Showing posts with label DMV Delirium. Show all posts
Showing posts with label DMV Delirium. Show all posts

Monday, September 13, 2010

A Bunch of Crazies

If my family were a shopping cart it would be the kind you'd avoid because it's got a squeaky misaligned wheel.  Only in my particular case, it wouldn't be just one bad wheel, it would be at least three.  And expecting it to travel in a strait and predictable quiet path would be out of the question. Basically, if my family was indeed a shopping cart, it would be the one you would quickly take back to the cart corral and exchange for a new one.

That's because it's really no secret that my family gene pool has been marinating in crazy for some time.  I've never hidden the fact that one of my unconventional but favorite uncles had a knack for holding solemn occasions in not-so-solemn locations.  Namely a marriage that took place in a nudist colony, Christmases spent in lock-down, and even his own funeral was held at the Screaming Chicken Saloon
(If you're a member of a notorious biker "club" you'll know exactly where that is).

Nor have I made secret that my eccentric aunt spent years dabbling in the fine art of hyperbole.  She'd constantly hustle her neighbors, unsuspecting waiters and waitresses, even her mailman, with flagrant and erroneous updates on me and my siblings--claiming that we were child prodigies (a serious crime of untruth).   When we'd arrive at her house for summer visits she would give us a verbal dossier in order to get our stories strait.  My brother who she professed to be the "youngest astronaut-in-training",  my sister the "Olympic Gymnast", and me the "successful child actor" would spend a few minutes studying our bogus biographies as if we'd just been put into the witness protection program and our lives depended on it.  Then she would promptly unveil us like a traveling stage show in a dizzying parade of pride.

...and these are just the relatives I dare blog about.

But one confession that I rarely let slip through is the one about my own father.  Crazy uncles and aunts are a staple but a direct relation that makes up one half of your DNA strand seems to mar your personal integrity with greater abruptness.  The secret about my father proves so salacious that people far and wide know the sordid details without my having to publicize it--which really doesn't make it much of a secret does it?

My dad became a bona fide family crazy about a decade ago.  He abruptly changed his first name and officially declared himself a "Sovereign Nation".  At the time, I'd only heard of the declarations of Independence or perhaps declarations of items you've brought with you across a border--but declaring yourself a sovereign nation?
Well, that one I had to Google.

His "manifest destiny" as I like to call it,  came about when some governmental red tape became his "last straw".  Instead of complaining about it like the rest of us casually do, my father actually did something about it...something crazy.  His formal show of force came in the form of the aforementioned declaration and drastic name change. 

As for the name change, that becomes a little more confusing.  Usually names are changed from an irregular name to something more familiar.  Perhaps your parents were products of the 60's and named you  "Galaxy" and you just wanted something more normal and so you legally change it to "Bob".  Fair and normal enough.  But that is not the case here--which really comes as no surprise given my genetic predisposition for the unorthodox.  In this case, my father chose to name himself after one of the 50 states.  For me, it just doesn't roll of the tongue very easily to call my own father a name that I associate with a fifth grade test that forced me to memorize it's associated capital city and shape on a map.  So I just stick with calling him "Dad".  My sister, however, loves to use his new name and uses it often and almost incessantly in awkward misplaced areas in a sentence as if she's some sort of stenographer who's getting paid by the word.

The whole ordeal has become sort of a family ruse.  When any of us begin to look like were stressed out and about to succumb to the ill pressures of life, one of us blurts out, "you're not going to go change your name are you?"  It's sort of become a kind of code for losing it.  A familial litmus test.  One of the perils of having a lifetime pre-paid membership in my peculiar yet special family also inevitably means that any one of us are all one stressful situation away from joining our kindred crazies in a brazen act of nonconformity.

Poor Mitchell had just that kind of episode a few days ago...

Mitchell went to register and renew the plates on his car at the DMV and when he came home he gave me quite a scare.

His plates had expired (as a nice police officer, accompanied by flashing lights, had so kindly pointed out to him).  This meant that the poor kid got his first taste of Real Life 101 when he went down to the DMV to renew and pay the fees ON HIS OWN.  When he arrived, he found an unusually long line for even the "take a number" machine.  It took a half hour to reach the service counter.  There he learned that the DMV does not accept debit cards.  Only cash or checks.

