Well, it's been almost a month now. All the jitters are worked out and am more longer nervous when going for a ride. I feel so comfortable when riding now. I am actually going to be buying a new bike next weekend with the comfort features I was wanting(floor boards, hell toe shifter, highway pegs, etc). Getting a newer vulcan 900 with a belt drive so less maintenance and EFI as well. It has a nice mustang seat and luggage rack. This brings me to the next question.
I was doing some visits today on the bike and needed to bring 3 keyboards to one of the customers sites. I found I needed to wear a backpack in order to properly transport them. How do you load hardware on the bike when making visits?
Also been riding with a black snowmobile helmet for now and want to do something different. Do you wear a helmet or not and reasoning for your choice either way?
Good to hear things are going well, and your confidence is building up. Don't get cocky, don't get lax in your senses...it's important not to let your guard down, don't get too comfortable. Once you start dropping your guard and your defenses...that's when something will get you. Keep working on your "360 degree radar" and being aware of every single thing that starts to come towards you. Especially at intersections, stop lights, stop signs. Be aware of who is behind you...especially as you approach stoplights/stop signs. Quick darts with your eyes to the rear views...and pumping that brake so your rear brake light is flashing and more visible to cars coming up behind you.
Matter of fact, on your new bike...get LED rear lights and all 4 turn sigs. BAL (Bright A$$ Lights) makes the best..but they're pricey. ~300 bucks for the rear brake light. But isn't 300 bucks worth a little more assurance that you will be seen and not rear ended at a stop?
Congrats on the new bike BTW. Mustang seats are the best for comfort.
To carry gear, I didn't use a back pack...I had 2x saddlebags (see my older black bike)...and I had a luggage rack over the rear fender. I had a few bungie cords that I would strap on my laptop bag or other laptop bags I used for carrying stuff, if they didn't fit in my saddle bags. I basically rode on days where I didn't have something scheduled that required me to carry gear. Such as a couple of days a week I work at clients offices where all I need is my laptop, and I have large hardware they order drop shipped to their office. If I was stuck and needed something big from the office that I couldn't take on the bike, I'd have someone drop it off.

Only once did I need my truck...so I rode home and swapped the bike for the truck. My house is only 12 minutes from my office. I think that only happened twice in the past 5 years...so the benefits of taking my bike for work faaaaaaar outweighed the couple of times it was inconvenient.
I'm still shopping for saddlebags for my new bike (the old blue Shovelhead FLHS in above pic) Right now the bike is in my garage about 3/4 put together. Last week I took the seat, tanks, exhaust, and engine out...to put in new head gaskets and rocker box cover gaskets and a few other things. Should be back together by next week. The bike came with hard bags...but I want the old style floppy leather ones like I had on my black bike. I'll find some, I'm patient. Also looking for a Mustang Wide Touring seat for it...and a new true dual exhaust system, and some floorboards, and...and...and (I have quite a long list of improvements to do). All in due time. One at a time, I'll get there.
Helmet...I dunno what snowmobile helmets have for standards, or what your state has for law. Some states require a "DOT" certified helmet...has to have the sticker on the back, else you get a ticket. I imagine the snowmobile helmet is better than nothing. But just check out your states law, save yourself from a possible ticket. As for me, I'm ashamed to say I wear nothing. I'm a freaking idiot.