It’s been more than a year but I still remember the look on the police officer’s face when my car slid to a stop, just inches from where she sat in the passenger’s seat of the cruiser.
Her mouth was open and her eyes wide with surprise…before she narrowed them in a glare.
I was driving through an intersection on a light I had watched turn green on my approach. I had slowed to accommodate two cars squeezing in left turns on a red light in front of me. In a split second I reacted and took in that those drivers too, had narrowly avoided hitting the police cruiser which was proceeding straight through the red light.
The officer gestured that I should pull into a nearby parking lot. I did, immediately. Her partner, a young man with a ruddy face and an endearing expression approached my car.
“You came pretty close to hitting us back there,” he said.
“But the light was green. I didn’t hear a siren; you didn’t have your lights on.”
He shrugged. “Maybe you had your radio on?”
“No.” I didn’t.
He glanced in the back of my car, Graham fidgeted.
“Talkin’ to your baby?”
“He was asleep until just now.” I gulped. “I was watching the lights and the intersection. No one was stopped. Those two other cars almost hit you too.”
“Wait here.”
He went back to the cruiser where his partner still sat, glaring at me.
I waited. And waited. Graham started to wail. It was 15 minutes before he returned.
“I’m gonna have to charge with you failure to stop.” He looked at Graham. “Is he okay?”
“He’s just frustrated,” I said. “We both are.”
The police officer sighed and I thought I saw something flash across his face. Sheepishness?
Emboldened I stammered, “I’m a very careful driver. You didn’t have your siren or your lights on. Someone less careful would have hit you.”
He leaned in and handed me a ticket. “Go to court,” he said. “It’ll get knocked down.”
And so I did.
It was a few weeks ago. I took a holiday day from work, partially so I could attend and partially to attend to a million other errands I had been neglecting.
He was there. In a nice suit and looking younger than I remembered.
The prosecutor pulled us aside. “So, you can plead guilty and we’ll accept an $80 fine and no points. Does that work?”
Inexplicably my eyes filled with tears.
“I did stop. I know you think I’m just some stupid woman driver, but I’m not. I have spent years studying how to maneuver a few tons of metal around.”
Both men shuffled uncomfortably.
“Do you want a trial?”
I sniffled and nodded, mortified because the tears would not stop coming.
“I can’t plead guilty to something I didn’t do.”
And so I got a trial date two weeks hence. And on the way out I fell in step beside the young officer.
“What did you mean by that?” he asked.
I shrugged, embarrassed now. “I’m a pilot.”
“Wow, cool.” We walked in companionable silence.
“You know, you could be a Formula One driver. You still almost hit me.”
I stopped.
“You looked at me like I was some kind of cliché, silly woman driver. But if I didn’t have the training I have, I would have hit you. You know those other cars almost hit you too.”
“Yes.”
“How come they never heard your siren or saw your lights?”
He shrugged. “You have to do what you think is right.”
I showed up for the 1:30 p.m. trial yesterday on my lunch, with the naïve hope that I could make it back to work within my allotted hour.
The young officer saw me enter and scooted over to sit beside me.
“Are you sure you want to do this?” he said. “If it’s financial, I could talk to the prosecutor.”
I bit my lip and sighed.
“I don’t want to sway you. But you stand a real good chance of getting convicted.”
I looked at him. All of a sudden I felt tired, exhausted really.
I thought about how busy my life was lately. I thought about what a long and difficult winter, financially and emotionally, Rob and I have endured: about how many things, important things, have caused me stress over the last several months.
I thought about a piece I wrote a few months back in which I expressed a desire to teach Graham which battles are worth fighting. I considered that if I left in the next 10 minutes I wouldn’t have to use any more holiday time.
I thought about how my dogged insistence on doing things the hard way has always made things difficult for me. I thought about how I wished that Graham would learn a better way.
And I sighed and I lifted my damn stubborn, figurative foot off the brakes.
“I want to move forward,” I said.
He smiled.
So I pleaded guilty and accepted a reduced fine: $50 and no points.
But I still asked for, and received, 90 days to pay it.
Because I don’t want the Man to think I’m dead just yet.
Wednesday, July 9, 2008
Score One For The Man
Posted by
Don Mills Diva
at
1:30 PM
70
fabulous voices rang out
Labels:
fight the power,
learning,
priorities,
stubbornness,
traffic tickets
Sunday, April 20, 2008
Photos, plus proof that blogging changes the world
So we goofed around in the village Friday night...
And I skied in a t-shirt (in temps about 24 C, 75 F!) for the first time ever Saturday which was amazing, 'cept I forgot to apply sunscreen on my arms and spent last night sleepless and in agony with the Worst. Sunburn. Ever.
