Tag Archives: speeding tickets

At Least We Can Agree Upon That

A splash of evil crept into my soul one day this week when I was walking down the sidewalk. I didn’t know where it had come from. It appeared like an eclipse, totally unexpected, but it went away.

A man in the coffee shop line smiled at me and kept looking around himself, holding his iPad in both hands in front of his body. What does he want from me? What organization is he working for? I better hide.

The line is long. These people ought to know that they can place mobile orders on their phones. That’s what I do. I live half a mile from this coffee shop, and my cold brew and eggs are ready by the time I walk here. Yet these people didn’t get the memo.

The Adderall kicked in. It’s six in the morning, and I’m wide awake. The pharmacy didn’t have my medication until yesterday, so I’d been out of it since Saturday. How did I survive? I need it for attention. Some days I forget, which shows how ineffective the Adderall can be. But I take it anyway for my attention deficit disorder. I’m not ashamed to admit it because I believe that most people need the stuff. Too many people are plagued by a short attention span. Too much stimuli. I look out this dirty window with water stains on it and see a plethora of shops with letters on them, words and letters everywhere in town, and numbers too on signs and such. I have to get away to see nature, to avoid all this information.

Anyway, I still haven’t called the court to find out about my speeding ticket, which is supposed to come in the mail. The idiot cop had written my address from Hollywood on my citation, but I don’t live there anymore, and he’d pulled me over a few miles from home. My new address is on my insurance and registration card. No one ever said a cop is supposed to graduate from MIT, but he should’ve at least politely asked where I lived, and I would’ve told him the truth.

I still have post-traumatic stress from that night, which was less than a week ago. Why did I drive close to ninety miles per hour? Where was my head when I was driving? I was thinking a million thoughts other than how fast I was going. My foot kept pressing the pedal without my awareness. Now I have to pay the fine and attend traffic school. I’ve gone to comedy traffic school a few times. The people who instructed it were not funny. This was before COVID, long before COVID. I had to drive to an economy office building and sit for eight hours, where I studied all the different traffic laws. The instructors read jokes from their notes. They ordered pizza too. There were definitely coffee and donuts.

I can take traffic school online now in my apartment. I don’t know how the court will see that I attended. Nevertheless, I can’t have the points or my insurance will skyrocket, so I must endure the long, painful process. That’s the point, isn’t it? To keep me from speeding again. They press the issue. It’s on my conscience every time I sit behind the wheel.

Now I obey all traffic laws. I drove to my parents’ house on the day after the cop had pulled me over and kept my eyes on both the road and Google Maps on Apple Carplay. Google Maps helps because it tells me the speed limit on each road. If the limit was forty five I would drive that fast and nothing more. It’s hard because it’s tempting to drive over the limit, but that moment made me hypervigilant. I looked all around myself for cops lurking on the freeway shoulder or on main roads. I crept below twenty-five miles per hour in a school zone, even though school was out. It’s July, for chrissakes, but I still went as slow. I have nothing to fear. Speeding tickets come every ten years or so. The last time a cop pulled me over was in the past decade for speeding in a thirty-five-mile-her-hour zone. I was going fifty. The cop got irritated because I was playing music while he was trying to talk over it. I was so nervous that I forgot the music was even on.

I’m not counting the many parking tickets I received in Los Angeles County. Parking enforcers are the most efficient officers of all because the parking situation in that city is such a mess. There’s a parking meter in just about every space on just about every street. People can’t park anywhere for long because of the number of cars versus the number of streets. I spent two dollars to park for an hour.

I drive only a few days a week, so I don’t have to worry a lot about traffic and parking violations. But man, that last speeding ticket hit me hard. I don’t want to drive again.

“I Don’t Know, Man.”

Confusing times on a Sunday. Was driving through the 111 from the 10 Friday night. It’s a speed trap, miles of lengthy road, just two lanes with no cars in sight, in the middle of the desert. Was going seventy, eighty, kept my eyes off the speedometer. Was stuck in la-la land, thinking about work and rock bands to keep my mind off work all through the ride back from LA.

