheels to be correct,
don’t care how long something’s been there.
They care if it works.
If it has some form of use.
And, so does Rebel.
She lives for it.
Rebel Learned This With Wrenches in her hand, Not from Words out of mouths
It’s that Machines don’t lie.
They don’t:
- guilt you into keeping the broken parts
- promise they’ll improve later
- ask for more chances
- require emotional processing
If a part causes problems, you don’t negotiate with it.
You take it off.
Through it in the broken parts bucket,
move on to put the new in.
Mindset Isn’t Emotional — It’s Functional
Rebel doesn’t “reflect” when something isn’t working, no need to.
She simply knows already that in the garage,
if something is not working,
it needs to be replaced.
So, she observes:
- vibration
- resistance
- drag
- failure under load
If it interferes with movement, it’s not a mindset issue.
It’s a mechanical problem.
Knowing exactly this;
“If it fights the system, it doesn’t belong in it.”
What Doesn’t Survive in the Garage
Things that get removed quickly in the garage when marked useless:
- unnecessary weight
- parts that slow acceleration
- components that fail under pressure
- anything that compromises safety
- anything broken, that can’t be changed
No explanations.
No second chances.
No loyalty to some form of malfunction.
That logic didn’t stay in the garage.
Applying the Same Bad Breed garage Rules to Life
Rebel uses the same test everywhere else in life too.
People.
Habits.
Patterns.
Environments.
If it:
- disrupts any kind of flow
- creates instability of any form of mechanics
- drains the power source down
- compromises any form of normal function
It’s not “challenging.”
It’s misaligned.
And misaligned parts don’t get managed.
They get replaced.
With well working parts.
In life it should be the same in Rebels eyes.
For a full functioning life,
everything should work together and add to the story.
Not take away from a well operating machine.
Why This Sounds Harsh to Some People
Because they treat dysfunction like it’s some form of a personal relationship.
Rebel treats it like a mechanical fault.
It needs to be fixed,
broken parts need to replaced.
She doesn’t hate broken parts.
She just doesn’t ride with them installed.
“You don’t argue with what’s slowing you down. You fix it.”
There’s No Malice in Removal
Removal isn’t punishment.
It’s maintenance.
The bike doesn’t get angry when a bad part is swapped out.
It performs better.
And, if using the same philosophy towards life.
So does life.
The Garage Rule
If something doesn’t fit:
- the system rejects it
- the machine compensates until it fails
- or it gets removed intentionally
Rebel prefers the last option.
On The Record
If it doesn’t fit, it doesn’t stay.
Not because it’s bad.
Not because it’s wrong.
Not because it’s personal.
Because this machine is built to move.
And anything that interferes with that
has to go.
>>The Ride Is The Point : A Rebel Journal Entry<<<
>>>The Rebel Collection At The One Bad Maa Shop<<<
