the setting: the van
the event: an unplanned trip to the pediatrician
the time: midday
Our story begins when a sweaty, tired woman goes to the school in said sweaty clothes to pick up her sick son. This woman is no fashion plate in these exercise clothes and would not even get rave reviews from the pigsty in the smelly shorts and lizard t-shirt she is wearing but the nurse said her kid was having trouble breathing and he was coughing all morning. Fashion isn't the issue when your kid is having problems.
Flying down to the school in a light drip drop of rain to pick up said boy and bring him home to get an appointment since the doc won't take walk-ins under ANY circumstances, I call the office and explain the circumstances for seeking an audience with a health practioner. By the time we pulled into the driveway, the audience is granted and we are lucky enough to get the 1:30 p.m. slot in Huntsville for TODAY.
Dashing hubby comes home long enough to transfer to the bed, change the soggy rotten teenager and transfer him back to the chair for the ride over to Huntsville.
This is the part of the story where you need both popcorn and a drink.
We leave the driveway. Hmmm. Is that water on the windshield? Must be condensation since the meteorologists didn't say anything I recall about us having rain today.
Moments later, I notice a few raindrops forming into little lakes on the windshield. It's just sprinkling. Like a leaky pigeon.
By the time we are out on Highway 72 nearly to the I-65 turnoff to Huntsville, it comes a pretty healthy shower. Crap. This is not good.
Traffic is heavy with semi trucks and loaded trailers all going about 75 miles an hour with lesser vehicles just hoping to share a portion of THEIR road with them. I merge into traffic.
This merge is more blind faith and trust with a little pixie dust thrown in than actual clarity of sight since the windshield wipers on the van do not work. Nope. Not one blade even twitches when I test out the switch to see if maybe today a wiping miracle will occur.
Nothing happens. Nothing.
Due to the rivulets of water cascading down the windshield, there is only one alternative with a sick kid. I have to roll down the windows. Lovely…in that way that I mean "NOT"! The driver's side window is down all the way so I can be fully pelted by the rain instead of just enjoying a sudden deluge. It is also down so I can make the attempt to bypass viewing the highway through the windshield so I can see the white stripes on the road and allegedly keep to my own lane in an attempt to prevent the van from becoming an attractive hood ornament for a Peterbilt.
Have you ever driven a car 70 miles an hour with semi trucks on all sides and you lack front window visibility? I have. It's more of an adrenalin rush than anything you can possibly come up with. You simply can't top this one. Theme parks and reality TV have nothing on this experience. And if you are constipated, you won't be for long with this little scenario moving things right along.
I have had proximity induced semi truck-phobia ever since I was laid up in a wreck with one about 16 years ago. The proximity of the truck back then made me jittery now anytime those big rigs get a pinch too close. Frustratingly, they never have found the jackass that did the deed either. Some foreign driver with no legitimate paperwork. Gotta love "illegal immigrants". Buttheads.
So there I am, my precious cargo in imminent peril as I attempt to keep from becoming a ping pong ball between the flatbeds on the trailers on the way to see his doctor.
With me so far…? Good. This is just beginning to get good.
People who drive the highways and byways of our interstate system are a wonderful bunch. They will cut you off with less than 6 inches of clearance as they cross ALL THREE LANES to get to the exit they were in too much of a hurry to plan ahead to meet.
Yeah.
In the rain.
With NO visibility.
And my ailing son in the van with me.
Zero fun.
I knew this would happen.
When the wipers on the 1994 Dodge van gave up the ghost, I knew there would be some reason I'd have to drive the van some distance in a driving rainstorm.
The best part is that the rain stopped when we got to the doc's office. And promptly started right back up when we were leaving.
I am beyond 'white-knuckled' on this ride.
I think my entire body is pale. Okay, fair enough. Paler than USUAL.
And I'm reasonably sure that if I'd had any pee left that hadn't already been scared out of me by the close order drill ordeal with the semi's I would have peed my pants.
As it is, I feel like I have run a marathon, won the Superbowl and flown to the moon and back all in one shot. I'm not built for this kind of labor.
Pray for sunny days and rainy nights. It's the only way I'll live through the continued demise of the van.
I'm reasonably sure that the day is not far off where I'll be scooting along the pavement on my fanny leaving remnants of me and the van on the road behind me as it finally decides to deconstruct on the molecular level.
When that day comes, don't be surprised to find me laughing hysterically on the side of the road while a stranger blots my skinned up butt with some used Hardee's napkins from the
floorboard of their pickup truck until the paramedics arrive.
Just another day in paradise.
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