The Moth - The Moth Radio Hour: Taking Risks
Episode Date: January 10, 2023In this hour, stories of diving in head first and putting it all on the line. Unconventional gifts, apex predators, and stock car racing. This episode is hosted by Moth producer and director ...Jodi Powell. The Moth Radio Hour is produced by The Moth and Jay Allison of Atlantic Public Media. Hosted by: Jodi Powell Storytellers: Andrew McGill learns more about his father than he bargained for. Aspiring primate veterinarian Estella Z Jones has a shift in perspective about her own life after seeing animals in the wild. Ashamed of not knowing how to ride a bike, Francesca Hays attempts to learn in secret. Michael Corso enters a stock car race for blind drivers.
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Attention Houston! You have listened to our podcast and our radio hour, but did you know
the Moth has live storytelling events at Wearhouse Live? The Moth has opened Mike's
storytelling competitions called Story Slams that are open to anyone with a five-minute
story to share on the night's theme. Upcoming themes include love hurts, stakes, clean, and
pride. GoodLamoth.org forward slash Houston to experience a live show near you. That's from PRX.
From PRX, this is Amal 3D Hour.
I'm your host, Jody Powell.
In this hour, stories of taking risks.
A few months ago, I said yes to swimming lessons.
I would have two weeks of lessons where I would actually blow bubbles, float,
tread water the whole nine yards.
I was terrified. The thought of water engulfing my body was horrifying.
Yes, I grew up on an island, and I loved to be near the water,
but in the water is quite a different thing.
So I set out to my lessons, goggles and swim cap in hand,
with a very trusted instructor.
And after two weeks, I have discovered that I love being underwater,
but I hate the bubbles.
And the coordination escapes me.
But the wagers have been set.
I will keep at it.
Though my inner voice never fails to say, what are you doing?
I hear that, and then I jump in anyway.
In this hour, stories of taking chances, going the extra mile, beating the odds and making
small moments visible, or lifelong dreams come true.
Our first storyteller, Anne Vermagil, takes a chance in a taxi cab.
Live in Hawaii, we are with the Hawaii Theatre Center.
Here's Anne-Gee.
Thank you.
Hey everybody.
So growing up, the best way I could describe my mom was like LeBron James in his 2006
season in the Cavaliers.
Literally the MVP from my brother and my sister myself.
She did everything.
Whereas my dad was like the rest of the Cavaliers team that year.
It wasn't really around.
It wasn't really around. It wasn't really present.
And just like LeBron left the Cavs,
my mom left my dad, but she took the kids with her.
So I never really have my dad growing up in the house.
And he was always this mysterious enigma to me,
this mysterious figure.
And I remember asking my sister,
what was one memory she has of our dad in the house?
And she said, he told her not to
get involved in credit cards. She was 12, y'all. She was 12, but she said she has an impeccable credit
now, so I don't know something might have stuck. And my dad was this mysterious guy, but I really
only knew two things about him. One was that he was a New York City taxi driver,
and he drove a yellow taxi cab.
And two was that anytime he would show up,
he would always have a gift.
Now my brother and sister were a little older,
so they didn't really mess around with him too much.
So that meant I automatically got the gift.
And the visits would always be the same.
He'd call the house, say, I'm on my way,
and then we'd hear him honking his horn from the fourth floor of our apartment. I would run downstairs, go into the front seat
of his taxi. It always smelled like, you know, whatever food he was eating in his cologne.
And he would give me the gift. And the gifts were always different. Sometimes it'd be
shoes that didn't really fit too well. Sometimes he gave me a fedora.
I love fedoras.
Another time he gave me a star, David necklace.
I don't practice, but it was cool.
It was cool.
But the best gift he gave me was a PS2 with this game, Batman
Vengeance.
And I was, from that day, I was like, yeah, my dad can do no wrong. In our house, he had a lot of names.
My brother and sister said he was crazy.
My mom said he was a deadbeat,
but I was like, no, he's the dude that gave me to PS2.
That's my guy.
That's my dude.
And I would defend him at home,
but I would also defend him at school
when kids are talking crap.
And kids would be like,
yo, my dad is faster than your dad.
And I'm like, not on the streets of Brooklyn.
He's not. My dad would be moving through those, my dad is faster than your dad. And I'm like, not on the streets of Brooklyn. He's not my dad.
He's moving through those streets in this car, man.
