Monday, February 9, 2015

My Favorite Transportation by Ricky


(Planes, Trains, Automobiles & Buses, without John Candy)

Preface:  I wrote and submitted this piece to the SAGE Telling Your Story group, while visiting my brother and sister at South Lake Tahoe (SLT), California.  My brother had been diagnosed with an aggressive form of prostate cancer and had driven from his home in Oregon back to SLT to visit our sister.  While there he became so ill that he could not return to Oregon so I also stayed throughout the summer until his end.

          I spent most of my teenage years either being driven or, when I reached 16, driving myself in either my or my family’s car.  Once each year during Christmas school vacation, however, I got to ride Greyhound buses to and from my father’s home in Torrance, California (a suburb of the Los Angeles metro area) so he could have his one-week visitation rights.  Those trips occurred from my age of 10 through 18 when I left home for college.

          Whenever I had to catch the transfer bus in Carson City, Nevada, I always dreaded the 5 to 6 hour wait until I discovered the Nevada State Museum.  Eventually as the years passed, I managed to see all the exhibits (and I even started reading the signs telling about the stuffed animal dioramas).  I learned a lot about “things” during those years from visiting the museum.  My favorite exhibits were right at the entrance; the history of and silver service from the USS Nevada battleship, ultimately used during the hydrogen bomb test at the Bikini Atoll in the South Pacific.  It had various animals on it to represent human crewmen.  My other favorites were the displayed collection of Silver Dollars and Gold Coins minted in the Carson City Mint and at the official exit in the basement, the mock-up of an underground silver mine.

          Whenever I had to catch the transfer bus in Sacramento, California, I was usually involved in reading a book specially purchased for the trip.  Once, when I was 16 a slightly overweight girl my age sat by me for the whole trip.  She was going home to Venice (another suburb of Los Angeles) and very talkative and all I wanted to do was read but, since I am often too polite for my preferences, I talked with her until she got sleepy and then I read.  Once close to Los Angeles “we” decided that I would pick her up for a date in two days.  My dad loaned me his car and we went to Pacific Ocean Park (sort of a carnival with rides built on a pier over the ocean at Venice).  We had fun there.  I took her home and walked her to the door but we did not kiss and I never saw her again.

          After the above mini-stories, you might think that Greyhound was my favorite mode of transportation.  While buses played a major and positive part in my youth, my recent 24-hour bus ride from Denver to Reno definitely removed any “romantic” attachment buses had as a result of my youthful memories, so it is not my favorite.

          From age 10 thru 17; I was probably the happiest when riding with my dad during his 30-days each summer visitation time.  He would pick me up at Lake Tahoe and we would then travel to Minnesota, Iowa, and points in between during the days the interstate highway system was just beginning to be constructed.  One year on our way to Minnesota, we went to Mt. Rushmore first and traveled on a portion of I-90 in Rapid City, South Dakota.  I had my learner’s permit then, so I was driving at that point.

          On one of those cross-country trips I learned something about sleep and dreams.  On one very warm (no auto air conditioner) day, I was dozing or perhaps actually sleeping.  I was actively dreaming about being in a WW1 trench with other soldiers.  Apparently, I was the commander because I began to give my men a “going-over-the-top” pre-attack motivational speech.  During the speech I started to sing and everyone joined in.  We were singing “San Antonio Rose”.   After a couple of choruses, there was an artillery blast that roused me a bit and I felt my dad shaking my leg and heard him tell me to wake up.  As I woke, I heard “San Antonio Rose” playing on the car radio.  So it is possible to hear the real world while dreaming and incorporate it into the dream world.  This is not unlike dreaming of using the bathroom and waking up to find out you have either wet the bed or are about to, if you don’t hurry. 

The artillery blast turned out to be the result of a large goose that did not move out of the car’s way in time and had hit the windshield in front of me.  Unfortunately, the goose’s neck and head got stuck between the windshield and the exterior “visor” overhanging the windshield on that model of car (possibly a ’55 Studebaker).  Dad made me go pull it out so we could continue.  Yuck!!

