And then we kick out the jams
Jun. 15th, 2002 02:15 pmThe good news is that I can turn on my windshield wipers with the best of them.
The bad news is that it took longer to change the tire that I blew than it did to take the test.
I took the right turn onto Showers out of the DMV, cranked the wheel too far and smashed into the curb. Within 20 feet I had failed the test. I do not yet know which Saturday in July the DMV is open, but I'll make another appointment and try to fail less egregiously.
On the up side, Ellie came and saved me, and Jay and Silent Bob made me laugh a lot.
The bad news is that it took longer to change the tire that I blew than it did to take the test.
I took the right turn onto Showers out of the DMV, cranked the wheel too far and smashed into the curb. Within 20 feet I had failed the test. I do not yet know which Saturday in July the DMV is open, but I'll make another appointment and try to fail less egregiously.
On the up side, Ellie came and saved me, and Jay and Silent Bob made me laugh a lot.
HUGS!
Date: 2002-06-15 06:38 pm (UTC)I failed my very first driving test, too. The woman who gave me the test was brand new to the DMV, so she did everything By The Book, complete with stone face and monotone voice. Being one of those people who is inherently terrified of cars in general and driving in particular, it made for a traumatic experience.
In another burst of coincidence, I also failed the test within twenty or so feet of passing. The crime? I didn't excellerate fast enough when turning on to the street that would take me back to the DMV. It was not a main road or even a busy one, and there were no other cars present at the time, yet my failure to accelerate up to the 30MPH speed limit for the whole fifteen feet it took to reach the turn into the DMV lot was deemed a "dangerous action" for which I failed the test.
Two weeks later, I went back and passed with no trouble at all.
Cars scare the living SHIT out of me, they really do. I'll never love driving the way some of my friends do, it will always be a chore and something of a white-knuckle experience. Even so, I -can- do it ...
...and so can you. :-)