My first car was a white Toyota Tercel,
a stick-shift car which I loved and cherished as if it was my first baby. Just
before my driver's test I attended two 2-hour classes on drivers' safety and
there I received what will always be the best safety advice I ever heard of. It
was the concept of ’periscope driving.’ The teacher taught us how to use the
periscope mentality to predict what’s coming from your right and left, keep
track of what’s going on behind you, through the rear-view mirror, and of
course, keep your eyes in front. It’s a simple technique to be aware of what’s going
on around you, all the time. My first
ever drive in my Toyota with my friend Fr John Heinlein was as historic as it
was nerve-wracking, as he wanted me to experience expressway driving in the rain,
and boy was it scary, driving in pounding rain on the Meadowbrook Parkway, late
at night. I don’t ever remember so much rain in a span of 5 minutes, but it was
a baptism of fire, let alone water. Then my first solo ride was also quite
interesting as well as disappointing. It was a short ride to a local store and
I parked the car where there were a lot of garbage cans on the sidewalk.
Unfortunately, I did not see the fire-hydrant in their midst and within 3
minutes, I got a ticket for illegal parking (close to a fire hydrant.) I was
pretty upset until I got back to the Rectory and my pastor Fr John calmed me
down and convinced me it was just a minor infraction which everybody gets once
in a while. It would take another 30 years for me to get my second and only
other ticket in my stellar driving career. More on that on another day.
But all
in all my Toyota Tercel gave me a lot of driving pleasure, as I remember
driving 60 miles at a stretch for the first time ever, from New Hyde Park to
Riverhead on Long Island. My biggest trips were for upstate New York, and even
into Canada through the Adirondack’s. Looking
back I realize how brave I was to drive through the bizarre neighborhoods of Queens
and Brooklyn, over the Verrazzano Bridge, all over Long Island, and over many
bridges to head upstate New York, where traffic was much less hectic, and the
scenery spectacular, especially between October and November, with the colorful
foliage that is so prevalent at this time of the year. Stay tuned for my second
car tomorrow.
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