No more driving Miss Katie
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SHERWOOD KIRALY
Katie is 15 now, and taking a driver’s ed course which Mr. Roche
teaches on Wednesday nights.
Lately she’s been learning stuff like who backs up if you meet
another car on a one-lane hill (the driver coming downhill backs up,
in case you’ve been doing it wrong), but at the last session she’s
going to see “Blood on the Pavement” or “Streets of Gore” or “Road
Kill” or whatever they’re calling the movie they use now to scare the
bejabbers out of the students before they hit the road.
So Katie will be driving soon. For parents, this is the separation
which precedes the big separation.
Up till now, Katie has been chauffeured by either Patti Jo or me.
In the car we talk, unless one of us is freezing the other one out.
We sing. We communicate, an activity we tend to neglect at home.
There’s been a lot of hauling, to school and stores and riding
stables and movies and friends’ houses. This is sometimes boring or
inconvenient. But a father hasn’t lived until he’s driven four or
five girls around while they sing “Weird Al” Yankovic. It doesn’t get
much more carefree than that.
I’m just about out of the picture now, though. Soon, when we’re in
the car, I’ll be in the passenger seat, acting calm. And then she’ll
be driving off by herself, which means that if she’s a minute late
getting home I’ll be standing out in the driveway staring down the
street. They have to put 30,000 miles on the odometer before you can
relax a little.
By then they’re usually living elsewhere, and you’re fresh out of
kids.
That’s when you need to go to the emotional memory bank and
withdraw all that aggravating juvenile behavior you stockpiled so you
wouldn’t miss them so much.
Like, when Keaton started driving my car he would change the radio
station, the seat position and even the angle on the steering wheel,
which enraged me because I didn’t know how to change it back. It
helped a little to remember that, when he left.
When Katie was a baby she would occasionally launch into a crying
jag, from sickness or infant angst, and the only sure way to stop the
crying was to put her in the car and take her for a ride. Once we
took her to Seattle.
When she was about eight she used to kick the back of the driver’s
seat out of boredom. I told her to cut it out and she did.
Beyond that, I have little in the bank. The truth is I liked
driving her around. Now she knows more rules of the road than I do,
and soon she’ll pull out of the driveway and disappear down the
street. No matter how fast she drives, it won’t be as fast as she
grew up.
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