drewboid ... you may be onto something there. I took up some of the slack and it seemed to shift much smoother.
I just had the entire transmission rebuilt in March, so up until now, all was just like new. My mechanic advised me to keep an eye on my clutch cable and to make sure I take up the slack, or let some out ... I'm not sure ... but always to keep it tensed, but with a few millimeters of "play in the clutch handle" ... to make sure when it's released it's completely "closed" ...
If I understand the clutch well, when we pull the handle toward us, it pushes a rod that separates 2 plates that when released, clamp down on something and make it all spin (or something like that). I guess that when the cable is too loose (or a bit loose then heated up to make it expand and gain a bit of length) then those plates don't separate as much as they should and something keeps spinning inside and doesn't let us change the gears ... I think.
I got spooked by my mechanic telling me to "Make sure you keep it tensed to where it's just right or you'll burn up the new clutch in no time" ... So maybe I'm a bit wary of adjusting the cable ... being that I'm not quite sure exactly what I'm adjusting ... This is my first and only bike (I've had it for 10 years now) and my previous "ride" (for 15 years) was a '70 Chevy Chevelle Malibu convertible with an automatic transmission ... same idea, different machine...

) ...
... any tips or comments on all that?