He knows how to make that left turn.
And he's like, yo, my dad, beat up your dad.
And I'm like, yeah, but my dad knows where the nearest hospital
is, so he'll get medical attention faster than your dad.
And then my friends said this one thing that I really got.
And he's like, at least my dad is around.
I've never seen your dad.
He's not at the PTA meeting.
He don't pick you up.
Where is he?
And I went home that day and I felt weird and I called my dad up.
And I was like, hey, what do you have?
You got anything for me?
And he's like, yeah, I got something.
And he pulls up and I, you know, he comes.
He will hear the honking,
I go down, sit in the front, and I wanna ask him,
I wanna say, hey, man, where have you been?
Like, why haven't you did a pick me up for PTA meetings?
Like, where are you?
But I didn't say any of that, and he says,
hey, I got this for you and he hands me this gift.
And he says, you good, and I say, I'm good,
and I walk out the car. And I like
to examine the gifts to see if they're cool. And I look at this and this is brown wallet.
And I'm looking at it and I open it up and there's someone else's money. I D credit card.
And I look back at the car and I wave him down. He lowers the window. I was like, hey,
I think this is someone else's wallet. And he's like, not us for you, that's yours.
And I was like, okay, cool.
And he drives off and I'm making my way back upstairs
and I'm like, has my dad been giving me things
that people have left in the back of his cabs gifts?
And I get back in the house and I get to my room
and I start looking at all the things
that he's giving me.
And I was like, and he's made me an accessory to all of his crimes.
I was like, I'm gonna go to jail.
Look at all this stuff.
And I was like, oh man, what am I gonna do?
I can't go to prison now.
Too young.
So I do what I always do when I get overwhelmed.
I just took a nap. And as I'm taking a nap, I have this dream where I'm sitting
at the front of this line.
I'm about to pay for something.
And I pull out the wallet.
And someone behind me is like, yo, that's my wallet.
And we have a scuffle over the wallet.
And I wake up and I'm like, I got to get rid of all this stuff.
So I take all the contents in the wallet.
I put it in envelope. And I was like, I'm just going to mail this stuff. So I take all the contents in the wall and I put it in envelope and I was like I'm just
going to mail this away, I take the shoes, the fedora, all the random things that he gave
me.
And I wish I could tell y'all that I threw away that PS2 but I didn't, I did feel bad
every time I turned it on, I did feel bad every time I played.
Batman it was tough, it was tough for me.
And I didn't talk to my dad for a long time and I was going on a trip, it was tough, it was tough for me. And I didn't talk to my dad for a long time.
And I was going on a trip, I was planning to go on this trip.
And it was one of those trips where we have everything planned.
You know where you're going, you have like the itinerary
of like, I'm gonna eat here, I'm gonna do this.
But something fell through with my ride,
going to the airport.
And I was telling my mom this and she's like,
it'll just call your dad.
And I was like, nah, I'm good, I'll figure it out.
And before I could know, she has them on the phone.
And then a couple minutes later, I hear the honking
and I'm like, ah, I guess I'm gonna take this ride.
And I go downstairs, but instead of sitting
in the front of the taxi, I sit in the back.
And the back was different than the front.
Didn't smell like his food, it didn't smell like his cologne.
It smelled like a night out, like drinking and smoke
and cigarettes.
And where we take off.
And he's listening to his music and it's silent.
I feel like it's silent.
And I'm like, I got to say something.
I got to break this tension.
I don't know if it was curiosity or fear.
But I was like, hey, man, did you always
want to be a taxi driver?
And I thought he would just ignore the question
and keep listening to his music.
But for my surprise, he lowers the music.
And he's like, no, I didn't want to be a taxi driver.
I wanted to be a musician.
And I was like, word?
What music do you like?
And he terms up the music a little more.
And it's like this Haitian compa music.
And it's these beautiful drums and these guitars.
And I was like, were you good? And he's like, no, I was terrible. I was like, where? He's like, yeah, I wanted, and he proceeds to tell me
this story about how his dad was a chicken farmer.
And he didn't want to be a chicken farmer,
so once him and my mom got married, he moved to Berlin,
pursued music, he failed at that,
and he was like, I'm just going to become a tailor.
And then when they came to the States
because they were looking for new opportunities,
he couldn't find a job as a tailor,
so he started working as a tailor. And he was like, I'm just gonna become a tailor. And then when they came to the States
because they were looking for new opportunities,
he couldn't find a job as a tailor.