The 111 has spaces between both two-lane roads where cars can turn around and go the other way. Passed one of them and there was a bike cop, just waiting there. I saw it in my rearview, him turning around and following me. “Oh fuck,” I thought. So I did what every civilian would do and hit the brakes, suddenly trying to obey the law. There were no speed limit signs in sight, so I guessed the limit was fifty-five. I slowed to that. The cop rode my tail for about a mile before he turned his red and blue lights on in the rearview mirror. That was my signal to pull over to the shoulder.

Once the car was in park and I saw him climb off his bike, I thought, “What the hell is he gonna tell me? Maybe he’ll just give me a warning. Yeah. I’m a nice guy. I’ll just act politely toward him, and he’ll appreciate the respect I’m giving.”

He stopped at my passenger side, so I pressed the button for the automatic window to slide down. He didn’t reach his head in or nothing like that. He just stood straight, wearing his cop uniform of course, but also some kind of heavy vest that looked as if it carried a mase canister and a taser, but I wasn’t sure. I didn’t usually see cops wear vests, but they do around here. He kept his helmet on naturally and said, “I’m Officer Martin. I stopped you because you were going eighty-seven in a sixty-five.”

Eighty-seven in a sixty-five? I knew I was going fast but nothing that egregious. Maybe he’d radared the wrong car. Either way, I knew I was screwed. No talking my way out of this one. I just said. “Okay.”

“Your driver’s license, registration, and insurance please,” he said.

I handed over my driver’s license and fumbled around in the glove compartment for the registration paper and handed it to him. Then he looked annoyed and said, “Your insurance?”

“Oh right. Sorry,” I said

I was so nervous and caught in the moment that I forgot that he needed that. I forgot where it was for a second and remembered I kept it in my wallet. So I pulled that little card out and handed it over.

“Give me a few minutes. Don’t go anywhere,” he said, as if I was gonna drive off without my license, registration, and insurance.

I waited for him as he filled out the citation, watching him do it in my rearview, and just thinking how shitty this was. A lot of self-loathing after speeding so fast down the 111 I tell you. It’s a speed trap. I’m never gonna take that road again, but I have to if I want to reach the 10 freeway. There is no other route there from Palm Springs. “Come on. Just hurry up and give me my license and stuff so I can leave,” I thought. “I’m so screwed. How much is the ticket gonna be? What’s all the crap I’m gonna have to do to make up for speeding?”

He gave me my stuff back and spoke so quickly that I couldn’t register what he’d said. He handed me my citation and said, “Drive safely” before he walked back to his bike.

What did he say? I looked in my wallet because I didn’t think he’d given me my insurance card back, but it was there. I was so nervously caught in the moment that I didn’t remember him giving it back to me. But anyway, he’d also written my old Hollywood address on the citation because it was still on my driver’s license. So now I would have to straighten that out with the court. What a headache. Speeding tickets are a bitch, not because of the steep fines but because of all the other nonsense that you have to put up with, such as traffic school. Gotta do that to keep the points off my driving record. My insurance will skyrocket.

I yelled for the cop to come back, but no sir. He drove off, left me there stranded. I also noticed in my rearview another car that was pulled over and a cop bike behind that one too. Those vultures were trying to meet their quotas by the end of the month. It felt better knowing I wasn’t the only one. So I drove off carefully as if another cop was lurking in the bushes somewhere, ready to pop out and write me another citation. I was in the outskirts, right outside of Palm Springs, about five miles from home. It ruined my weekend and will probably ruin my month as I worry about where the speeding ticket will go. To my old Hollywood address? I hope the post office somehow figures their shit out and mails it back to me, or else I’m never gonna get it. And they’ll sting me with late fees. Not to mention having to sign up for traffic school. Who has time for that? I sure don’t. I don’t know, man.