Friday, March 22, 2019
Highway Bound :: essays papers
Highway Bound Highway 40, is it a battleground or an interstate highway? It is a large mass of asphalt, dark rubber tucker marks burnt into pavement, tons of fast moving steel, confusion, boiling anger, psychogenic anguish and lost souls. I view the nations first federally funded interstate as a large mass of asphalt that stretches from North Carolina to California. I have personally spent many infuriating, intense and mentally drain hours on this highway, traveling in route among Durham and Raleigh. The memories of a thousand trips all seem to fuse into one long entrepot of roadwork, delays, chaos and horror. It takes strenuous efforts to confess and alleviate this burden from my shoulders. The nightmare begins as I navigate my pearl white Toyota Supra onto the Highway 147 onramp, denoted by an ever so familiar reflective green sign. My music blares a blissful tune as I sink the accelerator to the floor. Gaining speed, winning flight so that I can successfully merge i nto the ageless column of vehicles racing towards their separate destinations. As I merge dispatch of the onramp and into chaos I look cautiously over my shoulder, checking to make sealed I am clear to get in. A mini new wave the color of the darkest midnight is the single obstacle in view. I merge successfully deciding the boring moving vehicle is well out of danger. No sooner do I slide securely into my lane upon the black asphalt than I notice that this family transport of safety is not really that, but a marauding mother hauling her troops into combat. The dark figure of the van grows larger and larger until it appears I am merely an obstacle meant to be trampled. I look down and realize that we are reaching speeds of fourscore miles per hour, yet this minivan has virtually become a part of my bumper. I second questioning glances asshole me trying to predict the mad womans intentions. Unable to bring solace to the growing war behind me, I face forward concentrating on sim ply keeping my car between the bright, pure white line running broken down the highway. I keep my car within a few feet of the one in front of me, trying not to infringe upon danger but at the same time trying to keep mother murder behind me from laying on her horn.
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