Ok, I really don't have time for this....but I need to work on something other than the yearbook for 5 minutes.
So I am going to take on the writing assignment over at
Mama's Losin It. The prompts this week are appealing:
1.) Tell us about a lie you told that you later regretted.
2.) Choose a task you'd like someone to complete and write a poem asking them to do it.
3.) Describe a talent you have.
4.) Write a list of ten things on your mind this week.
I could take on #1, #3 and #4 but considering my time limitations I am going to choose to do just #1.
Hi, my name is Michelle and back in 1989 I told a lie that I ended up regretting. Let me set the stage for the lie that I created oh so many years ago.
I was a student at SDSU and I was the proud owner of a green Datsun 260Z.
Not a picture of the car I owned, but this is it's twin sister. It was my very first car and I loved it. It was low, it was solid and it was fast. It was a teenagers dream come true.
As I happily left my last class of the day I jumped into my little love and started up the engine. Just as I was starting to pull out of my parking spot I heard this tiny little "tick-tick" sound coming from my dashboard. It didn't sound like a noise my car would make, but what did I know, I was young!
It wasn't until I was pulling out of my parking spot that I saw the little creature that was doing acrobatics around my car.
The escapee from the bug circus was a little hard flat green creature. For it's small size it made an awfully big noise when it landed on anything plastic in my car.
My first instinct was to get out and try to swoosh the freaky little bug out of my car, but I had already pulled half way out of my parking spot and their was another student impatiently waiting for me to move.
So against my better judgement I decided to drive away with my little green passenger. As I drove the perimeter of campus I tried to forget about the stowaway. That little poop refused to buckle up and sit still and hearing him jumping around the car became a huge distraction.
As I rounded the corner of campus all of a sudden the green circus bug did a back flip and landed right on my face. Being under attack, I freaked out! In that split second while I was trying to keep the bug from sucking the eyeball out of my head I veered off the road!
Hello light post, meet my Datsun 260Z. Yes, I drove straight into the side of the hill and hit the one and only light freakin light post on that stretch of road.
If you haven't been in a wreck you don't know how freaky it is be moving one minute and the next to come to a dead stop after hitting a very solid object. At first I wasn't sure what had happened. Then the horror of the situation hit me. I cried as the rubber neckers drove by and stared at me.
I felt so incredibly stupid for what had happened, because that bug didn't jump up and try to suck my eyeball out of my head (but I'm sure he was thinking about it). In fact, the little bugger wasn't anywhere near me.
It did exist, it was just sitting down on the passenger side floor mat patiently waiting for me to take it to my place near the beach.
The truth is that I was watching the bug and not the road, but I told EVeRyone that the bug had attacked me! I regretted telling that stupid lie because people thought it was funny!
You know what happens when people enjoy a funny story? They ask you to retell it! It is easy to tell a lie once, but it gets harder when you have to do it over and over again.
Years later I finally fessed up to friends and family about the bug that didn't actually try to wrestle the steering wheel away from me and cause me to crash.
They still thought the attacking bug story was funny so now if it gets brought up I just now tell it as the lie I made up to cover my stupidity.