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I Have Done Things I Am Not Proud of


The light changed, his horn blew.  That quickly.  The unwelcome blare startled and instantly angered me.  I pressed on the gas pedal and proceeded through the green light as the SUV swerved, then accelerated around me.  The driver, locking eyes with me, gave his best glare.  A 20-something, perhaps early 30s, he contorted his face into what I suspect he hoped was a fearsome snarl.

I gave him the finger.

Without hesitation he swerved in front of me, nearly clipping the front of my old jalopy.  I couldn't help but notice the "VETERAN" plates on his car as he slammed his brakes.  What had been nothing more than a brief annoyance somewhere in my chest had become a familiar fierceness in my brain.  He began to pull away but quickly responded to my encouraging gestures he pulled to the side of the road.

Before his door was all the way open I was out of my car and bearing down on him like a raging bull.  Though I feel younger (at least mentally), the gray in my beard and lines on my face betray me. Regardless, six feet three inches and well over two hundred pounds of fury made the young road-rager's eyes go big.  He knew he was about to be tuned up.

I shouted "What kind of Vet are you?!" just as my hand closed around his neck and I drove him halfway over the "V" created by his open car door and the side of his windshield.

Then I heard it.  Cutting though the boiling of my brain I heard it.  Crying.  From the back seat of this moron's car came the sound of at least two children weeping.  My heart sank.  I eased up on the driver's neck and he cautiously allowed himself to stand upright again.

"What are you thinking," I asked... incredulous beyond measure someone would come so close to causing an accident with children in his car!

"I'm sorry, man," he said... offering me his hand.  "I was wrong.  I was out of line."

It took a few seconds for me to accept his offer - my brain shifting gears and trying to wrap meaning around what I'd experienced, my anger, his children crying, and now this.

I shook his hand and returned to my car, his children's frightened wails haunting my chest-full of lifelong poor decisions.

Driving away, I wished I had taken a moment to address his children... to say I was sorry, that adults don't always handle things in an appropriate way.

Lost.
PeaceFrog2 · M
All the same, his driving erratically and swerving in front of you could have caused an accident killing him and his kids.
DeadNGone · 51-55, M
@Aries10010: I agree. I was triggered when he so aggressively swerved in front of me then braked... but STUNNED when I heard his children crying. Such wasted energy all around.
PeaceFrog2 · M
@DeanNGone: You did the right thing in the end. Regaining your composure and defusing the situation.
DeadNGone · 51-55, M
@Aries10010: thank you. I appreciate that.
JerseyGal · 51-55, F
[c=#003BB2]What he did was selfish and uncalled for. Not only did he put his life in jeopardy, but also your life and his kids.
Maybe, just maybe by you doing what you did, he'll think nexttime before driving so crazily. He has probably done it so often without anyone saying a word or doing anything, so maybe this will shock him enough to not do it again.

I can tell you wish you handled it a bit differently as far as his kids. Try not being so hard on yourself. You possibly saved their lives. [/c]
DeadNGone · 51-55, M
@Wingz1969: I had thought of that and yes, my only remorse were his kiddos being there. In this culture... this century... where folks launch attacks while hiding behind their computer screens or behind the wheel of their SUVs - i am glad to be the unhappy reminder there are still folks who aren't playing their game.
JerseyGal · 51-55, F
@DeanNGone: [c=#003BB2]I have an unhappy reminder from when I lived in Florida. So many just don't care there anyway, and I was run off the road onto the sidewalk. I was shaking, my heart was pounding. The person got stopped by a red light, so I followed them till they pulled over. Big mistake. I found that out when I went up to the truck's window and it was a man who had a huge German Shepherd in there with him. He had no problem letting that dog come towards me. I learned my lesson then. [/c]
DeadNGone · 51-55, M
He, like many who use this sort of aggression, are most likely cowards. Hope you weren't hurt.
JerseyGal · 51-55, F
@DeanNGone: [c=#003BB2]No, thank you. I was not hurt. Luckily, I walked away. [/c]
iamnikki · 31-35, F
I've had angering moments on the road too but it should never come to this. I've seen plenty of news stories of what you just described turning deadly. Stop to think " do i want to get shot and potentially DIE because an idiot honked at me?".... Be safe...
DeadNGone · 51-55, M
@iamnikki: thank you for your reply, N. ummm.... yeah, about that. Another story for another time - but yes, at times i DO wish someone would just put a slug in me.
iamnikki · 31-35, F
@DeanNGone: i have negative thoughts as well. Part of life...i guess.
DeadNGone · 51-55, M
@iamnikki: I'm sorry to read that - wouldn't wish those dark times on anyone.

 
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