So he started working as a taxi driver
and he's been doing that ever since for about 35 years.
And he turned back the music up.
And for the first time, I could actually like see my father.
And I didn't see him as a, you know, my dad,
I didn't see him as the son of a chicken farm. I didn't see him as a failed you know, my dad, I didn't see him as the son of a chicken farm.
I didn't see him as a failed musician, but I saw him as a person.
And I started to think about those gifts that he gave me of the things that he gave me
from the back of the cab.
And I was like, he could have just kept all those things, but he gave them to me.
And I realized that maybe it was his way of saying, hey, I don't have a lot, but this is
what I have for you.
I thought, maybe it was his way of saying,
hey, I'm sorry that I wasn't around.
And maybe it was his way of saying, hey, I love you.
So we pull up to the airport and I take my stuff out
and I'm walking into the terminal
and then I hear my honk is horn and he pulls down his window
and he's like, hey!
You want these headphones?
And I take them. Thank you.
Andra McGill is an educator, stand-up comedian and storyteller who lives in Brooklyn but loves
to travel and especially loved being in Hawaii to tell the story you just heard.
Andrew says that wasn't the last time his father offered him a gift.
Recent ones included a Fedora, church shoes, and a baseball glove.
Andrew's urging everyone to take a last look
before leaving your taxi.
Do you have a story to tell us?
You can pitch us your story by recording it right on our site,
themoth.org.
It was Sunday, July 13th, 1969.
And as my parents were driving us back to our home in Montreal, we were talking about
the upcoming launch from Apollo 11 on Wednesday.
Everyone was talking about it.
It was the biggest news of the year, and I had been captivated by this race to the
moon since I was about seven.
The next morning my mum woke me up and said, if you really want to go, Dad and I will pay
for your airplane ticket.
But one proviso, I had to find someone to go with me.
I called my two best friends and when I explained what my plan was, they both spoke to their
mothers and quickly came back on the phone with, my mom says, no way.
I guess I shouldn't have been surprised.
I just turned 14, looked about 10.
My parents Maraxi said I could do the trip solo.
That type of permission they would probably get them landed in jail, but I guess it was
a different time back then. Anyway, my plan was to hitchhike this 50 or so miles from Orlando to Titusville
Sleep on the beach the news reports were talking about a million people lined up from miles
So I certainly wouldn't lack for company
Watch the launch hitchhike back to Orlando and fly home
When I was changing planes and JFK and carrying a sign saying to the Cape Kennedy or bust, a man came over to chat with me.
His name was Arthur C. Johnson.
He lived in Titusville and he worked for one of the contractors
in the Apollo program.
That chance meeting resulted in my being invited
to his home in Titusville to stay with his family
for four days, a front page story in the local newspaper
about my trip, and a thrilling unforgettable view
of the beginning of one human kind's greatest adventures.
The only time my life I actually saw history in the making, a memory that hasn't been
for almost 50 years.
Remember, you can pitch us at 877-799-Moth or online at the moth.org where you can also
share these stories or others from the Moth Archive. Music
Coming up, risky moments from a trip across the world to an animal kingdom and an early morning
bicycle lesson, when the Moth radio hour continues.
Music The Moth Radio Hour is produced by Atlantic Public Media in Woods Hole, Massachusetts
and presented by PRX.
This is the Moth Radio Hour from PRX. I'm Jodie Powell.
Our next story about taking risks in life was told by
Dr. Estella Jones.
She told this in Troy, New York, at the Troy Savings
Bank Music Hall.
Here's Estella.
Thank you. I was born into a world of poverty where my parents weren't even allowed to vote.-star general which meant that he kept his shoes polished
for the general.
For ever since I could remember, and my mom says, from four years old, all I ever talked
about was wanting to be an animal doctor. No one told me I couldn't do it.
But my neighborhood said something different.
See, I was in a public school in Columbus, Ohio
that was built for 700 students, but it housed 1,600 students.
And at 12, I have to admit I was going down the wrong path. I had a teacher
by the name of Dr. Charles Tenet, and he noticed it, and he really pulled me off of the wrong
road. He said, you can do better, and remember nothing is impossible unless you succumb to it.
So I remembered that.
And by age 14, I had turned everything around,
and I won a scholarship to a school right here in Troy, New York
called Emma Willard.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
So Emma Willard was great fun.
