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"Summer
Roadtrip " (Westside Today August 2005)
The heat in Los Angeles feels particularly
brutal this summer, but I wouldn't trade this unmerciful baking for any
of the summer vacation road trips that I took as a child in Florida .
Those excursions with my mom, Aunt Frances, and my two cousins: Lance
and Susie were a nightmare. The fighting began the moment we walked out
the front door. It always started with ear-piercing screams of "I call
the front seat!” Lance and Susie would then jump into a heated debate
as to who actually “called it first.”
That would quickly degenerate into a furious
shouting match laced with more profanity than a Richard Pryor concert.
Finally, my adorable cousins would engage in a no-holds-barred,
hair-pulling, wedgie fight. They would grab each others' underwear and
yank upwards as hard as they could, hoping to hear a "ripppppp."
And this was all before we left the
driveway.
Winning the front seat wasn't enough. The
victor would turn around and taunt the loser with and an ultra-snotty
repitition of “Lucky me! Lucky me!” That, in turn, would set off
another fight, complete with flying hairbrushes and CDs hurled at high
speeds. My Aunt Frances was always embarrassed by her kids and often
reminded them that, "We have a Christian fish sticker on the back of
our car." This spiritual warning always elicited laughter from her
godless offspring..
While my mother sat in the back seat,
silently praying and singing hymns, my aunt tried to keep order as she
drove. Calling on a higher authority, she would remind her little
angels that “God was watching.” To which they would respond, “Who
cares? We don't believe in God.” Worried about divine punishment, my
aunt would quickly tip her head towards heaven and say, “Yes, they do
God!” With a smirk on her steely braces, Susie would respond, “No, I
don't God.”
No doubt, God had his TiVo set to record our
vacations.
The worst one that I can remember (and
cannot forget, unfortunately) was when we drove from Orlando, Florida
to North Carolina . My mother and aunt had bought some property, sight
unseen, in the Blue Ridge Mountains. A real estate agent, over the
phone, told them that “this property has a wonderful view.”
Traveling north through several states meant
hours of battles between Lance and Susie. They fought every way that
was humanly possible inside a car: Glaring at each other, repeating
each other in a mocking tone, and the cardinal sin of all junior
highers: using the other's hairbrush without permission!
Much of the trip included stops at
Indian-themed souvenir shops where my Aunt Frances bought several
Cherokee-carved paddles for spanking via the Native-American way. She
was truly at a loss when it came to her kids. I recall her saying over
and over, "It's all that violence they watch on Saturday morning
cartoons."
Funny, but I can't recall Scooby Doo ever
giving Shaggy a wedgie that tore flesh and needed medical care.
When we finally got to the property, my aunt
and mother were shocked to find that their newly-bought land was a lot
that sat on a 70 degree angle on the face of a mountain. Building any
type of a structure there would require suspending the laws of gravity.
My mother, ever the optomistic one, promised me that, "someday that
property will be yours... along with Lance and Susie."
Gee, I can hardly wait. Maybe we can take a
roadtrip to see it.
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