Mitchell, of generation Y, was puzzled because he had never even seen an actual check nor written one.  In the year he has had his own checking account he has successfully remained paperless and never found an occasion that required actual paper to transfer money.

The DMV attendant at the window directed him to the nearest ATM and instructed him to hurry back as he would have to wait in line all over again.  

So Mitchell ran across the street where he paid $4 in fees for the privilege to use a non-friendly ATM machine and withdrew $100 in cash.  He dashed back to the DMV where he waited again in yet another long line.  Another half hour later he once again stood before the disinterested DMV man.  Mitchell confidently slide the documents and cash across to him to finalize his first of many painful DMV extortions  transactions only to be told callously that the amount owed was more than double the amount that was actually listed on his official DMV papers.  Although it stated that he owed $75, the man told him the total was incorrect and that he needed to pay $175...cash or check, of course.  

Mitchell, who was now slightly distraught having only withdrawn $100 from the ATM, made his way back across the street.  In an attempt to avoid another $4 "transaction fee" he decided to go to a nearby store and get a cold beverage with his debit card and get $100 cash back.  Smart kid right?  Unfortunately his plan backfired.  The store only allowed him to take just $10 extra.  This meant a return  to the offending ATM machine to extract another $100 after all.  And of course the machine again charged him another $4 service fee. 

For the second time he made his way on foot, across traffic and waited in line-this time for 40 minutes.  He slid $175 of his hard earned summer job savings across the counter only to be given in return, two tiny little stickers for his car's license plate.

Mitchell arrived home and came straightaway to find me and give me all the sordid details of his  distressing DMV experience.  His tale included uncharacteristic undertones of hostility accompanied by mild gesturing--which is an extreme act in Mitchell's case.  I sat listening and tried really hard to act upset over the first of many costly predicaments that lay in wait for the rest of his adult life.  Unfortunately my insensitive response was, "Just think, when your plates expire in two more years you get to do it all over again!"

To which he looked at me and said, "Mom, I'm so frustrated I'm about ready to change my name and declare myself a sovereign nation!"


I was horrified at how easily this thought rolled off his tongue...but not surprised.
 
Yet another family member gone mad.  I suppose it was only a matter of time.

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

There's no ASAP at the DMV

Sunday…
As fate would have it, Mitchell’s 16th birthday happened to land on a Sunday. A Sunday! This is no good, especially for a teenage boy who’d rather be celebrating his momentous milestone by getting his license and not by sitting on a hard church pew contemplating hellfire and damnation.

Monday…
Bright and early, Mitchell and I arrive down at the Department of Motor Vehicles and are happy to find that we we're the first to arrive in the parking lot, ahhhh! No waiting in line! We park the car, skip excitedly to the door, and…it’s locked! What? How can this be? Mitchell had just waited 24 torturous hours with all the feigned patience and determination of a man on death row awaiting an 11th-hour pardon, only to find the door to his future would remain locked tight! Freedom denied! The sign read: “Mondays-Closed”. The DMV’s four-day workweek had shattered all hope. His car, like his dreams, would sit idle. Someone in President Obama’s administration should be alerted to the fact that the business hours of this particular branch of government has turned the campaigned promise of “HOPE” to “Nope”. Apparently “Yes We Can” only operates from 9-5pm Tuesday through Friday.

Tuesday…
Tuesday's tale is what your math teacher would call “a story problem”. Feel free to use the "new math" from my previous blog to see if you can solve it: The DMV stipulates that if you’re taking a written test you must be in line AND have your number called no less than one hour before closing, “No Exceptions”. Okay, so let’s do the math…hmmm…this means we can’t be called any later than 4pm and the line, if of average length, could take about 30 minutes should two service windows be hypothetically open and the lobby had less than say, five people in it. That means we’ve got to arrive no later than 3:30pm, but we must allow for the fact that school gets out at 3:45pm, 15 minutes past our time, plus it takes 10 minutes to pick him up and drive there at speeds no greater than 35mph (are you keeping up? I’m now reaching for my scientific calculator) therefore, we discover the total sum will require me to nab Mitchell out of the last bit of school and pick him up at about 3:20pm right? Wrong! Silly me, I forgot to factor in that it takes an additional 10 minutes to actually fill out the school’s paper work explaining why I am willfully retarding my son's education by taking him out of school mischievously early. So by the time I pen my way through the school's official forms declaring myself a derelict parent, you guessed it, we arrived 10 minutes too late to WAIT FOR for a test on Tuesday.

