It is one of those moments of gentle parental hypocrisy.
Not one of the gobsmackingly obvious ones. Like thinking the time when you’re pouring a glass of wine at the end of a day is a teachable moment for your teenager on the dangers of overindulging in alcohol.
But one of those times when, having arranged your face in a vague approximation of a centered, calm and benevolent presence, you pass on tender advice while all the time your inner chat is screaming.
Like “you might want to steer to the right a bit” when what you actually mean is “WHAT ON EARTH ARE YOU DOING? YOU’RE GOING TO CRASH INTO THOSE VERY EXPENSIVE PARKED CARS”.
I am teaching my teenage daughter to drive.
It is a thing in which I had very little choice. My teenager, having reached the appointed age, became armed with a learner’s licence and having assessed the various merits of her parents stress-wise, she declared that she would like me to be the one to help her learn to drive.
Despite my suggestions that maybe some professional help may suit her better at this initial stage of the project, she insisted that she wanted a parent – being me – to be the one to impart the mysterious knowledge.
And so I am here. A gentle parental hypocrite. Trapped between outward benevolence and the inner torment.
Having the two conversations at once.
Want more? Try: Women without children are neither selfish nor bitter.
The what I say out loud – “the important thing is not to panic” – and the what I say to myself – “BRAKE BRAKE STOP OH MY GOD”