I graduated in a leaving home at 14.
Lot of responsibility grew up fast.
But I still had to figure out a way to work my way through undergrad.
And I had a lot of jobs.
And I can't name them all, but to name a few, bartender,
sky cap. I can't name a mom, but to name a few bartender, SkyCap, and when I was working as a slaughter
inspector, I met Dr. John Malone, who was collecting tissues at the slaughterhouse, and he
said, Asselle, you really need to apply to Vetschle in Louisiana.
That's where I was working.
He said, you can go to Vetschle.
I don't see you doing this as a career.
So you know, a little fear took over because I knew the odds of getting in vet school were
10 to 1 at that time.
But I applied and I got in.
And in vet school, we were doing so many amazing things at LSU because they have a wonderful
exotic animal medicine department.
And it was at that time I said, I am going to be a primate veterinarian after I graduate.
I'm going to specialize in primate medicine.
Then we got an invitation to go to the Baton Rouge Zoo to do a polar bear root canal.
So I don't know how many of you have ever done a polar bear root canal.
So the zoo that comes out and he scares the life out of us.
He goes, look, the drugs we use here, you students aren't even allowed near them because
one little finger prick and you're dead.
Polar bear will see you as a snack so don't let them wake up.
You know, we got these kind of instructions and then I thought, oh boy, where's my career
going?
And the primates, they looked a little sad, they were in cages and I said, wow, I wonder
what it would be to work with them in their environment, not in the zoo environment.
So at that moment I said, you know what?
I'm going to go study primate medicine in Africa in their environment.
Okay, crazy, right?
Here I am, a student with no money.
I have a little girl.
I started vet school when she was 14 months old and I was
married and I had a difficult marriage.
So my ex-husband at the time now, ex, followed me around with a gun in his car and was leaving
threatening death threats on my car windows.
So my daughter's safety was my very first priority.
How am I going to get her safe if I can make this trip?
I wrote to this place called Institute for Primate Research.
They wrote me back and said, if you can get here, sure you can do your
preceptorship here. So I called my family in Ohio.
They said, sure, we'll take your daughter.
She's three by then.
And we'll watch after her while you're in Africa.
So, how I got there, I used all my sky cat miles to fly to Africa and that.
So, one of this plane, of course, the flight is very long.
I'm sitting next to this reporter, a whole time we're chattering, and she was so cool, but when that plane landed she explained,
oh my God, I can't believe we're in Africa! And I said, oh my goodness, this is
really surreal! So I get to IPR, it's very beautiful. They take me to my hut that I'm going to live in while I'm there.
And it had running water and a datch roof.
So that night I go to bed and I'm still excited under my mosquito net.
And I hear these loud thunks on my roof just jumps and pounding all night long.
So I really couldn't sleep.
And I'm like, what is that?
I'm not gonna go outside and look, right?
So the next morning, a few employees came to pick me up
to walk me to work.
And down this dirt road and they said,
look, that's just the wild primates.
And they're having fun and they're looking for food.
We hear that all the time.
I said, okay.
Then I saw this fence along where we were walking and it had holes in it. And I said, what's that? And they said, ah, that's just the National Park Mix door. And occasionally, you know, an animal
strays over here. Usually it's old lions and they're looking for slow prey. Okay.
And then they said, oh yeah, that's why we walk to work together.
And we advise you when you walk to work, don't walk to work with people who are faster than you.
And they weren't kidding.
So, IPR really educated me, showed me a good time.
I work with conservationists.
I work in tropical medicine.
They let me rotate through the whole facility pathologists,
and they were doing some really cool research.
Then I remembered I had this note from the curator
at the Baton Ruzou.
He said, you need to look up my friend, Mr. Don Hunt,
when you get to Africa.
I was in Southern Africa in Kenya, Nairobi.
Mr. Hunt was in Nanyuki, which is Central Kenya.
So I call him up on the phone and he goes, sure, you can come here and visit my conservatory
as long as you find a way here.
So I found a way there.
I jumped on that public bus and I was off. You
know, in my little trench coat looking weird. But when I got to the conservatory, Mr. Hunt
showed me the best of the world. I was given a guest house this time with a picture window so wide,
and you could see all the animals in the conservatory
of 1,200 acres.
It's beautiful, but I stood in that window
and I had an epiphany.
