Page 26 - May 2020
P. 26

PERSPECTIVES






          Sam, on the other hand, was an older student  out, and somehow made it back to my office.
      from nothing more than a roadless native  The secretary at the front desk called the college

      village of 200 people where the method of  health nurse immediately since in her words “I
      transportation was by foot or boat. The fast-          was white as a ghost and trembling”.
      paced life and vehicles of California were a               Thus, ended my 100% success rate and almost
      novelty.                                               my life. The college changed their policy and

          After his first day at the college where he  no longer required everyone to have a drivers
      had removed his bed and dresser from his  license. I was relieved of that assignment, the
      room—he said he did not need them—I knew  last of my kind. And just to let you know, Sam
      that he would need a little special attention.  left the college within two weeks and returned

      Having never driven a car before, I started him  to rural Alaska.
      out in the parking lot in a sedan. That went well          Years later I was in Alaska serving on a
      enough. His confidence grew to the point it was  disaster staff. The Mat-Su Valley out of  Wasilla
      off to the DMV for a permit. More weeks passed.  (home of Sarah Palin) was the scene of a massive

      I was elated that he seemed to enjoy driving and  brush fire that burned for almost two weeks.
      managed to drive up and down our local roads.  My job was to manage the
          And then “it” happened. Leading up to  volunteer groups that were
      our turn-off to this small college was a long  feeding and providing

      boulevard with a median populated with trees,  comfort to the fire crews.
      flower beds, and an occasional turn lane. The  (The firefighters really
      average was about one mile between left- or  appreciated the new, clean
      right-hand turns. Off we tootled on a bright,  pair of socks we provided.)

      sunny day. He did fine merging onto traffic                Almost six days into this
      with great speed awareness as well as managing  massive fire control effort,
      mirrors and signals. I was confident that we had  the winds came up, and
      a winner, a soon-to-be-licensed driver.                the fire shifted. Our base of

          I wanted him to practice parking. I asked him  operations would soon be
      to make a left-hand turn to go down a residential  smoked out and threatened
      side street. Signal on, merge into turn lane, make  by the flames. We had to
      turn, and . . . my life flashed before my eyes.  evacuate everyone—the field

      He turned right . . . into the oncoming traffic!  kitchen, tents with supplies,
      Remember I said it was about a mile between  fire suppression vehicles,
      turn lanes? Do you know how much panic,  and other equipment—all of
      thoughts of instant death you can produce in  it within an hour. This was

      your mind in a mile? Somehow, I remained calm  during the summer. The sun
      enough to tell him not to worry but turn left as  set around 2-3 am and rose
      soon as he could and park—pronto.                      at 4-5 am.
          I drove back to the college, parked, let him           But not this day. The




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