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Non Fiction -
Slice of Life
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The Driving Lesson
It came upon me to be his new driving instructor...
He wakes me up
at half past five in the morning. Not being much of an early riser I leave my
bed rather grudgingly. He is ready - fresh faced, in his jeans and T-shirt,
raring to go. I reverse the car out of the gate and shift to the passenger’s
seat. He lowers himself into the driver’s seat and takes his time adjusting the
rear-view mirrors. Turning the ignition on, he wrestles with the gear shift to
push it into first. I can see his hands tightening
around the steering wheel as he tries to get the car moving. The engine
sputters out. I remind him to release the hand brake. He does so, starts again
and this time the car jerks forward and dies on him. “Release the clutch slowly”
I tell him. We finally get going.
A junction
comes up and he turns right, in fact keeps turning until the car almost grazes
the circle in the center. And keeps turning. “Straighten the car, straighten
it” I shout. He now whirls the steering to the left. And keeps turning it. The
car is now lurching towards the kerb. “No, no, not that much, turn right,
right.” The car now swings out towards the opposite curb. And all this is
happening at 40kms per hour. I grip my seat and shout “Slow down, slower and
turn to left”. Finally after the pendulum has swung from right to left to right
five or six times, the car is more or less in the center of the road. I breathe
out and reach for my handkerchief. Mangalore is still a small town and I thank
my stars for that. At six in the morning, vehicles are still rare and most of
those which are running are ones belonging to driving schools.
He had been a two-wheeler
enthusiast. He had earned his spurs on a friend’s Yezdi RoadKing. A 1969 Bajaj
Vespa was his prized possession for the last 38 years. When it was decided to
buy a car, he enrolled in a driving school even before the car was booked. The
instructor from the driving school would give him lessons for 30 minutes each day, five days a week in an old Maruti
800. After precisely 20 such classes (for which the fees had been paid in
advance), the instructor declared him ready, took him to the RTO and a week
later the old tattered six-page motorcycle driving license booklet was replaced
by a smart plastic Light Motor Vehicle Driving License card. The new car took another
three months in coming. When it did come, it was soon apparent that he wasn’t
ready for it. So it came upon me to be his new driving instructor.
“Change to
second gear” I said pitying the engine wheezing up the slope in third. As he
took off his left hand off the steering wheel and grappled with the gear shift,
the right hand pulled on the steering and the car veered to the right into the
opposite lane. The Taxi cruising in the opposite lane had to take some quick
evasive action to save our lives. I put my hand on the steering and yanked to
the left. He had frozen in fear and it took me some effort to overcome his
grip. He completed the gearshift. Not from third to second, but to fourth. The
engine promptly stalled and the car parked itself in the middle of the road.
The Scooty behind us screeched to a halt inches behind the car’s… umm…
backside. I looked back, surprised by the silence, by the absence of any
invectives. It was a young lady in the driver’s seat with an extra pair of
hairy hands on the handle from behind. An unshaven bleary eyed face peered from
above the ladies right shoulder. Ahh… that explains it I thought. Another
driving class. No wonder they were so understanding. Grinning back sheepishly
at them I was trying to shake my pupil out of his rigidity and to get him to start
the engine again. It was seven by now and the city buses were on the prowl. One
came up from behind and started blaring its horn. That only worsened the
rigidity. After five false starts, when I finally managed to induce enough left
foot - right foot coordination in the nervous wreck next to me to get the gears
engaged without killing the engine, the car jumped forwards towards the left (remember?
we had stalled during a attempted left turn) and almost ran over a curious
bystander who was watching the proceedings with a smug look on his face. Serves
him (the smug pot) right I thought but did not dare to look behind. I somehow
managed to coax the driver and the driven safely back to the stables. As I
stepped out of the car, my knees still knocking against each other in fear, I was
in half a mind to let out a mouthful at my pupil but memories of an earlier
morning doused my rage.
Nearly sixteen
years ago, it was on a similar morning that I
had woken him up at five-thirty in the
morning. After much begging and pleading, he had agreed to teach me to ride his
scooter that day. One of my earliest memories as a child is that of sitting on
that parked scooter and pretending to be racing along on it. I would twist and
turn the hand gears and accelerator to his exasperation. All through my school days
it was my one dream to ride that Vespa. It was going to be realized that day.
He had driven us down to a deserted stretch of road that morning, put the
scooter in neutral and had slid back to the back seat. I had proudly climbed on
to the front seat and squeezed the clutch and twisted the gearshift up into the
first gear and let go. The scooter had bucked like a wild horse and had thrown
us both off the saddle. Without a word, he had picked himself up, righted the
scooter, kicked the engine into life and straddled on to the back seat. “Come
on son, give it another try. Remember, go easy on the clutch” he had said with
a serene smile. The memory of that smile fizzled out my anger today.
I owed my Dad that
much.
Synaptic Muddle
Close
Chummaa
First of all, welcome to Sulekha!
Don't worry, go ahead with the driving classes. The menace is off the streets these days. Will warn you if we hit hit the roads again!
purefriendship
Thanks for the appreciation mate. Glad you found something more than just humor in it.
Regards
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Historical memoirs to the early morning rituals From your dad (while learning Driving )
and the patience seen by the teacher and experianced later after 20 years to teach his son.
Gr8t stuff, lot's of observations and lessons seen in your blog. keep flowing......
Subbu
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hello...
think i shd give a second thought abt joinin drivin classes in mlore splly mornin at half past five ??!!
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bharatborn
Thanks!
Rama Rao Garimella
He he he! Teaching to drive is a thankless job!
sujim
Glad you enjoyed it
swarajya
Trust you to come up with a profound comment! Thanks
Gupta Roli
Wish you all the best with the computer lessons!
palahali
Hey, that was a interesting reference to Mangalore. Have you been here anytime?
sheikchili
Moved by your response. Thanks. Hope you have some fun time with your Dad.
mayaonline
Thanks for the encouraging words
wiskyd
Thanks mate. Just "discovered" your blog today. You have serious talent!
kamalji
Thank you. It is so nice of you to take time to read our blogs and encourage us newcomers with your kind words.
Regards
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dimwit


I have watched a couple of "Everybody..." and they definitely were hilarious. Would love to watch the one you mentioned. And phew what a word...curmudgeon, Noun: A crusty irascible cantankerous old person full of stubborn ideas... thanks for enriching my vocabulary!
supriyad
That was nice of you!
Arun Kumar V
Thanks mate.
estamani
Quality time? Maybe. Wish it could be safe as well
narensomu
Thanks. Well, safe driving to you and the best of luck to your passengers
Regards
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