Lea Lane

Lea Lane
Location
Florida, USA
Birthday
August 26
Title
freelance writer/editor
Bio
“I’ve discovered the secret of life,” Kay Thompson, the eccentric entertainer and “Eloise” author, once said. “A lot of hard work, a lot of sense of humor, a lot of joy and a lot of tra-la-la!” And that's been my life: As a travel writer for over 30 years, I've been around the block (more like around the world), and I write true stories about interesting people and places. I've lived an unconventional life in conventional trappings. Been a corporate VP, worked with foster kids, acted in an Indie ("Nurse 1"), was on Jeopardy!. I've been managing editor of a travel publication, written for the Times, and authored books. OS is my home, but I also blog on The Huffington Post, and I've contributed (mostly anonymously) to everything from encyclopedias to guidebooks. Married young, divorced late; married late, widowed early, I dated lots in-between -- and survived a scary illness. After being happily, peacefully solo for many years, I'm now happily married again. I founded and still edit www.sololady.com, a lifestyle Website for single women. I'm truly grateful for each precious day, each well-earned wrinkle, my family, my cat. Truth, laughter, friendship, late love. And this blog -- on this wonderful site!

MY RECENT POSTS

Lea Lane's Links

LINKS
Favorite THINGS posts
Favorite FUN posts
Favorite PEOPLE posts
Favorite PLACES posts
SEPTEMBER 20, 2010 7:39AM

Fun, Loss, Death, Love: A Life Along I-95

Rate: 47 Flag

images

 

I realized the other day that the river of my life has been I-95, the highway that starts in Canada and ends thousands of miles later and a couple of minutes away from where I now live in Miami.

At night, from my condo's 22nd floor window, I-95 is an endlessly moving artery, creeping drivers and macho weavers cutting it too close. I drive it all the time: from South Beach to see my sister, and to Hollywood and Ft. Lauderdale and up the coast to see friends. I take it to both Miami and Hollywood airports. I start toward my hospital in Weston using the express lane.

Long before the eight lanes and sound baffles were built, my brother and I drove with our parents from Miami to a cousin's wedding up north, in 1950, on secondary roads. I remember that we stopped at a rooming house in Georgia and the water tasted like rotten eggs. No expressways = no chain motels. Slow going, saggy beds, endless red lights: another era. 

The country's expressway system was a product of President Eisenhower's vision of a roadway with no lights and sustained speeds connecting the cities of America.  Much of I-95 was started in the 1950s and some southern parts weren’t finished until forty years later. Today, much of it needs reworking, in a time of needed work.

When I was a senior in high school the first section in Miami opened to much fanfare, and my friend Helene Zablow with a lisp and a ponytail, 17 years old, was the first fatality on this segment of I-95, her name splashed all over the Miami Herald. How many deaths have followed in the many years since, I wonder.

Many times I've driven back and forth up the east coast, to see friends and family, and for many of those years with no seat belts, no aircon, and 50 mile speed limits. The jewel cities of Savannah and Charleston have been fun stops. I've seen South of the Border grow from a motel on the South Carolina border, to a destination with rides, restaurants and punny road signs for miles that still make me laugh.

Traffic around DC is predictable.  So are the cheap motels off most exits, the monotonous pines, the exits for starchy road food and quick rests. And if you drive from Miami to New York there are usually a few accidents to rubberneck, reminding you of life's precariousness.

My first big I-95 memory: driving from Gainesville Florida to Washington with first hubby to visit Congressman Claude Pepper to present him with an award from the University of Florida. (Pepper had been a great senator, but lost a race to George Smathers, a cagey pol whom my new husband Bill worked for as a lawyer years ago.)

We often drove to Miami Beach from New York without stopping overnight, during the Christmas holidays, a happy, young family with two young sons rushing to visit eager grandparents. One time we interrupted the drive, placed our car on the autotrain in Virginia, sat in a reclining seat and emerged in Sanford Florida, near the middle of the state. I found the whole thing a bit confusing and just preferred to get into the car and drive the whole way.

I drove alone on 95 from New York to Cape Canaveral with my sons when I knew my marriage was going south, too. (It was 1980: The Americans beat the Russians in Olympic hockey during that trip.) Years later, I drove 95 to Philly from Westchester alone to visit my son at Penn.

