“Riding Along in My Automobile"
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We Americans
are so tethered to our cars. It’s as though there is an umbilical cord between
our brains and the ignition switch.
When I first
moved to Mexico, driving my vehicle stuffed to the roof with bare essentials, I
lived in the fair-sized city of Mazatlan. In the first six months, I drove my
van exactly one time. Public transportation in most of Mexico is good, easy,
and inexpensive.
I was there on
a six-month tourist visa so my trust van and I had to exit Mexico. On returning
to Mazatlan, I patted my sweet long-time companion, shed a micro-tear, and left
her in the care of a friend. Over the next six months, with our umbilical cord
stretched the limit, I did some figuring.
It simply
didn’t make sense on my extremely limited income (Ah, dumb decisions of my
past!) to maintain a motor vehicle. So I arranged for a friend to take her, and
she is still chugging merrily along. I have visitation rights. It was a good
decision and I’ve no regrets.
When I moved
from Mazatlan to Etzatlan, a pueblo, not a city, I found public transportation
to be not so easy or diverse, yet adequate for my needs and wants.
Back in
April, a year ago, my Montana Driver’s License expired. Due to surgery plus
Covid, travel was out of the question. I’d already renewed online the one time
allowed. There was not a thing I could do but watch my license expire. May it
rest in peace. I would just have to take the whole test again whenever I
returned. I felt my long-severed umbilical cord twang.
Oh, the
uncounted hours, lying awake in the small hours of night, terrified of taking a
driving test. Silly waste of my time. I’ve been licensed to drive in Montana,
Utah, Oregon, Illinois, and Washington, all in the days before reciprocal
licensing agreements. I know how to take a test!
Additional night
worries included, how could I rent a car? Should I even bother with a license;
after all, I don’t own a car? What if a friend needed me to drive-share? None
of those worries were yet applicable. But I worried them none-the-less.
Then the
memories clicked in, memories of road trips throughout the northwest and into
Canada. Memories with friends and memories of solitary trips. Memories of the
times I veered off onto a side road simply to see where the road took me. What!
No more road trips?
No more inspiration
from Chuck Berry? No more “riding along in my automobile”. No more “cruising
and playing the radio, with no particular place to go.”
Remember,
during this year plus change of being without a license, I’ve not had the urge
or need to get into a car and drive anywhere. That didn’t stop my head from
making up dire stories in the middle of the night.
When a
solution to my quandary walked around the corner, I immediately said “Yes, take
me along.”
Michelle had
arranged for our friend and gardener, Leo, to accompany her to the office in
Ahualulco to apply for a license. Without hesitation, I jumped into the back
seat, a clutch of paperwork in hand.
We arrived
at 8:15 and were second in line waiting for the office door to open at 9:00. We
were unaware of a back door, but no matter. At 9:15 we who were waiting were yet
another form to fill out. We waited. Talked. Everybody in line was masked and
respectful.
Once we were
called into the office, we found the procedure to be quite similar to anywhere
in the US. Paperwork, copies, signatures, photos, fingerprints. After a short
wait in the inner courtyard, walking, stretching our legs, at nearly 11: 00, our
brand-shiny new licenses were printed and handed to us.
I nearly
cried, my photo looked so good, well, un-criminal-like. My first thought was
that I can now rent a car when I need one. I can drive wherever the urge takes
me. I’m not dependent on public transportation in places there is none. I won’t
need to rely on the good graces of friends and family. Woo-hoo! I can drive
again.
We are a
very small community here. By evening I had heard that Leo had told the few of
us remaining that I now had my Mexican Driver’s License. He went on to
speculate that now that I am vaccinated and have my License, perhaps next week,
I might be talked into buying a car.
Leo
obviously thinks in terms of “Driving Miss Daisy”. With himself as chauffer, he
thinks we will explore all of Mexico. I’m not the only one who makes up
stories!
Sondra
Ashton
HDN: Looking
out my back door
May 13, 2021
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