I've always been fascinated by cars and driving. Luckily
I came of age when muscle cars ruled the roads. Back in the early 1970s, our
school parking lot was filled with fabulous cars – powerful Ford Mustangs, fast
Dodge Chargers and yacht-long Rivieras.
For me, the real thrill was sitting behind a skinny
steering wheel, my hand on a rumbling floor stick shift and then gunning a
powerful engine.
My dad taught me how to drive when I was 13 because I begged
him constantly about wanting to learn how to drive. I remember bucking down the
street in our old Ford, trying to ease the clutch while praying I wouldn't hit
any of the garbage cans on the side of the road.
When we'd take long road trips, I sat in the front seat
where my dad dispensed driving tips about how to judge distances, how to keep a
steady speed and how to safely pass another vehicle.
On the day I turned 15, the legal age to drive back then
in Louisiana, I was the first one in line at the driver's license bureau and
elated when I walked out with my license.
My parents let me have my dad's beat-up Pontiac Executive,
and I drove everywhere, including to school every day. The highlight of my
early driving days was when I learned to master the big curve near the
governor's mansion on Interstate 110 without tapping my brakes.
Everything was going well until three friends and I were
returning from a high school marching camp at LSU. A week in the Louisiana
summer sun had practically melted us, but we'd survived and were glad to be off
our feet, heading home in the Pontiac.
I still wasn't good at reading freeway signs, and instead
of taking the exit to north Baton Rouge, I accidentally took the exit for the
old Mississippi River Bridge, the one obstacle I said I'd never tackle.
Built in the 1940s, the structure was steep with narrow
lanes and no shoulder. For someone who'd never driven over a bridge, the
prospect of driving over the overpass was terrifying.
My friends were screaming as we headed for the old
bridge, and I broke out in a cold sweat. I gripped the steering wheel, my heart
pounding, and we slowly ascended the monster.
I held my breath going up and exhaled at the top. But
then I realized – not only did I have to go over the bridge, I had to come
right back over it to get back on the right road.
Somehow we managed to do both safely, and I've avoided
that bridge for years. I'd sit in bumper-to-bumper traffic for an hour on the
new bridge just to avoid having to drive on those narrow lanes way above the
Mississippi River.
Recently, I needed to drive over the old bridge to go to
my sister's house. Approaching the bridge, I tried to calm my beating heart by
telling myself that terrifying trip was over 40 years ago, and I've driven over
hundreds of bridges since that hot summer.
Approaching the giant orange monster, my stomach
tightened up and I gripped the steering wheel.
Just like I did so many years ago, I held my breath on
the way up and breathed a sigh of relief and triumph when I crossed over into
West Baton Rouge Parish.
Conquering fears isn't easy. Sometimes all it takes is
holding our breath and taking a step. Or in my case, a trip over the river.
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