Hi! I'm Lindsay Ferrier. You might remember me from a blog called Suburban Turmoil. Well, a lot has changed since I started that blog in 2005. My kids grew up, I got a divorce, and I finally left the suburbs for the heart of Nashville, where I feel like I truly belong. I have no idea what the future will hold and you know what? I'm okay with that. Thrilled, actually. It was time for something totally different.
September 26, 2012
My suburban neighborhood has a few hot spots– places where you’re guaranteed to know pretty much everyone. They include the local pub, the Kroger, the YMCA, the Dollar Tree (yes, we’re highbrow), and the car rider pick-up line at my kids’ elementary school.
Generally, I consider this small-town atmosphere to be a good thing– an ‘I’m-raising-my-kids-in-the-right-place’ thing. But like anyone else, I have moments when I’d rather not see a bunch of people I know. Luckily, Nashville is a big enough town that I can drive ten minutes outside my comfort zone and shop and eat at the same types of places with a greater degree of anonymity. Except when it comes to the car rider pick-up line, anyway.
No matter how antisocial I’m feeling, I can’t avoid the line. The kids. must. be. picked. up. Trust me, I’ve tested this theory and faced some very cranky teachers as a result. And so I endure this daily gauntlet of meet-and-greets, cringing all the while.
What makes the line so excruciatingly social is that it’s a lasso-shaped loop that forces you to pass every other car in line at close range before taking your place in a vast circle of vehicles. I know most of the people inside these minivans and SUVs. They include neighbors, church members, media colleagues, acquaintances and good friends. But I can’t always see their faces through the windshield. Sometimes, I can make out a disembodied hand frantically waving at me through the glass. I wave back, having no idea who the person is, or if it’s actually me they’re waving at. And since one of my great downfalls is that whatever I’m thinking/feeling is undeniably stamped across my face, here is what the other person sees…
If this doesn’t say “Hey! I’m so very, VERY happy to see you!” I don’t know what does.
I’ve been on the receiving end of this experience as well. I’ll see a friend, a pretty good friend, drive by. I’ll wave. She’ll look at me. SHE’LL LOOK RIGHT THROUGH ME. She’ll keep on driving. As she passes me, I’ll sit in my car, stung, trying desperately to figure out what I’ve done to deserve her cold shoulder. Did I write something offensive on Facebook? Did she hear something bad about me? Did she simply sit up in bed this morning and realize with utmost certainty that Lindsay Ferrier is a total loser? COULD SHE NOT SEE ME THROUGH MY WINDSHIELD?
This final, most obvious possibility generally doesn’t occur to me for several days.
Now you understand why I hate the line so much.
And the social gauntlet is just part of the problem. Since I usually spend 20-30 minutes sitting in the line, I often use the time to read or work on a Bible study. Over the last few years, as many of you know, I’ve done several Beth Moore studies. And they are INTENSE. The car rider line is when I do the study’s homework, which sometimes makes me cry. Like, hard.
In my car.
In the line.
While everyone watches.
And that makes me the unaccountably bitchy, crazy crying woman in the car rider pick-up line.
BUT WAIT. THERE’S MORE.
Yesterday, I was running a bit late, and ended up taking my spot farther back in the line, beside a shady grove of trees. As I always do, I rolled down all my windows and turned off my car. I checked my e-mail on my phone, then glanced up to find that a swarm of mosquitoes had joined me. Apparently, the grove of trees beside my car was a popular West Nile gathering spot. Frantically, I batted at the mosquitoes, forcing as many of them outside as I could. Then I rolled up all my windows to keep more mosquitoes from getting in.
This left me with about a dozen mosquitoes trapped inside my car, feasting on me. And I have to tell you, next to ticks, hornets, roaches, bedbugs, wasps, tsetse flies, and scorpions, there’s NOTHING I hate more than mosquitoes. I spent the next ten minutes swatting them and slapping them and squealing and stomping.