Wednesday…
Things are looking up. It’s “early out” at the high school and we’re ready to shake off the bad DMV vibes and try it again! This time, with the coordinated effort rivaling the tactics of General MacArthur, we set our watches, mapped our route into enemy territory, and set a rendezvous place and time to begin our DMV invasion. Like clockwork, everything went off as planned! We arrived 1 hour and 32 minutes before closing, took our number…and waited. Looking back, I should have been a little alarmed that the parking lot was packed full of cars, as was the waiting area, but I took comfort in the fact that there were three windows open and the line was moving right along. This could be our day! No sooner did we take our seats, the lady behind window #1 finishes up with her customer, shuts her window, and starts counting the money in her till! An hour-and-a-half before closing! She then turns and disappears behind a mysterious door where I assume secret closing rituals take place that must take precisely an hour and a half to orchestrate an official DMV shutdown. Now we were down to two open windows! I looked at Mitchell with widened eyes, and started fidgeting. “We’re gonna make it,” I reassured him timidly. Four minutes later the lady behind window #3 finishes with her customer and instead of calling the next number, she bends down and reaches for something…what could it be? Hurry lady…get your shoe-lace tied or pick up your dropped pen, or whatever it is and call the next number! Suddenly she stands back up, looks out at the packed waiting room, and shuts her window! Incredulously, she heads out into the lobby among the impatient masses holding a giant blue recycle bin! Thinking global (obviously not local) she proceeds to gather recyclables from all the lobby trash cans! I suddenly felt sick and needed to breathe in a paper bag(I wonder if she's got one in there?). We now had 10 minutes left before the DMV went to official "nope status". While she was saving the planet, I was trying to save my son-the room was swirling for the poor boy who was seeing his hopes and dreams getting refused, reused, and recycled! Tick-tock, tick-tock…we were glued to the clock on the wall. Then, like a dagger striking at our hearts, the big hand finally lurched to 4pm, our number was never called. At 4:05pm we left the DMV parking lot empty handed…again!

Thursday…
We’ve blocked Thursday’s events from our memory. Through a series of shock treatments we could probably begin to piece the shattered moments together but I’m not sure it'd be worth it. Whatever did happen, it clearly did not include the getting of any license.

Friday…
All is lost. There is no hope, only long lines.

Saturday...Sunday...Monday…
You guessed it…closed. closed. closed.

Tuesday…
A change of tactics. The gloves are off, there’s a score to settle. The plan: skip school, skip the written test, and go strait for the actual driving part. You have to have an appointment for that, won't that force them to take us? We’ll worry about taking the written part later! We arrive for our scheduled test early and to our overwhelming joy and satisfaction Mitchell's number was finally called! Late, but it was called! This was better than winning the lottery! Off he went, keys, car, proof of insurance, and DMV official test-giver. Twenty minutes later he was back with a huge smile and had passed the driving part. Yahoo! Then, we heard these melodious words, “Since you passed the driving part, would you just like to skip through the other line and take the written part right now?” They had surrendered. Victory was in sight! Mitchell strutted off to the test area to defeat the enemy that had forced him to drive with his mother for far too long.

Happily, he passed the written part and now it’s official, he’s licensed to hit the road. We’re fully taking advantage of the fresh excitement that takes hold of every new driver by sending him on all our monotonous errands before he uncovers the truth: that they’re really not that exciting to run and that’s why we’re not doing them ourselves. We figure we’ve got another two or three months before he catches on! Anyone need something from the store? He'll do anything but run to the DMV!

(Stay tuned for the crash blog. As we learned all to well with our first teen driver, it doesn't take long before we'll be inevitably blogging that impending disaster. This time we haven't abetted the situation by throwing a nice car into the mix, poor kid, that's what you get for being born second.)
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