Ride motorcycle
Sitting on the back of a motorcycle means the body takes everything in at once: the engine pulse under the seat, wind hitting the cheeks and the helmet hugging the head. The pictures below walk through it ahead of time.
♀Woman riding motorcycle
A woman wearing a helmet rides a red motorcycle.
About this visual support
A motorcycle ride is not a regular trip. The engine drums up through the seat, the wind whistles past the visor and the helmet wraps the head in a way no winter hat does. Add the exhaust sound and a cool stream of air along the legs, and you have a setting where the body takes in a lot of information at the same time, for the whole ride.
A picture sequence ahead of time lets the child meet each impression once in a calm setting before they all show up together. The visual schedule shows where the helmet sits, how to climb on behind, where to hold, what the engine sound means and what a stop looks like. When the head already knows what is coming, the vibration becomes a familiar signal rather than an alarm.
One specific tip: let the child sit on the parked motorcycle with the helmet on for two minutes before you start, so the body can get used to the helmet weight and the smell of fuel without engine noise. In the Routined app you can save the full pre-ride preparation as its own routine for next time.