Thursday, October 22, 2020

A Short Trip

Ready for town . . .
We lived 70 miles from the nearest city. Thus, a 'trip to town' was more of an event.
Inevitably, I got car sick. Not a pleasant thing for anyone stuck in the vehicle with me.
And, being four, I sometimes confused being excited with being sick.
Let me explain . . .
On the ranch, the most exciting thing our Dad could say was, “Everyone get in the car, we've got to go to the town!”
It was equivalent to being told we were going to Disneyland.
All right, I admit it, sophisticated world travelers, we weren't.
We would then pile into the car (And I do mean 'pile'. Seatbelts hadn't been invented yet.) and head up the gravel road towards the great white lights of Lethbridge. The trip took an hour and a half. Or more, when Diane was one of the passengers.
Invariably, at some point between the ranch and the first town, Milk River, a small voice would pipe up from the back seat, “I'm sick!”
The car would slide quickly to the side of the road. Mom's door would fly open. Diane would pop magically to the top of the heap of humanity in the back seat and . . .
I'll leave the rest to your imagination.
Every trip.
Every time.
But then . . . something changed.
The little voice would speak up sooner.
And sooner.
Until the car wouldn't even have made it out of the driveway before the fateful words were heard.
Mom and Dad tried to puzzle it out. Why was Diane getting sick so quickly after getting into the car?
They must have figured something because they certainly came up with an effective solution.
On that fateful day, Dad announced that he had to make a trip into town.
With much talk and laughter, we kids piled (that word again) into the car.
Dad got in. His door closed.
A pause while he found the key and jammed it into the starter.
He turned the key.
The motor roared to life.
He reached for the gear shift.
“I'm sick!”
His hand hovered there for a split second. Then dropped down and shut off the key.
“Then, you'd better stay at home with your Mom.”
What?! No! I stared at him, horrified.
“Go on. Get out.”
The tears started.
I should mention here that my Dad is a real push-over for tears.
Any tears.
Except, obviously when his small daughter needs to be taught a lesson.
“Diane. Get out.”
“Daaaadddyyy!”
Suddenly, Mom was there, opening the car door.
“Nooooo!”
She carried me, by now crying bitterly into the house and set me down on a kitchen chair.
Over my sobs, I heard the car start up and pull out of the driveway.
They were really going to leave me! It was more than my little four-year-old heart could handle.
I lept off the chair, ran to my parent's room and crawled under the bed.
Now, I should point out here that, never before or since have I crawled under my parent's bed. Maybe because never before or since has anything been that traumatic. But I digress . . .
I lay under there, sobbing for hours. (Or more probably five minutes – it's all the same when you're four.)
Suddenly, a banana appeared at the side of the bed. A fresh banana, with the peel still on, but just slightly opened to reveal the yumminess underneath.
It stayed there, just temptingly out of reach.
I looked at it. I love bananas.
And it really looked good.
I slid towards it. Just a little.
It stayed there.
A little more.
I could almost reach it.
More.
There! I could touch it.
And I was out from under the bed.
“Are you feeling better?”
I looked up. Mom was sitting there on the floor, holding the banana.
I nodded and crawled into her lap. She held the banana for me to take a bite, then handed the rest to me and snuggled me tightly.
I munched my way through the treat, still sniffing occasionally.
Mom waited until I was done.
“Was it good?”
Nod. Sniff.
“Would you like something else?”
Nod.
She stood up, taking me with her and carried me into the kitchen.
Where she fed me a cookie.
Then another.
Why does everything look better on a full tummy?
Then she sat down. “Diane, in the car, were you really sick?”
I stopped chewing and looked at my cookie. Then I stared at her, wide-eyed.
“I don't think you were, were you?”
Slowly, I shook my head.
“So why did you say you were?”
I looked at the cookie again, my mind working frantically.
“Were you excited about going to town?”
I nodded.
“Okay, I want you to think about this . . .”
Great. Thinking. My forte. Not.
“When we go in the car, I don't want you to say that you're sick. Unless you really are sick.”
I turned that over in my mind. I nodded.
“Can you remember that?”
Another nod. I started chewing again.
Mom smiled and stood up. “Good.”
And, oddly enough, that was all it took.
Never again did I pipe up from the back seat for anything less than genuine illness.
Or the potty, which Mom kept under her car seat.
But that is a whole other story.

14 comments:

  1. Love the ending...you have more stories than Mark Twain.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you, Beth! What a nice compliment. And Mark Twain is one of my heroes!

      Delete
  2. I feel for you and your family. I was often sick. And still suffer. When we traveled by motorcycle it was a constant fear that I would throw up in my helmet and drown myself.
    I am very glad that some of your illness could be cured.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yikes! A helmet would just put yet another 'spin' on the whole experience!!!

      Delete
  3. I try hard not to be in the back seat of any car because I sometimes get carsick even today. (I also suffer from vertigo from time to time, long story). Guess fortunate that I a) grew up in New York City and b) grew up in a carless family. Having said all that, you've proved once again how wise your Mom was. I love your stories.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. You and me in the front seats only. Check! Mom was amazing. If I could be half the mom she was...

      Delete
  4. Your parents were such lovely people. Love your stories.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you so much, Laurie! I loved them. I love remembering them!

      Delete
  5. You have such a distinct memory from your preschool years. I have a hard time recalling things that early. I have a sister 2 years younger than I who has a sharper memory for things we experienced together in the 1960s. Thank you for sharing that slice of life / life lesson / witness to your parents' manner of correcting with kindness.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you, Karen! Those years are as clear to me as.... I can't think of anything to compare it to because even this morning is a hazey blur...

      Delete
  6. In our family, it was Grandma who got carsick. It sounds like your parents had that lesson planned ahead.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I do think it was a long-planned teaching moment. Right down to the banana. Just FYI, a banana will still tempt me out from under the bed...

      Delete
  7. I remember getting carsick on our two hour trips to 'the big city' where Mum would buy things unavailable in the small town we lived in. There were only three of us kids and I had to always be in the middle with a bucket on my lap.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I SO remember the bucket on my lap! Let's not do road trips together, River! ;)

      Delete

Thank you for visiting! Drop by again!