Ya Gotta Laugh –
Carolyn
Yesterday
afternoon in the rain, George and I were driving sedately down the parking lot
aisle at Kroger’s, when a half ton pickup with a steel flatbed backed out of
his space—hard—and into my side of the Expedition. Hard. We weren’t hurt, thank
God, but the whole left side of my car is smushed in. Both doors and the back
quarter panel will have to be replaced. The guy was insured, not always the
case in these parts, and had a driver’s license and everything. The car got us
home in one piece, but they can’t begin to repair it until next Monday!
And on next
Wednesday George’s two sons, Kevin and Kendall, arrive for five days. The
prospect of feeding two giant (one is six six) young men, when I have been
feeding us out of the microwave division of the grocery store is daunting. I’ve
forgotten how to cook!
This is simply the
latest chapter in The Great Disaster Saga. And since survived disaster is
funny, in retrospect I suppose this is—or will be.
If not for the
rain, we would have been to be driving my mare, Zoe, with other carriages
through a charming ante-bellum town called La Grange that was having its annual
blessing of the animals. Good thing we didn’t go. Zoe doesn’t appreciate
raindrops falling on her head.
I wonder how the
Amish manage not to get themselves run over. I would no more dare to drive Zoe
and my carriage on the highway in front of my house than I would dare to pilot
the space station—do they pilot that thing anyway or just let it whirl? I can
just see us trundling along when an eighteen wheeler comes flying around the
corner doing fifty miles an hour. Assuming he didn’t hit us, Zoe would probably
levitate and overturn us both in the nearest ditch. On the road we carry a
‘slow traffic’ orange triangle attached to the back of us, but you have to be
fairly close to see the darn thing. By then it’s too late. Let’s face it, my
Expedition held up pretty well against the assault. It hit us on my side rather
than George’s. I’m glad of that. He might have been hurt.
And it didn’t give
a hoot whether somebody clipped it or not. It looks awful, but it’s not in
pain. If anybody hit Zoe, not only would she be hurt, but she’d be really
annoyed. And I’d turn into a homicidal lunatic.
So, I guess I’ll
spend the next couple of weeks driving my disreputable farm truck, and continue
to do my carriage driving off road where we’re safe at least from murderous
vehicles. Besides, driving through the autumn woods behind a horse is just
about heaven. I recommend it.
Hi Carolyn,
ReplyDeleteSo glad you are okay!
I'm so glad nobody was hurt, but I'd really like to go on one of those autumn-woods rides.
ReplyDeleteCarolyn, It's good you can sort of joke about it. Glad the guy was insured. And my niece lives in Missouri near an Amish community. The roads are two lane and when the carriages are on them, cars just slow down and fall in behind them. On one of my visits was over an Amish harvest festival in town. There were lines of carriages coming and going. I found it fascinating, and so many were being driven by women, because the men were in the fruit and veggie stalls selling the wares. But women sold quilts and other hand crafts. The horses were all well cared for.
ReplyDeleteCarolyn - Bless you for maintaining a sense of humor! I can't imagine how scary that must have been. Thank heavens neither of you was hurt. I'd say you can still feed those young men out of the refrigerated case at the grocery store. I'm the pre-prepared foods ace! ( Jen - stop reading this. ) The lasagna in the family size is wonderful, as áre the chicken enchiladas and other pasta dishes. Order a pizza. Make a salad. They're looking forward to seeing you and George, not expecting to be fed by Mario Batali. And I want to go on that carriage ride in the woods, too!
ReplyDeleteGosh, Carolyn! Glad you're okay! And good luck with all the cooking :).
ReplyDelete