Seven years later, divorced, I'd drive to DC from NY to meet my long-distance lover, before I moved in with him a year later. Sometimes we'd meet halfway, in Delaware. I got lots of speeding tickets on those I-95 trysts.  Once I wore a fur coat and nothing underneath, and the cop probably knew it and gave me a pass. 

Later, from NYC to Washington with another man I drove to the blockbuster Vermeer exhibit, a hard ticket we managed to get. I was nuts about this guy and wanted the drive to go on endlessly, and didn't mind the traffic. 

 I drove to work at corporations, where I taught writing workshops for 10 years along the I-95 corridor in New York and Connecticut. And in 1998 I drove my little black Miata up to New England starting on 95, to research my book on B&Bs. Driving next to the trucks was always a challenge.

In late July 2001 my second husband and I drove down I-95, full of excitement. A new car, a new life with his retirement. I had just said “we’re so lucky” maybe 10 minutes before. Chaim was poring over a New Yorker. He looked upset. By the time we got into the motel in Brunswick Georgia, he had a pained look on his face. “I can’t read.” 

I thought he had a stroke and hired an ambulance to take him to the hospital. There, the next day, the doctor told us he had a brain tumor, a glioblastoma. Chaim asked what that meant. The doctor said maybe six months to a year, just like that.

"Do we want to go north or south on 95?" I asked. "South," he said. "Ahead."

Chaim never drove again, I sped him along 95 to Miami in a blur, a syringe beside me in case he had a seizure on the way.  Medical papers, flew out an open window, and we locked ourselves out of the car at a Pompano gas station and had to wait for a locksmith. 

Our friends met us, off 95. When we got to the emergency room at Jackson Memorial in Miami, neither of us had food or water for 12 hours, and Chaim had an awful headache. I was numb and looked so bad that the ER aides grabbed me first and tried to put me in a wheelchair.

And there was the drive a few months later, up 95 from Westchester to the cabin on the cliff on Grand Manan island in New Brunswick, Canada. I was now alone. And then to visit my Canadian friend Valerie, in Fredericton, the start of 95, to home, at its end.

*** 

I'm cruising the express lane at 75 mph, top down, Sirius playing, belted, air-conned, GPSed. I'm on 95, going to dinner with my new husband. We smile and hold hands. Miles to go, I hope, before we sleep .....

 

 

 

Your tags:

TIP:

Enter the amount, and click "Tip" to submit!
Recipient's email address:
Personal message (optional):

Your email address:

Comments

Type your comment below:
My life on the road.
I-95 is a ribbon of concrete and asphalt which ties the hearts, souls and minds of east coasters together, in sickness and health and for better or worse.
It's just a highway--or is it? Thanks for sharing and tying your life's narrative around this interstate thread.
Wishing you both many, many miles, by land and by sea....
Lea, an interesting and personal look at a very long stretch of highway! I do not have anywhere near the personal recollections of I-95, due to its distance from me. I mostly think of CT when it comes to that particular highway because the most I have traveled on it has been in that state.

In a smaller way I think of the train line coming out of the city. I remember the days when I was young and traveling that stretch of track and how the stations and rail cars have changed so much since the early '60s when I first traveled on it. Thanks for putting such a fascinating face on a highway that ties so many together along its route!
Your life on the road is fascinating. And your last lines just make me smile. Enjoy.~r
I-95 has taken you so many places, near and far. Thanks for sharing! R
I have lots olf 95 memories too...Just drove up from SC to DC!
Maybe you need to add "Life" to your title.
I know I-95 well mostly from Jacksonville south to the Keys or north North Carolina-always smile at the endless signs for South of the Boarder.
I wish you many more happy and safe miles ahead no matter which roads you travel.
Please pardon me, I see "Life" is in the title!
Need another cup of jo!
I've always relished long car trips with the man I loved. It's so intimate and provides so many conversational opportunities. My thanks to IKE for giving us our Interstates.

