Bitch, please…I’m from Detroit. I have friends who also come from there, and we all agree: we are so entirely grateful that we grew up in Detroit. Don’t tell us Detroit isn’t the greatest city – we are not listening. Because obviously you don’t know what you are talking about. Or what you’ve missed.
For starters, I have always said that if you can drive in Detroit you can drive anywhere in the world. Well. Once again: if you learned to drive in Detroit, you can drive well anywhere in the world. I stand by that to this day. I have been driving for over 5 decades now, not that I needed to be convinced. I have driven in other countries, including on the other side of the road. I have had to intercept the keys from people I was not willing to ride with and then drive in unfamiliar cities – like L.A. and San Fransisco. I’ve driven across farmland where no road existed. Waited for a crew to haul in dirt where the monsoons had taken out the narrow jungle road because there was no way to turn around. I’ve driven through mountains in a blizzard. I have discovered that learning to drive in Detroit prepared me to handle any road situation.
One lazy Saturday afternoon shortly after after getting my driver’s license, I took my mother’s car and my younger sister and headed downtown shopping for school clothes. I worked part time at Saks Fifth Avenue across from the Fisher Building, which meant an employee discount. Waiting at a light on Second Ave., the cars in front of me were going out into the other lane to go around something. I couldn’t see what it was until the car directly in front of me pulled around…a dead body. There was a tall older man lying in the crosswalk across my lane. The other drivers all went around him and continued on their merry way! Maybe they recognized him from the neighborhood and knew something I did not.
I threw the car into park, yelled at my sister not to unlock the doors for anyone but me, and ran into the corner drug store screaming. “Get out here! Somebody help!” Two men casually walked out of the store, picked the guy up and dragged him off to the sidewalk. Apparently he was not, in fact, dead. He was passed out drunk. Good for him.
No two days of driving in Detroit were ever the same. One night driving north on I-75, I noticed the taillights of the car ahead in my lane were doing something weird. They were coming toward me. Fast. As in, this bigass car was speeding directly toward me in reverse. Okay. I pulled off onto the shoulder and let him pass. To this day I wonder if he knew he was driving backwards.
And then…there was the time I was headed to a New Years Eve party at a friend’s house. I had only been there once and knew one route. It was closed. To be specific, it was blocked off by police barricades and officers with rifles. Whatever. I turned off onto a side street and then back north again parallel to where I had been. Now I was driving up a lovely residential street in the right direction. But something was off. The street was covered in cops. Big dogs in vests. Helicopter overhead. Oops. I had driven into an active crime scene. All I thought about was my Mother’s reaction if her new car got bullet holes. Phew….she would be mad at me.
But learning to drive in Detroit is just a small part of the reason it was such a great place to grow up. There is no where else like it on earth. It is so full of art and music and scrappy people. They are my tribe. Of course, I need to qualify this: I was a skinny Irish girl living in an upper-class suburb, attending a private school. But more on that later. Even that was a clusterfuck of dysfunction.
