I rode a Honda CBF 500 for my DAS course, but as a new GSA owner .......
Following on from my last episode of war and peace ......
The problem you've got (and take it in the spirit it's meant - just an observation and by no means meant to be critical ...

) is that you've not done an apprenticeship on a small bike.
If you start small, then you have a bike that is light, reasonably underpowered (Your CB500) and something that you can quickly master and ultimately learn to throw around. And more than that, you learn different ways to move it about. So like the chit chat about
push counter steering /
pull counter steering, on a light small bike, you can play and experiment. Weighting pegs? pushing the bike underneath you, keeping the bike up right but you the rider, getting weight inside the bike on a corner? Mucking about on full lock u turns? standing by the side of the bike, putting it in gear, left foot on the peg and driving off in a sort of push bike swing yer leg over once yer moving style .... ?? (and the opposite ... getting off the bike while it's still rolling ... ). Holding the bike stationary with yer feet up like a pushbike track stand ...? Riding a country lane and ABSOLUTELY THRASHING THE TITS OFF YOUR LITTLE BIKE IN EVERY FECKIN' GEAR ??

Some of these things are utterly pointless and are just games, but other things really teach you stuff. Counter balancing; Tight u-turns that are full lock from stationary, and lots of body weight counterbalancing the lean of the bike? Clutchless gear changes? Blipping between each gear? keeping the revs on and doing a silky smooth sustained rev change whilst you take two or three gears to one clutch movement? Brakes then gears?? Brakes
and gears ??
It's all about becoming a natural,
you becoming part of the bike, and over a period of time becoming so unconscious competent with how you control it (and the choices you make in which little tool from your tool bag you're going to use ...) that you no longer think. You just do it. Then .....
Then ...... you take those skills up the next step of the ladder onto a Hayabusa, A K16, A 150bhp KTM 1190 ....
Many moons ago, I got properly in to mountain biking. My first mountain bike was a full suss £2k bike

(regular trips to Wales and all that ..). But I never had some of the sublime skills that one or two of my riding buddies had. And that's because, I never did an apprenticeship on a hard tail. I never learned to properly bunny hop, to float my bike over wet tree roots with little technical skills, lowered heels, weight right back ... Instead I got straight on a much more forgiving machine which meant I could get away with poor technique and just crash my way through stuff. But when I
did need it ... I didn't have it. I remember enviously looking at some of my mates and being jealous of their outstanding handling skills. Some rooty gnarly, drop offy, tree across pathy, get over ditchy .... he used to make it so easy .... What a bastard ... !
I often read on here people saying how the GS is an easy bike to ride. Actually, I don't think it is. To me, an easy bike
is your CB 500 ... 750 ... Fazer 1000 .... These are bikes that are smooth, light, easy to match engine revs, decent steering lock, low down smooth revs, both feet easily on the floor, very flickable; get a wrong line and you've only got to look in the right direction for them to change course in the blink of an eye ....
The GSA is tall, reasonably heavy, awkward on that wet roundabout in lumpy second or too high revs first, not the easiest bike to do seamless constant rev gear changes, (twin..) very planted (can be a good thing) but an oil tanker on a pre determined course! ..... so all things considered, you've jumped in at the deep end on to a heavy, vibey, lumpy 1200 twin.
Should you have done that ??

(yes! Of course you should - who are we to tell you how to enjoy yourself and what you may or may not buy - long live yer GSA and I'm sure you love it ..

)
So that's where you're at! New biker, on a reasonably difficult heavy bike, (not a hard bike, but not what I'd call an easy bike) with only a few months worth of experience under your belt.
What can you do about it and how can you accelerate your learning curve?? Mneh

You'll get there. Maybe do one of the skills courses, regularly go to a car park on an early Sunday morning and play?
Or .... or ..... You'll buy a little 350 off road bike .... and learn to ride on dirt! Then .... Ohhhh yes ...
Then your grasp of technical skills will simply soar ...
