【senior sex video in hd】
A New Year’s Drive
First Person

Photo: Morven, via Wikimedia Commons
My father bought me a Swiss watch when I was seven. The strap was too big and needed adjusting, but when I could finally put it on, I felt a surge of electricity pulse through me, as if I’d just been shackled to time’s wrist. No matter what I did, I couldn’t get the ticking of the second hand to sync up with the beat of my heart.
I stopped wearing it and kept it in my pocket, only later finding the proper use for it: timing the forty-fives I bought and listened to in my room, checking the accuracy of the time on the label to the time on my watch. The Beatles’ singles, I found, all listed the correct times. The Rolling Stones’ singles, not so much. They’d often claim their songs were fifteen or twenty seconds shorter than they really were, hoping to get more airplay from DJs, who would often opt for a song they could run right into the news break. For me, it was the first hint that time was negotiable, that with the right connections no one had to pay full price for an hour. That being the case, what was the point of a watch? I haven’t worn one since.
Not long after, I started waking up in the night with bad, bad dreams about cars, nightmares of being behind a wheel somewhere on a highway, lost and panicked, cars whizzing by, the sun going down, nothing whatsoever on the radio. I was a New York City kid. Cars were nothing but trouble. You had to know where you were going. Then you had to go there. And then you had to park. This was far too linear for my tastes.
The summer I was seventeen, my folks sent me to California to visit my brother on his ranch and to get my license. He was an angry and solitary man, caught in a deep internal debate with himself that he kept losing. He took me off in his Ford to an abandoned stretch of road and had me get behind the wheel.
“Pay attention,” he said. And then he said it again.
“Watch the road,” he barked. There was nothing to watch. “Watch the road.”
The clock on the dashboard kept blinking the wrong time. I pointed this out, and he made me pull over and get out. I thought he might leave me there, but he had me switch over to the passenger side, and we drove back to his house in silence.
The next day, he called a friend who worked at the sheriff’s office, and I took my driver’s test on a tractor. There wasn’t much driving involved, and I passed. Within the hour, he’d put me on a bus to San Francisco. He even paid for the ticket.
Later, maybe a year or two later, when I was in Providence, a pretty girl named Marianne stopped by my place on Hope Street right after New Year’s. She was driving to Fox Point, over on the east side of town. Did I want to go with her? She had soft dark hair and lost eyes, and she looked like a flower with a hangover. Of course I wanted to go.
We drove to Gano Street, and she bought tea with nettles, a loaf of Portuguese sweet bread, a box of blank cassettes, and some hair products. The café was closed, the nail salon was busy, and the music store had nothing but old fadoalbums in the window. We walked back to her car, and she handed me the keys. “I feel dizzy,” she said. “Do you mind driving back?” This didn’t seem like the right time to mention my lack of automotive skills. I got in. My priority was looking cool. I rolled my window down and rested my elbow on the window frame. My head was tilted just so, something by The Kinks was on the radio, and the sun was shining. I got on the highway. I wasn’t doing too badly.
I got off the highway onto Wickenden Street. No one had ever told me that when you get off a highway you slow down, but it didn’t feel like I was going that fast until I hit the police car. All things considered, they were pretty nice about it.
I haven’t driven since. Come to think of it, I haven’t seen Marianne since. I hope she’s feeling better.
Brian Cullman is a writer and musician living in New York City.
Search
Categories
Latest Posts
It's Time to Reinvent the Digital Pen
2025-06-26 22:15CES officials recommended a taxi
2025-06-26 22:12Watch NFL star Melvin Gordon, Jr. troll his Ravens fan Uber driver
2025-06-26 21:1420 monumental things that will turn 20 in 2019
2025-06-26 20:56Best Sony headphones deal: Over $100 off Sony XM5 headphones
2025-06-26 20:14Popular Posts
Yes, that was Ke Huy Quan on the phone in 'The White Lotus' Season 3
2025-06-26 22:05Put down that pug: Vets urge people to stop buying flat
2025-06-26 21:12People still think anti
2025-06-26 20:284GHz CPU Battle: AMD 2nd
2025-06-26 20:16Featured Posts
Your 'wrong person' texts may be linked to Myanmar warlord
2025-06-26 21:46Eagles fans Venmo Bears kicker to thank him for missing field goal
2025-06-26 21:08Audi partners with Disney to entertain car passengers with VR
2025-06-26 20:25Robin Triumphant
2025-06-26 20:12Popular Articles
Trump tariff news: See the latest impacts on consumer tech
2025-06-26 22:34Bowsette is canceled, sorry horny Nintendo fans
2025-06-26 21:18Secluded library retreat is a book lover's dream
2025-06-26 20:51Audi partners with Disney to entertain car passengers with VR
2025-06-26 20:36Android Performance Tips and Tweaks
2025-06-26 20:13Newsletter
Subscribe to our newsletter for the latest updates.
Comments (53143)
Reality Information Network
What's new to streaming this week? (March 7, 2025)
2025-06-26 22:25Transmission Information Network
20 monumental things that will turn 20 in 2019
2025-06-26 22:17Follow Information Network
Now you can pre
2025-06-26 22:01Charm Information Network
Striking images from the violent protests in Charlotte after fatal police shooting
2025-06-26 21:13Co-creation Information Network
Elon Musk says Mars ship could make first flights in 2019
2025-06-26 20:23