Tag Archives: public transportation

Bus Driver Diaries: Patience, Jackass. Patience.

Driving a school bus is a trick. It requires navigating a rigid, forty foot behemoth on congested freeways, icy country roads, or, worse yet, on school grounds where new teen drivers are swarming out of the parking lot and pedestrians are crossing the bus lane in droves. It’s not for the faint of heart. The other half of bus driving happens inside the bus. While doing all the aforementioned navigating we are supposed keep order among sixty youth exploding with energy. How is this to be done? A line from an old Boy Scout skit has helped me: Patience, Jackass. Patience.

After eight years I was just assigned a new route. Changing routes after so many years is hard. It doesn’t help when the previous driver of your new route tells you how difficult your new route is. It’s a middle school route, after all. Half the seats have three riders; the rest have two. Sixty-four pubescent middle schoolers. Who would accept a route like that?

The previous driver told me that I would need to maintain control. “Once you lose control, it’s hard to get it back,” she said. I’ve driven long enough to already know that.

The first day went well enough. At least I thought it did. That evening, I got a call from an angry mother. In eight years, that is the first angry mother call I have gotten. She told me her kids had sat next to two boys who were “F”ing and “B” ing all the way home. She didn’t think her kids and others should have to listen to that kind of language on the bus. I agreed. She named the two boys. I went through worse case scenarios all night long of how I was going to handle it. I’d talk to the two boys. They would rebel. I’d take it to the principal. He’d slap hands and let it go. I’d have to quit being a bus driver.

First, I called the previous bus driver to find out who these two kids were. When they got on the next morning I had them sit up front with me. I had pictured in my mind big eighth graders with the mark of Satan on their foreheads. Turns out they were little fifth graders with pleasant faces. I told them why they were sitting next to me. They both come from a cowboy heritage so I gave them a cowboy analogy. “Have you ever seen a man in a speedo wearing cowboy boots?” I asked. They grimaced at the image and said they hadn’t. “That’s what foul language is like to those who don’t want to hear it. It’s really bad taste.” Surprisingly they were humble and respectful enough to me.

Since I have the fifth grade up front I assigned these boys seats next to me. We’re getting along just fine. The language has stopped. I let them sing cowboy songs to music on their phone. They turn it off voluntarily as I approach each stop. They are happy. I am happy. The anxiety of a big fight and quitting being a bus driver wasn’t necessary.

On the second day an eighth grade girl in the back was continually leaning out in the aisle to speak to someone behind her. I got after her on the intercom. As she got off the bus I reminded her again to stay out of the aisle. She gave me a dirty look. Then she walked in front of the bus without waiting for me to point her across. I said a few words out the window to her. She gave me a dirtier look.  It was clear to me—she was going to be trouble.

I thought all night about how to handle the situation. I wanted to be in control from the beginning. I thought I might ask her to sit up front the next morning so we could talk. I had a feeling this would not set well with her. It would be humiliating; the fifth graders sit up front.

When she got on the next morning I was distracted. By the time I saw her it was too late to discreetly ask her to sit up front. Instead I called out “Good morning,” as she passed. The look of distrust and anger left her face, replaced by surprise. She surprised me when said, “’Morning” back to me. That seemed like progress, so I let it go at that.

That afternoon, I checked my mirror. She leaned into the aisle a couple of times, but not for long. I let it go. When she got off the bus I said, “Have a good one.” She smiled and nodded. Since then, by eighth grade standards, she’s been downright friendly, and well enough behaved. The other day she informed me that I can call her by the shortened version of her name. I accepted.

I’m learning that you can’t be afraid and be a very good bus driver. Fear drives bad behavior in students and bus drivers. There are very real challenges that have to be dealt with in the life of a bus driver, but “Patience, Jackass. Patience,” has served me well in finding solutions to these challenges.

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These books by Tory Anderson are now available on Amazon in Kindle and paperback format:

     

Bus Driver Diaries: It’s Going to Be Okay

The West Fields route is unique. I have a couple of stops on the west side of the city, and then head out among the farmers’ fields on narrow country roads. The stops are miles apart. Unlike other routes where multiple buses crisscross paths, on out in the West Fields there is only one bus. I like the solitude.

Then there are the kids. I’ve driven the West Fields route for eight years. I’ve watched kids grow from kindergarten to eighth grade. I’ve watched other kids move through elementary school and graduate from high school. The kids on your bus become family. You don’t’ always get along. You don’t always like them. But you are stuck together and you end up caring about each other.

When I got word this summer that I would be changing routes my heart stopped beating for a moment. It was like getting “the call” informing you that someone close to you has died. The thought of being separated from my kids sent a pain through my chest. They were asking me to let go of the West Fields. What would the West Fields be without me? What would I be without the West Fields?

When fourteen year old son heard what route they were asking me to take, he sat straight up in his seat and yelled, “Don’t do it, Dad!” That’s the bus route he rode home on through middle school. He often would skip that bus and wait for my West Fields bus even though it would take him an hour longer to get home. The middle school bus—my new route—has a reputation.

Taking the Middle School route made too much sense. It starts in a small town thirteen miles away from the school. I live in that small town. The first stop is just a half block away from my home. I start at my home in the morning and end at my home at night. The other driver in town moved on and that left me. I made the change.

I’ve driven the route four days now. It’ll be weeks, maybe months, before I build any relationships. Right now it is awkward, like a blind date. I pull up to a stop and open the door. I see a line of young strangers staring up at me. They see a stranger behind the wheel of their bus. Conversation is stilted and difficult. I try to memorize a few names and get them wrong. I turn the wrong direction and have to go around the block. The kids think it’s funny while at the same time being a little impatient—the difficulties of putting up with a new bus driver.

I do miss my West Field kids. I had a line of them waving at me at school as I drove past. It was touching. Strangely enough, even though it’s only been four days, I’m starting to see individuals among those lines of strangers getting on my new route. There’s a sporadic smile, “good morning,” or “thanks for the ride” that catch me off guard. I sense the possibility of being able to love these kids like my West Fields kids. Is that all right? I’m not going to be able to help it.

Just the other morning little seven year old Faith got off the bus at school. Instead of running straight for the school like most kids, she stopped, turned, smiled at me, and waved. Everything is going to be okay.

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These books by Tory Anderson are now available on Amazon in Kindle and paperback format: