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As The Teenager Turns...

22.April.2005

There are few rites of passage in teenagedom as monumental as passing your drivers test and taking your first solo drive. Ah, the unbridled freedom! Playing your music so loud that your ears bleed, windows open, hair blowing in the wind. It’s a heady feeling. There are few rites of passage in parenthood as monumental as The Taking Away Of The Teenager’s License For Blatant Infraction.

Sadly, not a week had passed from the first passage to the second. I think she set a new land speed record for the loss of a driver’s license. What’s sad is that just before she left the house she’d asked me if I’d ever had a ticket.
    “Nope. Not one.”
    “Ever had an accident?”
    “Nope”
    “In all those years? Never?”
    “Not one and you can’t say the same thing about your father”
I added that last little bit simply so she would continue to believe that I was the superior driver in the family. It’s a female thing. Then she said something so touching, so sweet, so honeyed that I thought I’d need a big glass of milk to wash it down.
    “Then that’s my goal too. To be just like you and be a good driver.”
Uh huh. That should have been my first clue that something was up.

Then she left. With my vehicle. With instructions to go to the library and then come home.

Stephanie has what is called an Intermediate License. This means that she can drive a vehicle with other people in the car if they are members of her immediate family. We wouldn’t let her drive her cousins last week. We believe in obeying the law.

It appears we neglected to instill that whole ‘obey the law thing’ in our teenage mutant driver. Her father spied her as he was driving home from work and noticed that there was one, perhaps two other people in the vehicle with her. They were eating DQ Blizzards. One of them tried to crouch down and hide after our daughter recognized her father’s pick up truck beside her on the road.

When he informed me of what he’d seen I immediately dialed Stephanie’s cell phone.
    “Where are you?”
    “Fred Myers”
    “Who is with you?”
    “No one”
    “Uh huh. Your father says he saw someone in the van with you, who was it?”
    “Well, I have an orange construction cone in the back. He probably thought that was a person. I swear there isn’t anyone with me Mom!”
Riiiiight. A Blizzard eating construction cone with the flexibility to bend at the waist and hide from passerby’s. Who knew that construction cones were sentient beings?

I hung up with her and phoned three of the friends that my husband thought he saw. The first two had been home the entire time, with their mother’s corroborating testimony. The third teenage girl wasn’t as convincing and there was no mother to back up her story. She certainly didn’t sound like an orange construction cone to me, but it’s difficult to tell with teenagers these days.

When the offending daughter finally arrived home we sat her down and told her that we’d ask her one more time. Was there someone in the car with you?

Of course there wasn’t! It was the construction cone! She wouldn’t break the rules! How could we impugn her honor in such a fashion?

“I’m going to ask you one more time. And before you answer, consider whether or not you’d like to lose your license for a week or for a month. The choice is yours. “

They hate it when you’re all calm and reasonable. This is why I do it.

After an eternity filled with various facial expressions and mental contortions, she finally admitted the truth. The construction cone wasn’t eating an Oreo Blizzard. It was her friend Brittany. Now I can relax and not worry about inanimate objects suddenly springing to life and eating in my van.

I also don’t have to worry about losing my vehicle for the next week. She handed over her license to us and left the room in a huff. An Oreo Blizzard scented huff. Her father and I sat there for a moment in silence.

“You know, I’d probably have done the same thing at her age” whispered my husband. I agreed that I would also perhaps have done the same thing. We both giggled furiously, then put our parental game faces back on and went back to work.

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editor's note: due to stoopid people who can't behave in public (ie, spammers) we have had to turn off the comment feature on our older columns. We'll try waiting a while and then turning it back on to see if they get bored and go away. In the mean time, we will manually add any REAL comments if you email them to us. The link is below.


Yep. When my boy got his learner's permit. I got an old car, tied a logging chain to a huge stake in the ground, tied the other end to the passenger side door handle and told him to drive untill he wanted to go in the other direction. Not only did this method nearly produce a NASCAR contender, but it kept the insurance rates down until he was 23!
"hitch in mah giddalong" C
Horsepie City, NC USA -
Another good column! The more I read your work, the more I look forward to having my own kids... ...Look forward with fear and trepidation, that is...
Wayne Moore
Midwest, USA -
My parents were blessed to have such an obedient son... (of course, there were also the three older brothers to cause all the headaches!)
duckboy
San Jose, CA USA -
Pam, You haven't lived until you have two teenagers with learners permits at the same time. All the joy doubled. This brings back memories...I started to say fond?? Judy
Judy Watkins
Hillsboro, OR USA -
Oh Pam........I can just picture it. hahahahahhahaha!!! You are so good at putting on the parenting face! Now you know why I'm so paranoid about having 2 teen drivers this year and 2 more in 2 years!!! (I'll be keeping my eye on DQ!!!)
Margie
Massena, NY USA -
yo yo homey, been caught at the DQ wid yer "traffic cone" friend, yo daddy did see you. dat be such a good start, but to be in my gang you got to rob a bank if you is gonna hang but you be trippin, flippin, wiggin if "cones" eat at dairy bars keep it up, you'll be 30 before you can drive a car a petty misdemeanor will lead to a felony then you can be my homey in de penitentiary dey may be old but dey ain't dumb, deese parents you have got dey took away your licence cause dey loves you a lot If you was mine and you did pull a crazy stunt like dis You would be so grounded, you'd be 30 'fore youse kissed. yo!
rapmeister-C
The pen, NC USA -
Pam, You are officially OLD and no fun! ;-)
bri
New England, USA -
ROFLMBO!!! That was tooooo funny! You made me laugh right out loud, again, Pammy! Stories like that make me grateful my youngest is now 22. :-)
Libby
USA -
Bwahahaha!!! :-) Seriously, I don't know if I would have broken that law or not because I didn't get my driver's liscence until I turned 23... I didn't even get my first (yes, first...) permit until I turned 17. I was TERRIFIED of driving! :-) But at 23, they don't give you provisional liscences...
Jeri Lynn
Shoreline, WA USA -

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