While I have always enjoyed “road trips” because of my yearly travels with my father, it is not my favorite mode of transportation; most common, yes.

My first experience flying was just before I turned 8.  My parents had decided to send me to live with my mother’s parents on a farm in Minnesota while they obtained a divorce.  I didn’t learn about the divorce until age 9 ½.  Since that time, I’ve flown a lot on personal, union, and military business.  Once on the way back from visiting my father in Los Angeles, the plane I was on almost was involved in a mid-air collision.  That particular experience of violent turning and climbing and turning again put a solid fear of flying into my conscious and subconscious.  So, now days I’m am always tense while flying.  As you should expect by now, flying is not my favorite mode of traveling either.

At age 13, my parents decided to take a late summer vacation to the farm in Minnesota.  So, after packing us all roast buffalo sandwiches for the trip, we left Reno for Des Moines, Iowa where we needed to change to a northbound train.  When we reached Ogden from Reno, the train was to be stopped for 20-minutes.  My parents went to get coffee and left me with my 2 ½ year old twin brother and sister on the train.  About 10-minutes after they left, the train began to move and I went into major panic mode.  “Where are they?” “Are they leaving us, like mom did when they sent me to the farm when I was 8?” “How am I going to care for two babies?”  “Can I stop the train somehow?”  Those are the questions that started racing through my mind, repeatedly.  I don’t know why or how, but I didn’t cry.  I think I wanted to.

As it turned out all the railroad did was move the train to a different track a bit beyond where they had stopped originally.  About three minutes prior to the expiration of the 20-minute stop, my parents were back on the train with us.  Contrary to all the TV ads, “relief” is not spelled “Rolaids” it is spelled “let-me-give-you-both-lots-of-hugs-and-tears-of-joy.”

We returned from that vacation 1 ½ weeks after school started.  I was starting 8th grade.  My first day of school was Thursday.  My teacher, Mr. Ross, gave me my books and assigned me a desk.  Just before the final bell rang for the end of the day, he announced that there would be a test on the first 3 chapters in our social studies book the next day.  He told me just do the best I can.

I did some panic stricken cramming that night and the next morning and took the test.  On the Monday following, he was upset with the class because they had done so poorly on the test.  Then he did the unthinkable.  He told the class that I had only one night to prepare and they had nearly two weeks; then said that I had scored the highest in the class by a lot (like an 86 or something).  That statement fixed my reputation as a DAR (Darn Average Raiser) and my classmates were slow to become friendly and the reputation (much undeserved in my mind) continued through grade 12.  In college the real truth was revealed.

Train transportation is not fast in the west and central parts of the country, but it is very stress free and relaxing (unless you start school late).  Yet, it is still not my favorite mode of transportation.

My favorite method of transportation is books!  Reading books can transport one to places that cannot be reached by planes, trains, buses, or automobiles.  I love to lose myself (and problems) in a good stories contained in books.  Television and movies are often stories first told in books.  Books have the benefit of taking longer to finish and can easily be taken off the shelf and revisited.  Books contain adventures and knowledge without end.

The cliché states, “A picture is worth a thousand words.”  This submission to our storytelling group is 1579 words long.  So, you should have a decent image of me in your minds, in case you all have forgotten what I look like.  I will be back soon.

© 25 September 2011 

About the Author

 I was born in June of 1948 in Los Angeles, living first in Lawndale and then in Redondo Beach.  Just prior to turning 8 years old in 1956, I began living with my grandparents on their farm in Isanti County, Minnesota for two years during which time my parents divorced.

When united with my mother and stepfather two years later in 1958, I lived first at Emerald Bay and then at South Lake Tahoe, California, graduating from South Tahoe High School in 1966.  After three tours of duty with the Air Force, I moved to Denver, Colorado where I lived with my wife and four children until her passing away from complications of breast cancer four days after the 9-11 terrorist attack.

I came out as a gay man in the summer of 2010.   I find writing these memories to be therapeutic.

My story blog is, TheTahoeBoy.Blogspot.com.

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