I said, wow, physicians are responsible
for one species, male and female.
All the rest of the burden falls on the veterinarian and no
two species are alike and no two zebras are even alike.
So we would go out in the evening in Mr. Hunt's jeeps and look for sick animals, antelope,
deer, gazelle, you know, anything that was injured and distressed
and we would treat it.
Then one evening he said, have you ever been on safari Estella?
I said no.
He said, I'm going to send you on your first safari.
Wow, I was so excited.
So he did that.
Even though I didn't really know what a safari was. And when I got on
safari and saw the beauty, we were in a little Jeep when we went to the wilderness. Now I knew what
it was like to be caged, and they were free in their environment that did something for my heart. Even though it's dangerous, tour guides were excellent,
they knew the land, they were local.
And then they educated me about the deadly species of snakes.
I saw mother elephants with their young under their belly.
That's where they stand over them to protect them from the sun.
And I thought about my daughter that I had to protect.
So the animal kingdom is a lot like our kingdom.
But I also felt that they were free.
And even though it's not always safe, they knew freedom.
So when I came back from Africa,
I had a sense of taking my freedom back because I left
afraid, and I was no longer afraid of that bullie ex-husband.
I passed the freedom for my daughter, one to be whatever she wanted to be.
So, remember I told you, my dad once shined the one star general shoes?
Well he lived to see me become the first black female veterinary one star admiral in the
US public health service and assistant surgeon general. and Assistant Surgeon General. Yeah. So, you know, I found that teacher in seventh grade.
I went back.
I hadn't talked to him for 45 years and I told him, thank you.
If you have a teacher like that, find I told him, thank you.
If you have a teacher like that, find him and say,
thank you.
And what I now have my dad's shoes,
because I lost my dad last year to COVID,
but he saw me pin on that star, and he was so proud.
So I now am wearing the shoes that he once polished
and I'm gonna pass these shoes on to those who once thought their dreams were impossible.
Thank you.
That was Dr. Estela Jones.
She is the first black female veteran area in the U.S. Public Health Service to be promoted
to the rank of Rare Admiral and the role of Assistant Surgeon General.
As Deputy Director of the Office of Counterterrorism and Emerging Threats at the FDA, Jones works
to combat global health crises.
Estella's father sadly succumbed to COVID in 2021, so she says
her work in the fight against disease is never done.
Estella says it's important to remain humble, and if she sees a little further,
it is because she's standing on the shoulders of giants.
Estela is still in touch with her teacher from junior high,
and she uses every opportunity she gets to remind everyone
to pick up the phone, write a note to someone who
helped you to find the right path.
Our next story is from Francesca Hayes, who told this at the Bronx Museum of Arts in New York City, where WNYC is a media partner of them off.
Here's Francesca.
It was my deepest darkest secret, and it was one that got more and more shameful with every passing year.
I was 22, and I didn't know how to ride a bicycle.
And nobody knew this about me because I kept it secret. I didn't want anyone to find out my shameful secret.
And I avoided bikes at all costs, so no one really did.
And I didn't think about it very often, but that spring, I was in college and I would walk to campus,
and I would see classmates whizzing past me on their bikes.
And I was jealous that they were getting there so quickly.
And I thought to myself, maybe I could learn, ha ha ha.
And then I thought, well, maybe I could learn,
maybe it's possible.
And then it became kind of like an obsession
that I wanted to learn how to ride a bicycle.
But it was a quiet obsession because I couldn't tell anyone because they couldn't know in
the first place that I didn't know.
So I started this process that I coined observation, simulation, and visualization.
So I would observe people on bikes to figure out like the mechanics and how it worked.
And I would simulate writing a bike on a stationary bike in the college campus gym.
And I had read in Cosmopolitan magazine, very credible source,
that if you visualize yourself doing something, you're like 10 times more likely to do it.
So every night I fell asleep, imagining myself on a bike, just flying into campus,
riding straight into the classroom.
And I did this for a while, and I thought to myself, well, I'm the only adult I know who doesn't know how to ride a bike,
but there have to be other people out there.
And that's like what the internet is for,
is to find other weird people like yourself.
And so I went online and low and behold,
there was a forum of adult bike learners.
And I learned a lot from them.
The first thing I learned is they had like great reasons
for not knowing.
They were from like war-torn countries where they didn't have bicycles in their childhood
or they had been a part of very conservative religions where girls couldn't ride bikes
and now they wanted to learn.
