Don't Make Any Left Turns
This
is a wonderful piece by Michael Gartner, editor of newspapers large and
small, and president of NBC News. In 1997, he won the Pulitzer
Prize for
editorial writing. The following is well worth reading. And
a few good laughs are guaranteed.
*****
My father never drove a car. Well,
that's not quite right. I should say I never saw him drive a car.
He quit driving in 1927, when he was 25 years old, and the last
car he drove was a 1926 Whippet.
"In
those days," he told me when he was in his 90s, "to drive a car you had
to do things with your hands, and do things with your feet, and look
every which way, and I decided you could walk through life and enjoy it
or drive through life and miss it."
At which point my mother, a sometimes
salty Irishwoman, chimed in:
"Oh, bull----!" she said. "He hit a
horse."
"Well," my father said, "there was
that, too."
So my brother and I grew up in a
household without a car. The neighbors all had cars. The
Kollingses next door had a green 1941 Dodge, the VanLaninghams across
the street a gray 1936 Plymouth, the Hopsons two doors down a black
1941 Ford -- but we had none.
My father, a newspaperman in Des
Moines, would take the streetcar to work and, often as not, walk the 3
miles
home. If he took the streetcar home, my mother and brother and I
would
walk the three blocks to the streetcar stop, meet him and walk home
together.
My
brother, David, was born in 1935, and I was born in 1938, and
sometimes, at dinner, we'd ask how come all the neighbors had cars but
we had none. "No one in the family drives," my mother would
explain, and that was that. But, sometimes, my father would say,
"But as soon as one of you boys turns 16, we'll get one."
It was as if he wasn't sure which one
of us would turn 16 first.
But,
sure enough, my brother turned 16 before I did, so in 1951 my parents
bought a used 1950 Chevrolet from a friend who ran the parts department
at a Chevy dealership downtown. It was a four-door,
white model, stick shift, fender skirts, loaded with everything, and,
since my parents didn't drive, it more or less became my brother's car.
Having a car but not being able to
drive didn't bother my father, but it didn't make sense to my mother.
So
in 1952, when she was 43 years old, she asked a friend to teach her to
drive. She learned in a nearby cemetery, the place where I learned to
drive the following year and where, and a generation later, I took my
two sons to practice driving.
The cemetery probably was my father's
idea.
"Who can your mother hurt in the
cemetery?" I remember him saying once.
For the next 45 years or so, until she
was 90, my mother was the driver in the family. Neither
she nor my father had any sense of direction, but he loaded up on maps
-- though they seldom left the city limits -- and appointed himself
navigator. It seemed to work.
Still, they both continued to walk a
lot. My
mother was a devout Catholic, and my father an equally devout agnostic,
an arrangement that didn't seem to bother either of them through their
75 years of marriage. (Yes, 75 years, and they were deeply in
love the entire time.)
He
retired when he was 70, and nearly every morning for the next 20 years
or so, he would walk with her the mile to St. Augustin's Church.
She
would walk down and sit in the front pew, and he would wait in the back
until he saw which of the parish's two priests was on duty that morning.
If
it was the pastor, my father then would go out and take a 2-mile walk,
meeting my mother at the end of the service and walking her home.
If it was the assistant pastor, he'd take just a 1-mile walk and
then head back to the church. He called the priests "Father Fast"
and "Father Slow."
After
he retired, my father almost always accompanied my mother whenever she
drove anywhere, even if he had no reason to go along. If
she were going to the beauty parlor, he'd sit in the car and read, or
go take a stroll or, if it was summer, have her keep the engine running
so he could listen to the Cubs game on the radio.
In the evening, then, when I'd stop by,
he'd explain: "The Cubs lost again. The millionaire on second
base made a bad throw to the millionaire on first base, so the
multimillionaire on third base scored."
If she were going to the grocery store,
he would go along to carry the bags out -- and to make sure she loaded
up on ice cream.
As
I said, he was always the navigator, and once, when he was 95 and she
was 88 and still driving, he said to me, "Do you want to know the
secret of a long life?"
"I guess so," I said, knowing it
probably would be something bizarre.
"No left turns," he said.
"What?" I asked.
"No
left turns," he repeated. "Several years ago, your mother and I read an
article that said most accidents that old people are in happen when
they turn left in front of oncoming traffic. 'As you get older, your
eyesight worsens, and you can lose your depth perception,' it said. So
your mother and I decided never again to make a left turn."
"What?" I said again.
"No left turns," he said. "Think
about it. Three rights are the same as a left, and that's a lot
safer. So we always make three rights."
"You're kidding!" I said, and I
turned to my mother for support.
"No," she said, "your father is right.
We make three rights. It works." But then she added:
"Except when your father loses count."
I was driving at the time, and I almost
drove off the road as I started laughing. "Loses count?" I
asked. "Yes," my father admitted, "that sometimes happens. But
it's not a problem. You just make seven rights, and you're okay
again."
I couldn't resist. "Do you ever
go for 11?" I asked.
"No," he said. "If we miss it at
seven, we just come home and call it a bad day. Besides, nothing
in life is so important it can't be put off another day or another
week."
My mother was never in an accident, but
one evening she handed me her car keys and said she had decided to quit
driving. That was in 1999, when she was 90. She lived four
more years, until 2003. My father died the next year, at 102.
They both died in the bungalow they had moved into in 1937 and
bought a few years later for $3,000. (Sixty years later, my
brother and I paid $8,000 to have a shower put in the tiny bathroom --
the house had never had one. My father would have died then and
there if he knew the shower cost nearly three times what he paid for
the house.)
He
continued to walk daily -- he had me get him a treadmill when he was
101 because he was afraid he'd fall on the icy sidewalks but wanted to
keep exercising -- and he was of sound mind and sound body until the
moment he died.
One
September afternoon in 2004, he and my son went with me when I had to
give a talk in a neighboring town, and it was clear to all three of us
that he was wearing out, though we had the usual wide-ranging
conversation about politics and newspapers and things in the news.
A few weeks earlier, he had told my son, "You know, Mike, the
first hundred years are a lot easier than the second hundred. "At
one point in our drive that Saturday, he said, "You know, I'm probably
not going to live much longer."
"You're probably right," I said.
"Why would you say that?", he
countered, somewhat irritated.
"Because you're 102 years old," I said.
"Yes," he said, "you're right."
He stayed in bed all the next day.
That night, I suggested to my son and
daughter that we sit up with him through the night. He
appreciated it, he said, though at one point, apparently seeing us look
gloomy, he said: "I would like to make an announcement. No one in
this room is dead yet."
An hour or so later, he spoke his last
words:
"I want you to know," he said, clearly
and lucidly, "that I am in no pain. I am very comfortable.
And I have had as happy a life as anyone on this earth could ever
have." A short time later, he died.
I miss him a lot, and I think about him
a lot. I've wondered now and then how it was that my family and I
were so lucky that he lived so long.
I can't figure out if it was because he
walked through life
Or because he quit taking left turns.
Contributed
by
Jeannie Lovell
Defining
Moments
Archives
Copyright
© 2007, Jace Carlton. All International Rights Reserved.
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