Lezlie
Lovely piece of a memoir. I hope you have miles to go as well!
Lovely piece of a memoir. I hope you have miles to go as well!
very fine memory piece :) r.
NPR has been doing an ongoing series about I-95 you'd probably find interesting. My "road" was I-40, I've traveled that sucker nearly end to end at various points of my life. This was lovely :)
Miles to go. I hope this for you, too.
Oh, I love this, Lea. You were born to be in motion. Thanks also for the somewhat startling story about the fur coat.
Rated for someone who will never have to worry about the road not taken.
Great story. I've never driven I-95, but this makes me want to.
What an interesting tie between times and places in your life! And what a lot of geography it connects. Very cool look at I-95 and your life. May you have many smooth miles . . .
When I saw the I-95 logo, I ran here. I-95 has been a very important part of my life for 50 years. Yes, half a century. I've thumbed it all the way, one end to the next, a few times. But mostly it was a thousand miles here, a hundred miles here. I was young, a hippy and free. The I-95 corridor was a mecca for thumbing and most rides were great. Why pay for a bus ticket when you could beat the bus to where you were going. Besides, most people would fire up a joint when you got in, turn up the new Sgt Pepper Album and just ride. I miss those days. Of course, bad people made thumbing dangerous, but I had some of the best times of my life cruising down that corridor. Thanks Lea, you made my day!
In one of those accidents of good fortune I stumbled upon this just now am very thankful for it. You've not only given me a gift of shared knowlege of something, a road, but more than a road, that has changed my life repeatedly, and which I now live so near I can jump on it any time and, well, you know.

Your memories, the ups and the downs along 95, are a wonderful read. But they are more: the closing paragraph lifts the heart of this fellow traveler and fills him with hope -- and a sense of true freedom. Thank you for this. r
Have you started your memoirs yet? We see bits of your life in your posts, but a pulled together version, fur coats and all, would fly off the shelves!

I95 is the artery of my auto-life too, but is also the bane of my auto-life existence to the point that I avoid it whenever possible. I overdosed in MIA on the daily trek between the Gables and Broward General, causing an emergency amputation of my job on a Friday afternoon, and a speedy relocation to a beach in No Fla for recovery!
The way in which you did this is wonderful! Very creative and excellent posting! Rated!
I was on I-95 from Boston to New Hamphire Friday and was having the exact same kind of thoughts! I have not seen South of the Border since 1988 - I guess it's grown :-)
I was also on Route 1 which is a familiar frend to me and thinking what a trip it would be to take THAT all the way someday.
Beautiful writing and poignant parallels between the two roads, Lea. Wish you many more happy miles and safe driving. ~R
You should try I-75. You know, for a change.
I remember I-95, I was stationed at Ft. Belvoir, south of Arlington VA, had an apartment off-base in Woodbridge, I-95 was the road to nights out in DC and to weekends in NYC when I could get the time off, barreling up the interstate with the top down in my British racing green Sunbeam Alpine, cruising at 85 through Maryland, Delaware, Jersey

took a road trip down I-95 in the early '70s with an old college roommate delivering my Dad's new Lincoln from Boston to Delray Beach, all expenses paid and a couple of days of deep-sea fishing at the end

but the I-95 memory burned indelibly in my brain is coming over the hill in a jeep in the pre-dawn light of April 5, 1968, the city on fire, a curtain of smoke backdrop to the familiar view of the Washington Monument and Capitol Dome, as a junior officer in the first battalion to enter DC to impose martial law during the riots after Dr. King's assassination
Thanks all, for the comments. Some of you have taken parts of this road, I know. A few callouts:

Scanner, you thumbed it --a real story there, I'm sure.

Jenschrader, thanks for the heads up on NPR

AJ, there is hope, always.

Nancy, Rt 1

Michael, Rt 75 --very funny, been there too, when I lived in Atlanta.

Fusan and Holly, yes we can mourn and exalt about the two roads, positive and negative, as well as those not taken.
And Gabby, yours is a remembrance that sears. A road can lead to such volatility.

Roy, that is true history in full view. Wow. Thanks for adding to the chain.
i've taken I95 a zillion times too, so i especially enjoyed reading this. very clever way to tie many great memories together!
A few more callouts:

ladyfarmerjed, 95 stops at Key Biscayne, a few minutes from my house. The road to the Keys is US1-- old-fashioned stop and go, with many bridges.

bethybug, a zillion times? I believe you.

Bonnie, Jimmy Buffett sang about it, right?