I had no good reason and I just felt more ashamed.
But I got good tips from them, like to use a little bit of a hill and that gravity would
help balance the bike and to use a bike that was a little bit too small for you.
And I realized I really had to get on a bike.
So I needed to tell someone because I had to get a bike.
So I selected my friend Carol because I think any young person named Carol is a trustworthy person.
And she is.
And she's also that friend that just takes care of things.
Like she just can handle it.
And so kind of in one breath, I confessed to her that I didn't know how to ride a bike,
and I wanted to learn, I told her about the online people,
and what they said, and she said, okay, I'll come by tomorrow.
I didn't really know what that meant,
but she showed up the next day, just like a Carol Wood.
And with her, she had a big, huge,
purple, enormous helmet, and the littlest turquoise bike
I've ever seen. It was a
mongoose and it had the words little thunder splashed across the top tube and I
knew that this was my chance. I looked at little thunder and I thought okay we're
doing this. So the next night that was warm and dry I took out little thunder and
the purple helmet because I promised Carol, and you keep a promise
to someone named Carol.
And I went to the slope because the online people said so.
And I put one foot on the pedal on Lil Thunder
and I cruised down and I balanced,
and it was actually really easy.
And I was kind of surprised.
So I did that a few more times.
And then I put both feet on the pedals
and I was still balancing and I was shocked.
And so then I thought, well, the next time I do this,
I'm just gonna pedal and see what happens.
And to my surprise, when you pedal on a bike,
it just balances all by itself,
and you don't have to do anything,
and you're riding a bike.
If you're pedaling the bike, so all of a sudden,
I was riding a bike, and I was like,
oh my God, I'm riding a bike and I was laughing
and I was kind of crying and I said out loud
to myself, I'm riding a bike.
And it's also three o'clock in the morning
because I am 5'9, 150 pounds, 22 years old.
I cannot have people see me with the purple helmet
on the tiny turquoise bike.
I can't let anyone see this process.
So I finally got it.
There's no one out there.
It's, I feel at 22 the way a five year old looks
when they're learning how to ride a bike.
I felt so free.
I thought there was something like stuck in my helmet.
And then I realized it was the sound of wind passing my face.
I didn't, I'd never heard that before.
It was so exciting.
But I was kind of wild out there
because I'd never done this before.
So my steering was like all over the place.
And I didn't know how to stop, because Carol, bless her heart, didn't tell me those levers
were break.
So when I wanted to stop, when I was getting close to the bigger street, I would just skid
with my sneakers, and that wouldn't really do it.
So I would just like hurl myself off the bike and just bail completely.
And I'm sure I was getting hurt,
but I didn't care.
My adrenaline was like, pain was no match for my adrenaline.
I was on cloud nine.
And it was fine that I was so wild out there on that path,
just kind of careening around,
because it was so late and there was no one else out.
Except for then there was someone else out.
And there was a guy on his bike coming towards me and he was like helmet free and looking
really in control and I'm like on Little Thunder with the purple helmet.
And he's coming towards me and I realize I don't know how to steer at all.
So I'm just kind of praying that I don't crash into him and we pass each other and we don't
crash, thank God.
But under his breath he says to me, you know if're that drunk, you shouldn't be riding a bike.
And I realized in that moment,
that hipster bike police guy was my first witness
and he said, I was riding a bike and I was doing it.
And I burst into tears, happy tears,
because this asshole had told me I was riding a bike so that meant I really was.
And I realized that with the help of online strangers
and a friend named Carol and Lil Thunder,
I found my balance and I've never stopped riding since.
Thank you.
Yeah.
Francesca Hayes said her experience said
her on a new path to become a teacher.
She went on to work for Biden-New York on tour over a thousand adults in the city how to
ride a bicycle.
Francesca currently works in educational equity and lives in her hometown of Seattle, Washington.
She rides a steel celestial blue Pista 7 Bianchi 9 bicycle for the last 12 years and hopes to never replace it
In a moment, we are off to the racetrack. That's when the Moth Radio Hour is produced by Atlantic Public Media in Woods Hole, Massachusetts, and
presented by PRX. You're listening to The Moth Radio Hour from PRX.
You're listening to the Moth Radio Hour from PRX. I'm Jodie Powell.
