I’m a bit impulsive. So in October, when the opportunity came to partner with a race car driver around a grand-prix track at 150 miles an hour in a supercharged, ground-hugging, open to the elements hell-on-wheels speedster in Austin, Texas, I said "sure."
Back story first. (If not interested in normal weekend-away things, skip down three paragraphs to the chase.) A community organizer and her savvy daughter invited me down to attend a house party honoring the late Texas governor, Ann Richards. The governor had founded a successful, eponymous, all-girls high school right before her death. A great event, and a chance for a return to a city I had not been to since I was in my twenties and my first husband was in officer’s training for Vietnam.
Most of the long weekend was a chill-out. I scarfed ginger pancakes at the glam Driskell hotel, admired butterfly weed at the Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Preserve, dawdled at a downtown Mexican-art gallery, pondered a seven/eighths replica of the oval office at the LBJ Library. Normal getaway things. At a wellness retreat called the Crossings, I was even cuddled and swirled for an hour in a pool by a nice lady giving me a watsu (water/shiatsu) massage.
I downed fried frogs legs and Lone Star beer, and pulled-pork on Wonder Bread. I waved to Austin's homeless transvestite mayoral candidate, who was walking downtown in a bra and a beard. I watched millions of bats head out of their cave at sunset, heard live, maverick music at divey UT places, and drove through the hill country.
And then came the call. Friend of my friend opening a Grand Prix track at an east Austin former pecan farm on the Colorado River. The course was almost finished, but was being tested. Do I want to ride alongside a pro and try it out?
I tend to say yes before I think things through.
I met Bob a few minutes before I was about to entrust my life to him. He's a former Internet exec who had scrapped it all to race Ferraris in Grand Prix events, and mentor wannabe racers like Craig T Nelson ("Coach" and "a brilliant driver"), and Lance Armstrong ("feisty with the ladies" according to Bob).
Ok. Bob was a pro, and I rationalized I could add to my bucket list with this crazy endeavor. Besides, I figured, I sometimes speed on the parkways. What’s a few more miles faster? Like, say, twice as fast! Anyway, I helmeted up in the seat beside him with false bravado. Bob set a mic so I could scream that we stop the madness, and he strapped me in a four-points seat belt.
The race car was open to the air and so low I felt I was sitting on the dusty ground. That is something I didn’t factor in. It felt more like being in a streamlined bumper car than an automobile.
Suddenly, before I had a chance to say “Let me think a bit more about this ….” the motor whined like a jet engine, the tires screeched, and within a few seconds my face felt like it was plastered to the back of my head.
I can't adequately describe the terror of immediately accelerating from 0 to 150, hurtling around a race course purposely set with unexpected curves, bumps, and straightaways. It was the fastest I’d ever moved on the ground (except maybe when I was running away from a horny bull in a pasture one time – another story), but it seemed endless. And I was determined not to wimp out and push the panic button. Besides being impulsive, I’m stubborn.
When I asked Bob later, after my face returned forward, he said the closest experience would be flying in an F-16 jet: G-forces, blinding speed, pumping adrenaline, the feeling of flying. I will never experience a Top Gun moment, and I have never skydived or bungee jumped or accomplished other breathtaking endeavors which I’m sure some of you have. I can only attest it was ten times scarier than the highest, fastest roller coaster I had ever been on. And a coaster is simulated danger. This was the real deal.
I hated every minute, twice. Because when Bob, an exceptionally charming sadist, saw that I was petrified, he sped me around the track again. And this time we came less than a car's length behind another car (a normal-looking one) that seemed to be dawdling along (probably at 100). What was that about? Ever since driver's ed I knew that you're supposed to leave two car lengths, even at normal speed. I began to question Bob’s judgment, but it was too late.
And then there was the "J curve," a maneuver Bob teaches the military in case they ever have to get out of an alley in Baghdad, fast. Without stopping, the car turns into reverse and speeds the other way. It was over before I had a chance to close my eyes. I just, and I mean just, managed to hold down my Tex-Mex lunch. (Yeah, I know. Dumb.)
Afterwards, "relaxing" with Bob in the trailer, I noticed blood on his shirt. I must have been in a daze, because I didn't even see it before. I now also noticed a scar on the left side of his face, by his nose. He had said he always escaped mishaps. He just didn't say how many, and in what shape.