Sixtycandles, the fur coat is a story in itself. Someday, maybe.
A word of advice -- never stop in Jessup, Georgia. The sheriff has issues.
This was such a moving and well...driven piece of writing. I was right on that road of life with you.

Brava lady!!
You've just updated and refreshed the "road warrior" genre--oh brava, Lea!
This is a kind of book all to itself. Wonderful read, and I, of course, love that last line.....R
Lea, as a writer and as a woman, you are very inspiring. I love the way you've structured this, a long and winding road, with many stops along the way. I miss Chaim and I never even knew him.
That "South of the Border" place gives me the creeps.
R
Love it! Thank you for sharing Lea.
I'm assuming by now you and Bill on on your honeymoon, past the first leg of I95...here's to many, many joyous miles ahead on the road(s) and in life!
Thanks for this Lea. It got me to thinking, I've had a bit of a life on the highway...I-94. East to West. Thanks for reminding me.
Until I moved to New York City five years ago, I had never spent more than 3 weeks at a time away from 1-94. I followed that road back and forth within Michigan and then on to Chicago and finally Minneapolis. Even my radio station as a teen was WIBM which called itself "I-94".

But now I suppose I should turn my loyalty over to I-95. I guess I've upgraded my route number?
Oops I hit post before I said that I love how you use that stretch of highway to bind together all these moments of a life.
Here's hoping you get more mileage out of that fur coat! :0
Wonderful story, Lea. I've only done the I-95 NY to Florida trip once, and of course I stopped at South of the Border. I'll be taking I-95 to DC next month. But c'mon, we've got to hear that story about you driving in a fur coat with nothing on underneath. Inquiring - aka, dirty - minds want to know!
As I wrote before, the coat with nothing under deserves it's own post!
Wow, you sure can tell a story, and using the ribbon of I-95 is sheer genius. Loved this. (Though I hate that damn Beltway.) rrrrrrr
I'm astonished that your first road trip in'50 didn't sour you on travel of any sort back during your Wonder Years. But travel you have and I'm glad to be along for the rise. (Though I wish you'd slow down and write a book or two about some of those adventures. )
I like the way you weave together the figurative and literal in such a compelling way here. rated
Splendid writing! Just wonderful.
I love it when you share your travels. My, that I-95 has a ton of memories and emotions for you. This is so great; a great idea. I have a similar freeway in my life I-5 up and down the Pacific Coast. Excuse me but could you give a few more details on this: "Once I wore a fur coat and nothing underneath" ?
oh wow, Lea. This is great -- a life as defined by a road. I felt like I was with you every mile of the way reading this...
This is just ... so you. I'm in here too, not all the way back, but most of the back and forth. I wish we'd been friends and you'd have stayed at our house while visiting Penn. Yep, I've done the fur coat trick too, but never got stopped by a cop! You give us your own, a generation's and a country's history here, at least the East Coast version. Wonderful.
I'll second Gabby's comment - I hope you're already started on that memoir Lea - I don't think there's enough time in the world for you to get *everything* down - but do try for us, pretty please ;).

Meanwhile these little paragraphs that will make up future chapters will have to do :).

Rated for what's just over the next hill.
Life, Lea. Life. Such a puzzlement. I'm so glad we don't know the future.

xoxo

Denese
I know this highway well, from my younger years living in Conn., NY and NJ. And Penn Central as well!

For me, it's Highway 50 to South Lake Tahoe, week after week, memory after memory.
Great post!
Beautiful piece. Many roads ahead, my friend.
Count me among the eager to hear more, especially the fur coat story! I've traveled the length of 95 too ... I remember in the early '60s driving from NY to Miami to visit my grandparents and wondering about the "Colored" drinking fountain at a rest stop. In the Boston area, I just try to avoid 95 as much as possible between 3:00 and 7:00, when it's basically a parking lot. Thanks for another wonderful travelogue, Lea!
I've probably been on I-95 two or three times in my life.
Don't remember any of it.

This writing took me by the hand, sat me on the passenger's seat, made me look at a different life.
Sometimes, I smiled through tears.
Thank you for writing this.
Thank you post it at first . this is a good and great story.he is my example model.by the way lea ,do you interest in shopping ?do you have any good experience with shopping online,i love shopping ,and i love replica handbags how about you ?