Our final story about risk is told by Michael Korsow,
another storyteller from the event in Troy, New York
at the Troy Savins Bank Music Hall.
Here's Michael.
Here's Michael. When I was a little kid, I was a really active child.
I used to run and jump and climb everything and anything.
But when I sat down and watched television, my parents recognized that I had a hard time
seeing the screen.
And over time, I was inching closer and closer and closer
in order to see the TV.
Of course, they took me to the eye doctor,
and then I had to go to some specialists.
And then, ultimately, I was diagnosed with an incurable eye
disease called retinous chisous,
which means the splitting of the retina.
Unfortunately, on my 12th birthday, I woke up totally blind.
It caused a lot of stress in my family and in my household.
Some directed at me but I was worried it's a 12-year-old
and I'm going to be able to play with my friends.
That's what I cared about.
A little while after my going blind my friends and I were hanging down the street as usual and
they said, hey why don't we play evil
con evil? Any of you remember evil con evil? He was the crazy lunatic that would
drive a car 150 miles an hour and jump on a ramp and go over 25 cars and break
100 bones in his body. But we wanted to do that.
So my friends were sending up the ramps and we were going to jump garbage cans.
I went down in my house and pulled out my bicycle, which I hadn't written in a while.
And I come back to the area where we're playing.
And one of my friends says, are you crazy?
What are you going to do?
And I said, oh man, I'm going to try this.
I'm sorry, everybody thought I was nuts. I just forgot to think the same way as my friends.
So I get my bike set, it's my turn. I race as hard as I can. Franky says, now I lift up the handlebars, I jump over the garbage cans. I land on down ramp with my front wheel, but not quite with my back wheel.
And I blew the whole ramp out. Face down I go on to the concrete. My friends come running
over to see if I'm okay. They turn me over and I'm hysterically laughing. How much fun was that, I said? Well, I lived a couple years later. I got to have
some more fun when I was about 15 or 16. I went out to Long Island to see my cousins.
They were motor heads. And what they did was raced their muscle cars at national speedway.
And they invited me to come and hang with them in the pit.
And I was in total excitement because I love cars and I love their cars.
One of my cousins had a 69 road runner with a 3D3 engine.
My other cousin had a 67 Chevelle SS with a 427.
One cousin that I didn't like too much had a blim-it gold duster with a 340 engine.
And my least favorite had the best car.
It also had a 442 fire engine red convertible.
And I got to hang out in the pit with them, and I got to smell the gas and smell the rubber burning
and be part of the chaos and the excitement and the fun.
But the one thing that I always did in that pit,
wonder and think, oh my God,
all I really want to do is race one of those cars.
Well, of course, that's not possible.
So my dreams stayed somewhere tucked inside All I really want to do is race one of those cars. Well, of course, that's not possible.
So my dreams stayed somewhere tucked inside and I went on.
When I was 18, I moved on to go to college.
I moved from a small town called Brooklyn to the metropolis of Albany.
While I was in college, I still wanted to keep my adventures and my activities, so I
learned how to downhill ski.
I then learned how to tandem rally bicycle race.
And then, yes, folks, I learned how to play golf.
Now you wonder, how does a blind guy hit a little ball into a little hole 400 yards away?
I wondered the same thing.
And I found out.
It ain't easy to do.
But what kept me going was all my sighted friends couldn't do it either. Mm-hmm. Yeah. Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And then, I was 40 years old in the middle of my career, and out of the blue, the phone rings,
and it's my friend Marty.
And he's all hyperventilating.
And he said, hey, do you have all hyperventilating and he said,
hey, do you have a radio in the office?
I said, yes.
He said, turn it on.
I'm like, why?
I'm working.
He's like, oh no, forget it.
You got to turn on the radio.
He said, I'm driving into work and I'm listening to PIX106.
And Bob Wolfe is having a fundraiser called the Iraq 500.
EYE 500.
Oh, what a cool name.
But what are they going to do?
He said it's going to be a stock car race for 14 blind drivers.
I'm like, how the hell are they going to do that?
And he said, call them.
Call them.
They're on number 11.
They only have room for three more people.
I hang up the phone.
I start going back to my computer.
I can't think about it.
I'm like, are they kidding?
That is friggin' nuts.
It's going to be a demolition derby.
I pause. And I can't wait.
I just grab the phone.
I dial 476 WPYX and the guy actually answered the phone.