And we took this photo at dinner last night and I am aware that my dress is gaping and my overfed stomach is attempting a breakout. Can you blame it? We ate at a raclette restaurant which means they just bring you everything they find in the kitchen and you let the cheese melt on it and it's the Greatest. Thing. Ever.

And I think it was probably the very best time I have ever had at Mont Tremblant which is, literally, our second home (so I've been here a lot!)
BUT - the very best part of my weekend was opening the newspaper yesterday and reading this.
The story announces that the Canadian government is set to become the first in the world to ban the chemical Bisphenol-A, a proven hormone disruptor which is found in plastic baby bottles and the resin that lines the tin cans used to hold our food.
And the story says major retailers in Canada have already pulled products with Bisphenol-A off the shelves due to public demand.
Way back in October when I had been blogging for only a matter of weeks I wrote a rather impassioned piece on Bisphenol-A as part of Blog Action Day - a political movement which saw 15,000 bloggers reaching more than 12 million readers with their environmental concerns. In my neck of the woods BlogHers Act Canada concentrated its efforts on - you guessed it - banning Bisphenol-A!
Well we did it ladies and gentlemen - I believe Blog Action Day and BlogHers Act Canada put this issue on the front burner and directly influenced corporate and government policy with regards to a potentially hazardous chemical.
If you are reading this in the United States or the United Kingdom or Australia or anywhere else in the world, please follow my links, educate yourself about Bisphenol-A and find out where your government stands.
Because if we Canucks can do it, so can you: there is no force in the world greater than a mommy (or a daddy) blogger with a mission to keep their precious children safe.
We rock hard folks. We all do. Each and every one of us!
Posted by
Don Mills Diva
at
10:04 AM
55
fabulous voices rang out
Labels:
Bisphenol A,
bloggers rule,
BlogHers Act Canada,
fight the power,
Mont Tremblant
Thursday, February 14, 2008
Ronald's redemption
Oh, I sent the letter alright.
You better believe I sent the letter.
After posting it here Monday night, I called the head office at McDonald’s Canada on Wednesday after trying unsuccessfully to get any kind of an e-mail address.
Turns out you can’t complain to McDonald’s via e-mail (at least in Canada) because only three people work in the customer service department and they would be overwhelmed if it were actually convenient for people to communicate with them.
Does that sound snippy? I meant it to. Also snippy? When I said I completely understood that a small business like McDonald’s couldn’t possibly afford to hire more than three customer service representatives.
Anyhoo…I did get a fax number and I faxed the letter out over on my lunch hour. I included the address for this site and explained that in the day and a half since it was posted it had received several hundred views and dozens of angry comments. I included my full name and address and advised them I expected an immediate response.
When I returned home about 5:30 p.m. there were two messages on my answering machine. One was from a woman at McDonald’s head office who apologized profusely and said she would be contacting the owner of that restaurant and advising her to contact me immediately. The second was from said owner who was also very apologetic and expressed a desire to speak with me directly. I figured I would call her today on my lunch.
My husband called me at work this morning. Call these McDonald’s people back, he said, They keep calling!
I called the owner, a woman named Lori, right away.
Lori said she was devastated by how we were treated. She said she’s worked in and around McDonald’s since she was a young girl and her father owned that restaurant before her. She said she has a five-year-old and hasn’t been able to sleep since she read my letter and watched the security tapes because she’s so upset and embarrassed.
Lori said she is dealing with a new management team and that she already had an emergency meeting with them to discuss the situation. She said the manger was woken from a sound sleep by the worker’s call and didn’t fully grasp the situation or the severity of the storm. She said the woman had offered up her job, so guilty did she feel about giving the worker such terrible instructions.
Lori said she had a long talk with her staff at that meeting about using common sense and trying to apply the values, of family and community, that McDonald’s espouses, in everyday situations.
Lori said she was very, very sorry.
And you what? I believe her.
Also, I forgive her and the manager and the silly girl who delivered the manager’s orders. I think they get it. I don’t think it will happen again and Graham and I are home and safe. All I really wanted was a sincere apology and I got it.
Lori also said she was sending something to me and Graham as a token of good will and that’s all very nice and I’ll be sure to let you know when it arrives, but that’s not why I feel so good today.
I feel good today because I feel I have proven, in some small way, that there is power in words: real power. I feel like maybe one day Graham will read this and feel reassured that when people speak up, they can and will be heard.
Thank you all, my friends, for adding your voices – if you are ever in Don Mills I’ll treat you to a Big Mac.
Posted by
Don Mills Diva
at
9:00 PM
64
fabulous voices rang out
Labels:
fight the power,
McDonald's,
using our words