I generally drop Jenna off at school a
half hour before she needs to be there.
I also arrive on the lot before all other cars so as to not fight school
traffic. Jenna has always taken her time
walking to school or across the field.
When I am the driver who is picking her up, I welcome her dawdling. In first grade we were always the last car to
leave the parking lot. I HATE school traffic.
Kayla was looking for a sitter for her
two and as Jenna’s school is the same distance from their house as it is from
my own, I figured I could watch them at
Kayla’s house and then pick up Jenna. I
should have left her house the minute that Kayla came home.
It’s been four years since I had lived in that
same neighborhood and wasn’t taking into account that the school in that area
lets out a half hour earlier than Vantana. Before I went out to my car (which was parked
on the street) I saw the yellow bus pulled up by Kayla’s house. I wasn’t aware that there was a bus stop on
that street.
The stop sign was out and lights were
flashing. It was behind me and I didn’t
know if I had to wait for it or not. I waited
for just a bit until I realized that I wouldn’t be getting the attention of the
bus driver really soon (as she was visiting with a parent) and as I was not
passing the bus, I pulled forward through a maze of cars and dumpsters (that
must have been really great fun for the bus driver)
I have never liked the main street
which is closest to street where Bill and Kayla live – nor the cross street at the second
intersection. Lights were blinking red
indicating that traffic wouldn’t be moving at a rapid rate. Ahead of that were the spaces of red X’s and
green arrows and three lanes of broken yellow lines that always make me feel
like I’m driving inside of a video game.
Perhaps it’s popular in bigger cities, but that is the only street I
know of with that set up.
What’s ironic is the street seemed
desolate for decades. I remember when my
mom had driven out to her uncle’s house sometimes when her mom was in
town. The drive seemed sooo sooo long. Now it’s congested and makes me tense.
Bus STOP sign, dumpsters, children,
traffic lights and merging . . . What’s normally a ten minute drive took me
eighteen minutes. Fortunately I had
given myself twenty. But alas, I wasn’t the
first one to arrive in the parking lot.
I was too late just to park in the shade. But I didn’t have a long wait like I did when
Jenna was in first grade. Actually she’s
been getting out to the car rather quickly.
Must be the seven habits.
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