2003
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Unbeknownst to my family, my physician, or the motor vehicle branch, by the age of seventeen, I was going blind behind the wheel of my fatherâs 1982 Pontiac Acadian. Feel free to shudder. Other soon-to-be-blind people are on the road today enjoying a similar story, only theyâve still got some damage to do. Maybe youâll meet one of them at an intersection.
Driving beckoned me the moment I turned sixteen, but my parents thought Iâd benefit first from a driverâs education course. Or two. Maybe three. I was that hopeless. Not much of what I learned remains in my brain, but I do remember my teacher, a greasy-haired man who insisted I call him Buddy.
For several months, Buddy picked me up once a week in his schoolâs red Ford Taurus. The car was equipped with an extra brake on the passenger side. Buddy liked to punch it through the floor when frightened. Pocked and battered, the carâs condition suggested the nifty Siamese brake did little
more than relieve the pressure in Buddyâs jaw. Nobody could say he was impatient with his students, though, and nobody could say he looked at the world from his car with anything other than safety on his mind. Oh, and ass. A large helping of ass weighed on his mind, too.
When he wasnât advising how to make a generous turn, Buddy gazed out the passenger window, as if avoiding eye contact with his job. Who wouldnât? It probably offered relief from spotting all the gory mishaps I could have steered us into. Some afternoons I could tell that the man was a sack of adrenaline and nerves. As he spoke heâd manically smear his hair across the bald spots on his head. His thoughts flip-flopped at dizzying speeds, all given voice, jumping from death to sex and back again, shaped by a stream of consciousness Freud would have enjoyed fishing in. The sidewalks and parking lots we passed provided his material.
âHoly mother of god! Did you see that honey in the elastic jeans? Slow down. The one going into SAANâs back there? What a butt. Jesus that was close! You gotta shoulder check, watch your blind spot. What an a-ass! It makes meâjust pull to the right a bit so you donât ride the yellow line. Thatâs right, a little more, donât be afraid of your side of the road. How does she get into those pants? What about blood flow, eh? Signal first! Theyâre like paint.â
Sometimes I couldnât tell if Buddy was testing me in his own perverse way. Did his questions measure my awareness? Did the asses tell him if I noticed anything other than the car in front of me? Good drivers, heâd declare, observe everything around them. Everything. To underline his point, heâd
give an extra wipe of his hair. Sometimes I nodded and muttered something affirmative. I tried to demonstrate that Iâd spared some of my abundant driverly attention for the assscape. âYes, a very different butt from that one back on Fraser Highway, Buddy, quite different.â None of this made me a more attentive driver in the end.
Buddyâs final report was unambiguous. He recommended another course before I bothered failing the driverâs test. It took a lot of practice with my father until my parents felt everybody was safe. Somehow I passed my first road test with only a few demerits, which was unfortunate.
Because of all this I came a year late to driving. My licence, however, which I earned shortly before my seventeenth birthday, came a year earlier than my diagnosis with RP. The math is still chilling. I drove for thirteen danger-filled months, practically blind and legally reckless, unaware of what I was missing. And I mean barely missing.
Before I spill all the gory details, I should explain how it could happen. Itâs difficult to reconcile how I earned a licence. Some find it hard to believe that a person can be blinded, or slowly blinded, yet remain unaware of the vanishing points. Several explanations are