It's interesting, I was going to reply on your own blog, but I can do it here.
Has riding change me? I'd say yes. My crash changed me, physically (may have to have some oral surgery soon), mentally and mature-wise. My new scooter has changed and challenged me, making me feel I have both come of age, and still know nothing. My love for riding and scootering has been renewed. I've become active in a local scooter group in philly, one that both deals with and challenges the PPA (Philadelphia Parking Authority), the same institution that had it's own reality TV show.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1182156/ The PPA has implemented parking corrals for scooters and M/Cs across the city, but a policy that has many flaws and advantages. I'm documenting and surveying all of the corrals in the city, with the hopes the information will affect policy changes and improvements.
My new scooter has expanded my riding horizons, allowing me to look at the possibility of going anywhere, from a trip to the Jersey Shore to possibly Canada. As a filmmaker I'm considering making a documentary on my rides. Last, riding is now part of my marriage. There was a lot of resistance from my wife when I first began riding about 5 years ago. She loves it now, often being the one to kick me in the butt with a request for a ride -- scooter therapy, as she calls it, just to get away from things. With a bigger scooter and more storage we're looking at longer day trips and places to visit.
In a span of three months since my crash I've gone from scooter commuter to traveler. From rider to activist. I'd say riding has changed me.
Change is good.
-Wolf