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Up until I was 10 years old, we lived in town. In fact, we lived in a house right behind the elementary school. I walked to school, so I could sleep a little later than other kids. As you walked to school, you could hear the swings creak as kids were swinging and hear the bearings whine as the merry-go-round spun round and round until children became queasy and needed to throw up. The big water oak tree with its trunk stained white was right between our house and the school. It was stained white because that's the tree that teachers would send kids out to "dust the erasers" on. No one does that anymore, but when there were chalkboards and chalk, you'd have to erase the board. Pretty soon the erasers filled with chalk dust and needed to be dusted. Kids would bang the erasers on the tree trunk and the chalk dust would fly. Weird memories, for sure.
But in 1976, everything changed. We moved to a house in the country. There was no more walking to school 10 minutes before the bell rang. We rode the school bus. Since we lived far out of town, we'd have to get up early and wait at the bus stop (sometimes in the dark). The bus stop was an old wooden, musty-smelling structure with a tin roof that my parents had moved out and positioned close to the road. It had a bench in it. It kept us dry on rainy days as we waited for the bus.
Mr. Lambert was the first school bus driver I remember. He was a kind man. I would ride my bike out to his house and sell him seeds for our 4-H project. When he retired, Mrs. Audrey picked up the route. Mrs. Audrey had a large family and they were all talented bluegrass musicians and singers that could play and harmonize with the best of them. They lived back in the woods and kind of lived off the land.
Mrs. Audrey didn't only teach her kids music. Why, she taught everyone on the school bus. She had an 8 track player on her bus. She would play Ronnie Milsaps' "Smoky Mountain Rains" and Merle Haggard's "If we make it through December," John Conlee's "Rose colored glasses," and George Jones' "He stopped loving her today." Those were weighty issues in those songs for a 10 year old to digest, but as the bus rambled across the backroads with the windows down on the bus and wind whipping through our hair since there was no air conditioner, my young mind was pondering, "What if they don't make it through December?" I was also thinking about the couple in "He stopped loving her today," wishing that she would have come to see him before he up and died. That would have been better and the song wouldn't have been so doggone sad!
We made good friends on the bus and we'd sit with them and talk and even sing as we got to know the words to every song on every 8 track tape Mrs. Audrey had. The older, cooler kids sat in the very back of the bus. Sometimes we'd even see some older boys kissing their girlfriends, but they'd have to be sneaky about it. Mrs. Audrey had a big rear view mirror that stretched halfway across the windshield. She would watch what was going on IN the bus more than on the road ahead, and for good reason! In addition to kissing, sometimes there would be bullying and fights. You would see Mrs. Audrey looking back in that mirror with a glare in her eye and an ash about an inch long hanging off her cigarette. She ran a pretty tight ship. She was no pushover and wasn't shy about keeping her passengers in line.
I rode the bus for a long time, but one day my friend got his driver's license and invited me to start riding with him. He had a yellow 1979 Monte Carlo, and he would swing through our circle drive and pick me up for the ride to school. He had a good stereo system in his car AND had air conditioning. That was a plus. There were, of course, some downsides. My friend would pick me up after eating a big scrambled egg breakfast. I would jump in his car, and sorry, gentle readers, my friend was quite flatulent.
I would close the door and my olfactory system would be immediately accosted by the most sulfurous, acrid stench you could imagine. It would singe the hairs in my nose. You would really need to shelter in place after experiencing the foul fumes, the malodorous aroma. I would begin rolling down the window (no power windows) in frantic fashion, hoping for fresh air to fill that interior.
It was times like that that made me long for Mrs. Audrey's school bus where Merle Haggard, in his song, "Rainbow Stew" taught me to be hopeful for a better future where life was simple, happy, utopian and harmonious. I think I might have learned more on Mrs. Audrey's Bluebird School bus than I did in school. I tip my hat to you, Mrs. Audrey, if there is a bus driver hall of fame, you deserve to be recognized in it.