Slow Ride

There are songs from my youth that take me right back to a certain time and place. Foghat’s Slow Ride returns me to a concert at the Amarillo Civic Center in 1976, and perhaps the wildest night of my life. 

My roommate, C, and I had won tickets to see Foghat on a call-in radio contest. I’m going to confess that I wasn’t really into Foghat. I was more of an Eagles fan–mellow country rock. But C was a huge Foghat fan, and rather than let her go alone I gamely put on a t-shirt paired with a pair of faded and flared hip huggers and let her lead me into that den of iniquity.

C and I carried in bottles of Boone’s Farm Wine underneath our jackets–her idea, and by the time the opening act came onstage we were already pretty tipsy. The Marshall Tucker Band opened for Foghat that night. I’ve often thought that was an odd combination, but it worked. 

When Foghat took the stage an electricity like nothing I’d ever experienced lit the air. My good girl self got lost in a barrage of pounding drums and heavy metal guitar. Joints were passed. I might’ve inhaled. We passed our wine around. The whole night swam in front of my eyes like a fuzzy psychedelic movie. All the time my good girl self kept saying, “Just for tonight, kiddo. Just for tonight.”

Some random male in the crowd kept touching me inappropriately. Even in my out of body frame of mind I knew I needed to find a safer spot to stand. I elbowed C and motioned to a spot where we could have our backs to the wall. We began systematically making our way to the safe spot, but somewhere on our route we were separated. 

I didn’t panic at first. We’d driven my car to the venue, so I knew I could get home. But there was no way I’d leave my roomie. As the band played their encores I began hunting actively for her. No luck. I stood around as the concert hall emptied. Still no C. 

Nowadays we could just text or call, but back in the olden days that wasn’t an option. I feared the worst. Maybe the guy who’d been targeting my delicate femininity had grabbed my friend.

Finally I went to my old Ford Galaxy and stood there, hoping she’d meet me back at our starting point. I saw an old boyfriend. He suggested I go home and wait for C to call. And that’s what I did.

Sure enough, around 5 a.m. the phone rang. C had gone partying with a group she’d met and needed a ride home. I was relieved. And pissed. Did she have any idea how worried I’d been? 

On the ride back to our rental I chewed her out a bit. She just grinned. She might’ve said, “Sorry MOM!” 

I never had another night like that. Fun and crazy and a little scary. My good girl self knew she’d had quite enough. But oh, it was fun to be out of control for awhile.

Being out of control–that’s what I remember when I hear Slow Ride.

http://youtu.be/GcCNcgoyG_0

Unknown's avatar

Author: nananoyz

I'm a semi-retired crazy person with one husband and two cats.

3 thoughts on “Slow Ride”

  1. You must have been so worried. It is amazing how different things are nowadays, though. Everybody seems to have a phone, a tablet or an iPod with them at all times, so long frantic waits for missing friends are presumably a thing of the past.

    Liked by 1 person

      1. They’re good in a lot of ways, but I’m not overly fond of them myself. My wife always knows where I am and can ask me to stop off at the supermarket to buy a couple of bags of sugar and a bag of potatoes, or whatever.

        Liked by 1 person

Leave a reply to BunKaryudo Cancel reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

I didn't have my glasses on....

A trip through life with fingers crossed and eternal optimism.

Praying for Eyebrowz

Doing the best I can with what I have

Chaos with Cheese

kind of sad, but not so bad with cheese. cheese not provided.

Christine's Collection

My streams of thought meet here

JULIJA RUART

Conceptual Photographer and Writer

Misterio Press

Killer Fiction

Sean of the South Podcast

Music and Storytelling

Life is a rusty rollercoaster

A bit of this...A bit of that...bit of everything...come on in...

roughwighting

Life in a flash - a bi-weekly storytelling blog

Mark My Words

MARK PETRUSKA | WRITER

Dave Astor on Literature

Short essays about novels and other fictional works

Here There be Poems

By Ian Garrabrant

incomprehensibus

Home of Micropoetry, Literature, art and philosophy.

Entertaining Stories

Just a fiction writer, trying to reach the world.

Wagons Ho

I'd curtsy but I'm drunk.