The View from 95: Driving
Living in Blythewood, everywhere I go takes 30 minutes. I try to make driving interesting so I will stay alert. That is a good thing. I loved listening to ETV’s “Radio Reader” on my car radio back in the 80s. That got me into Books on Tape and an occasional bit of trouble.

I was stopped and heavily fined for breezing through a school zone while listening to a very dramatic part of a book.
Once, while on my way to a Circle meeting in LongCreek and listening to a book on tape, I kinda forgot where I was going, missed my turn, and ended up in Elgin. That was before GPS, and I thought I would never find my way back to Circle meeting.
Another way to make driving interesting is to watch for abandoned things on the side of the road. I hate to admit it, but I like to pick up some of these treasures. I can find small tables, chairs, toys, small logs just right for my wood burning stove and lots of chests of drawers.
I usually have someone in mind when I quickly put something in my car. But it is not my best look! When I pick up things no one else wants, I take them to a consignment or thrift store. And sometimes back to the side of the road for someone else. I recently picked up a bamboo frame for a small table. It only needs a little tightening up and a glass top. Anyone interested?
One bad experience has made me more selective. A good-sized bag was dropped in the middle of Fulmer Road. Thinking it was a traffic hazard and just might be interesting, I stopped and threw it in the back seat of my car. In just a few minutes, I realized I’d rescued a bag of dirty diapers. I was halfway to town before I found a trash can.
Occasionally I must have looked pitiful, because strangers have stopped and helped me get something heavy or large into my car. Maybe I’m the first bag lady with a car.
One hint: The better the neighborhood the better the find!
Also, while driving, I keep my eyes open for tossed pieces of metal to take to Thomas Humphries who is a well-known recycling sculptor. Numerous times I have stopped to pick up large pieces of what looked like metal that has blown off or been knocked off a passing car. Plastic! Disappointed in the find and in the car manufacturer. Thomas grew up in Blythewood, so check him out online. Or better, take him a piece of metal!
I don’t want to scare you, but another way I stay alert while driving is to identify the birds I see along the way and the types of trees along the roadway.
Staying alert on long drives is the goal, as I know how quickly a little sleepy nod can land you in a ditch. I once woke up just in time to find myself driving into and out of a ditch without a pause.
Being wide awake at that point, I just drove on home. That is when I found I could turn right but not left – dented fender. I got home but I couldn’t turn left into my driveway.
One thing has changed about my driving habits. I have just about stopped picking up strangers. The last person I stopped for on a hot day was a young man on a long, mostly unpopulated road carrying food and drinks on a take-out tray.
I was so puzzled as to where he had gotten the food and how long he had been carrying it, I just had to stop. He said he was right at the house where he was heading.
I will never know the story!
Jeanette Smith, 95, a Blythewood resident, has been active in the community’s civic affairs for over 50 years.