And then I happened to look up and see a sea of faces in the car rider pick-up line, all staring blankly at me.
Me.
Known hereafter at my kids’ school as the unaccountably bitchy, crazy crying, slapping, shrieking, squealing, stomping woman.
Did I mention I hate the car rider pick-up line?
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You probably won’t believe me when I say this but I’ve totally “been there.” Yes. Been there. And it’s godawful.
http://www.theopinionatedgirl.com
TRUTH.
This is hilarious! Love the photos.
Thanks!
Ugh. I feel bad for my mom all those hours she waited for us. I think I need to go apologize to her!
Unless she was a crazy, crying, stomping slapping woman in line, she’s probably fine now. ;D
I just moved to the suburbs this summer. I had read your previous posts about the car rider line with intrigue. But now, now I do it daily. AND NOW I UNDERSTAND.
It’s a magnificent obsession. Or maybe it’s just an obsession.
Thank you so much for the laughs!! I missed you this summer!!
It’s good to be back! I missed you all too. 🙂
Awesome story. Did you take the pictures? I love the tale and it makes me so glad my school doesn’t have a pick up line!!!
Yes, I took the photos the next day on my laptop. And, I’m pretty sure, terrified the grandma in the line in front of me in the process!
Hysterical.
I’ve been caught singing loud and off key to inappropriate pop songs while in line at our Catholic School.
Apparently, Monsignor doesn’t listen to Z98, or he’d know what I meant when i sang I MAAY BE BADDD BUT I’M AWFULLY GOOOOD AT IT . ..SEX IN THE AIR I DON”TCARE I LOVE THE. . . oh.
LOL, love it!
I’m with you on this one. The hook up line is terrible in my town. That’s why my daughter now takes the bus!
Ditto to what a few other readers wrote. Three cheers for the school bus!! P.S. I missed you too when you weren’t writing this summer, Lindsay!
Thank you!
thanks for the laugh this morning! our school just built a circle for pick-ups and i HATE it with everything that is in me.
Worst idea ever. I’m not sure what the alternative is- maybe an eight-foot wall around the loop? 😉
Loved this. Mine take the bus most days now for which I am most grateful, but when I do have engage in the dreaded loop, my big wraparound shades no matter that the sky is black with rain help tremendously. No eye contact!
I need to remember my sunglasses more often! 😉
HA HA! I hate it when that happens! When I’m waiting, I sometimes work on blog posts. Typically, I read these out loud back to myself to hear how they flow. Once I was really into a post and excitedly read it out loud. It must have looked like I was talking to myself – excitedly – because three or four moms in other vehicles were staring at me like I had lost my mind. I just smiled a big ole’ smile and waved. They quickly looked away like they had not been gawking in the first place. LAST LAUGH FOR ME! Or, I like to think so. 🙂
Yes!!
The first time I picked up my nieces at their school, one of the teachers asked me if I was their grandmother! That didn’t exactly make my day.
OMG – those pictures are making me laugh every time I look at them! I’m the one who’s trying to swat the inside my car as I drive down the road. Not cool, I know, t I can’t help myself! I don’t know that I’d do well in one of those circles. Too much social contact! I’d make sure I was busy with something else.
I meant to say, the *mosquitos* inside my car. Essential detail.
I’ve done a few Beth Moore studies. It cracks me up that you try to do your homework on these in your car in the line. Because I know how I’ve been when I’m really into them? Turn on the waterworks. Yeah, between this and the “skeeters?” I’m betting they think you’re nuts! : )
cute story -with a familiar resonance. spent way too much time in those pick up lines when the kids were toddlers. now the cherubs are teenagers -yikes! my own blog (with its tongue-in-cheek title) shares some of my roller coaster rides as a parent and a person in this 21st century digital world….www.kidssuck..net.
[…] story of my stepdaughters’ horrific public high school experience. I also had a run-in with a carful of mosquitoes. Yes, it was a boring month and I NEEDED A BORING […]