As birthdays go, sixteen is a
much-anticipated milestone. Don’t get me
wrong, being able to legally buy scratch-offs at age eighteen is a thrill but
nothing trumps being handed the keys to the kingdom. My daughter Sydney recently turned sixteen
and, as usual, we pulled out all the stops to celebrate. She began her special day with a batch of
buttered birthday toast. I meticulously
planned her mid-day meal of a Lunchable and mini grape soda pop. To prevent the debacle that inevitably
accompanies any important outing of which I participate, her father picked the
birthday girl up immediately after school to take her to the Department of
Motor Vehicles. Sydney had been practicing up by taking the
DMV’s online quizzes. She was surprised
to learn that under no circumstances is a driver to cross the double yellow
line. “What if your driveway is on the
opposite side of the road?” she asked.
As
father and daughter left, I suddenly had a premonition as I remembered my last
trip of this kind to the DMV. I quickly
scanned their helpful and informative website to discover that the social
security card is a must-have document.
“You just realized this,” older daughter, Savannah asked incredulously, “we went
through this less than two years ago.”
She is still holding a grudge from how I screwed up her own attainment
of a driver’s license. To the great
annoyance of my husband, who thought I had my act together (c’mon folks,
shouldn’t he know better by know?), I waylaid the trip to Warsaw with a carefully-worded cell phone
call. I then talked them through the
search for the needed document. I can’t
explain how to play Crazy 8’s to eleven- year-olds so you can imagine how well
that went. I drove home to make the
search myself and naturally found it in the last possible place.
Brad
and Sydney again hit the road.
Unfortunately, the documentation delay resulted in their arriving too
late for Sydney
to take her permit test. “Let me buy you
a Frappe,” Brad said to our disappointed daughter and off they went to
McDonald’s to discover an out-of-order drink machine. “Well, don’t forget you’ll be having homemade
ice cream tonight,” he said consolingly.
Yeah…about
that. Made the mixture, packed it in ice
and salt, turned on the motor and listened to the most horrific grinding sound
ever. I employ the same diagnostic
procedure across-the-board to all scary or unusual noises. I ignore them. Brad, however, felt compelled to directly
address the issue. Dismantling. Adjusting.
Fiddling. He reattached the
apparatus and plugged it in. It now
sounded like a dropped transmission.
“It’s fine,” I said optimistically, now actively ignoring the slender
spiral of smoke rising from our ice cream machine. Suddenly a new sound filled the air. No, not the smoke detector. If only we were so lucky. Our new puppy, who voraciously and
enthusiastically consumes shoe laces, fabric softener sheets and coffee table
legs, chose this exact moment to empty her stomach. Entering the kitchen, Sydney said, “Mom, Juno threw up.” My sixteen-year-old stood by silently as she
watched her parents battle flames in order to rescue the ice cream mixture, our
home, and our very lives (in that order) before she grabbed the paper towels and
disappeared back into the other room.
With the clever application of a monkey wrench, Brad hand-cranked the
ice cream in the manner of our forefathers and forty-five minutes later, we ate
our homemade cajun peach ice cream. Sydney had, by this time,
inexplicably lost her appetite and was more than happy to just go to bed. Sweet dreams, Sweet Sixteen.
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