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© Arnel Gonce and AllThingsBoys, 2010. Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this blog’s author and/or owner is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given to Arnel Gonce and AllThingsBoys with appropriate and specific direction to the original content.
you poor thing!!!
I don’t know what the deal was yesterday, but it wasn’t one o the better driving days!
thanks goodness we have those days far and few
Amen!
Uh-oh – that is a scary picture.
Ha ha! Not scary, terrified!
I remember making a person in wheel chair try to get up when I was first learning how to drive. My mother went nuts next to me asking me if saw the poor man.
Ahh memories.
HA HA! That must have been funny! Well, after the fact, anyway.
It really was.
Thank you for giving me my laugh for the day. That is priceless!!!
It made me laugh when I looked at the picture, but I wasn’t laughing while he was driving…more like groweling!
My youngest just turned 16 so we will be in the same position too. I will have to start taking some valium or something!! LOL
Oh dear. Good luck. I am completely out of iron constitution by the time the third one climbs in to the drivers seat. Just don’t have anything left. Poor guy doesn’t stand a chance… 🙂
Love This Photo!
Thanks!
Ha! It doesn’t get any easier even after they’ve had their license for a year or two. I still get in trouble for “holding on!”
Thanks for shattering any illusions I might have had about improvements! :-). LOL.
One question..Who took the picture?….Diane
I took the picture. It was how I felt after Buzzard drove to school… 🙂
Funnyyyyy Diane
🙂
Hee hee! Love your photos 🙂
It was fun to take. I came home feeling like my life had been in jeopardy, grabbed my camera and put it on the tripod, marched outside with my car in the driveway and snapped the photo. 🙂
Ah, memories… I think my late mother looked like that after she spent a few hours trying to teach me how to drive a stick shift…
(And the fact that she’s my *late* mother had nothing to do with teaching me to drive…)
Ah, the stick shift. That’s coming. I learned on a stick shift. I think everyone should learn on a stick shift. We didn’t have one to teach the boys, but my father owned an old jeep willey from 1948 that I’m now having shipped here (we bought it from him before he died, but never collected it). I resolved to teach them on that. Should be entertaining… 🙂
And I’m sure you did fine, but it probably added a few gray hairs to her head… 🙂
I never ventured to teach my girls to drive … and now I know why LOL – I left it to the professionals. And good thing or we might not be speaking any more.
Here the parents are expected to give their kids 25 hours before they start behind the wheel. If the show up and don’t appear to have any experience, they will send them home. 😦
When I learned to drive in Baltimore, lo, these many millennia ago, you had six weeks of classroom training (at a private company), and eight hours of road training (also by a private company). Schools and parents had nothing to do with it (except to pay for it, in the case of the parents).
My, how things have changed. I remember driving with my mom, but I don’t know that it was required, per se.
I love it!
That’s probably how my dad must have felt! ha ha
🙂 And if you learned to drive in London, he has a special place in Heaven! Lord that place is difficult to drive in, LOL!
ha ha..lol..indeed I did!
I take off my hat to you–I bet you are an awesome driver! (You’d have to be…) 🙂
Funny 🙂 You have a career in the movies Arnel 😀
🙂 Thanks Madhu, but Hollywood might not agree!