As we chatted further I surmised that Bob is a rare breed: an auto-sexual. He belongs to this fancy, famous downtown Austin men's club called El Reyes, where he indulges in single-blade shaves, massages, pedis and such. I imagined him, still in his bloody shirt, with a margarita in his hand in his private room, custom music playing, getting man-scaped. I wonder if I would have trusted my life in his hands if I knew they were creamed and manicured.
Anyway, I do not recommend the race-car experience to the timid or the sensible, which still leaves a few of you. No naming names, as we have written quite enough about that in other posts.
Relieved I was still alive, I returned home ready to face the biggest risk of all: keeping my money in equities.


Salon.com
Comments
I'd probably do it, too, but I wouldn't be as honest and honorable as you were. Because I'm a huge liar when my 'womanhood' is questioned (too much testosterone?), I'd be "it was fine!" and then go home and shake for several hours. Unless I peed on myself, in which case, they'd all know.
You are a brave woman.
I know a couple of students in the Ann Richards school, and I have high hopes for it. Holler, if you are ever in Austin again.
And yes, one thing you have to remember if you ever get in one of those cars -- go to the bathroom first.
And I'm not sure I'm brave. Just a bit reckless.
I love your city. The food is great. The music is great. The vibe is great. I could have just done without the racing car. That wasn't so great (for me).
I must admit I'm more than a little jealous. As a lifetime motorhead, I'd jump at the opportunity, as you did. There is something about rapid acceleration that gets me all apeman, which helps, in part, to explain my love of motorcycles. There is a one mile track in Orlando that has ride arounds in NASCAR style cars.
You can also drive the cars but the cost is well beyond me without a lotto win. The NASCAR rides are not open cockpit like the car you rode in, which would only add to your thrill ride.I think I'll go ride my motorcycle now!
PS. I'm still soooo jealous!
“I don't think about risks much. I just do what I want to do. If you gotta go, you gotta go.”
GM, I say if you gotta go, you gotta go all the time on the way to the ladies room. But I do get your point.
Liz, Your sister? That's flattering. And that would mean you would say yes and I imagine.
Luckily I was too scared to do much of anything except wish it were over.
rated for bravery and/or naivety??? I would have been another one Lea to say "hell yes", then regret it.
Thanks,
Greg
I do have immense admiration for people who can do this sort of potentially fatal thing day after day and enjoy it. I don't understand them, but I admire them.
'
Long story how I got it (semi-romantic) but the bad news is a sold it for a song. Couldn't maintain it and the market was low. Anyway, I have the memories, lemon or not.
I got my ride at Daytona, not sure I was conscious the whole time but I do remember three things: 1) the car seemed tipped sideways to my left the whole time, 2) the noise was staggering and 3) the vibration was so pervasive and intense that, well, hmm, let's just say I expected a whole different meaning from your fab term 'auto-sexual.'
Odette, I shook for hours afterward on a variety of levels.
I agree on #1 and #2. And as for #3, either I was too scared to notice or it else it was a less interesting track.
Now there was a school bus once ... but again, another story.
Questions to ponder...
Greg, you must be feeling better. That visual is just too funny. I now won't be able to look at Squirrel's avatar without thinking of his flying nuts.
"Auto-sexual". Snork. Damn, you write well.
I can understand your chills doing this -- I've always hated being a passenger on two wheels or four. Same reason, I presume, that I don't like flying (except in a helicopter, and I'm simply not going to try to figure that one out). If it's ME doing the crazy things, that's OK; having to rely on someone else is just plain frightening. Especially at speed. What kind of car was it?
I was in a car once with an old chum who used to rally (Corvairs, of all things, with reworked suspension). He showed me the finer points of the "J" turn you describe, although he called it the "bootlegger" turn. It's nuts, but effective.
i would kill for a chance to do that (i'm not kidding but only someone i don't like). i'd prefer to do the driving though. i know, i'm probably safer in the hands of a pro but i'm something of a control freak.
you probably had no idea how true that last line would turn out to be when you wrote this.
Cap'n, you're right. That was just the beginning and I would have been much better off if I had taken my money out back in Sept!