I never got a busy signal, which I never had happened before.
And I said, hi, my name is Michael and I'm blind.
He didn't even say anything.
He just shot me into the studio live.
And I'm talking to Bob Wolf, John and Ellen live.
And they're interviewing me about being a driver
in this race.
And I'm like answering the questions.
And next thing I know, Bob Wolf says, OK, you're in.
Hang on, we're going to get your contact information.
And we'll see you at race day.
I hang up the phone, I scratch my head, and
I say, what the hell did I just do? It's Race Day. And all the drivers and their support
teams, along with the officials from the track, are in the infield and we're getting huddled
up for a little quick meeting with the track officials
and to tell us the rules. First rule, it's a fun razor. If you end razor, you don't get hurt,
you don't do anything crazy, we're just going to have fun. So, every one of you blind drivers
are going to be paired up with a professional stock car driver.
And I wondered, can they see?
We met and we learned that the place was going to be packed.
They usually get 100 people at the raceway
and fund the speedway.
And their old motor heads were mechanics and drivers,
no one else goes. This day for the Iraq 500, they had 6,000 spectators. We're all excited and
nervous and we go to our cars. Everybody picked a number so you would get your car assignment. My car assignment was 12. I was so bummed because
that meant I was in the back row. In the front it was one, two, and three. In the back it was 12,
13, and 14. I want to win this damn thing and there's no chance sitting in the back. It's just
not going to work. So we're in the car. We hear the
announcement, start your engines, everybody turns the key, I hear the engines going. And
the gun goes off and the race is on. The race is on, but we're not moving. And I say,
Jake, what's going on? How come we're not moving? He says, well, it's a bit of a cluster.
Everybody's in front of you trying to figure out what to do.
There's left turns and right turns and spins going on.
Just wait, you'll get your turn.
Oh my God.
I said, I don't believe this.
I'm sitting stuck behind a bunch of blind people that don't have had a drive.
Then I hear engines behind me. And if you know about stock cars at all, one of the features
is they don't have any glass, which keeps it safer. Glasses that could really hurt. There's
no windshield, there's no rear windshield,
there's no side windows, and there's no headlights, not that I would need them if I had them.
But I hear engines behind me and I said, Jake, what's those engines? What is that? And he
looks behind and he says, oh, that's cars one, two, and three, they made the first lap. Jake, we didn't even move yet. I was so bummed. It's all four lap race.
And I'm down one lap. It's my turn to go. He says, okay, you can start going. I step on the gas
and the gas pedal doesn't move much. And we're crawling. And I said, Jake, what's going on with this gas pedal?
I'm trying to move and it's not going. And he says, every car has a governor underneath the gas
pedal. It's a block of wood. So you stay at a reasonable hour. Remember, fundraiser?
I said, bull. Something else. I took my foot. I kicked underneath the block and I knocked it out
I put the car in neutral. I rev it up
Jake says you're sick. I said no, no, I just want to win. I
I just want to win. I've got the whole car now and I'm so excited.
I said, Jake, just tell me where to go.
Tell me exactly the directions I will pay attention.
He's like, oh my God, this is not the rules.
I said, what rules?
No one told me I couldn't kick the block out
from under the gas pedal.
They didn't even tell us we had that.
He says, OK, go left.
Go left, go a little right, go a little left.
Oh my God, he goes, you're responding beautifully.
I said, of course I am.
What do you think I want to do?
Kill myself.
But guess what?
He was definitely pooping his pants.
But I was going to be smart and listen to him and do my best.
So I tell him, where do we go?
Where do we go?
Come on, I want to win.
He says go left, go left, go right, straighten it out, straighten it out.
You know what, a clear path.
Go.
He says, go, go, go.
You're doing great.
Go, go, go.
I'm flying past a bunch of cars.
He says, Michael, go into the right.
Now straighten it out.
Okay, you're in the middle of the track and you just passed a load of cars.
And I'm like, sight, and we're going,
and we're going, and we're going.
And I feel the wind blowing through my hair.
Yes, folks, I had hair then.
And I feel the dust blowing up off the track,
hitting me in the face and being sticky.
But I'm so excited because I'm moving
what I think is about 40 miles an hour, not 15.
So he says, you're doing great.
You're really doing great.
He says, you're holding the road
and you're doing the nice bend to the left.
The track, of course, bends to the left.
It's a counterclockwise track. And it bends into the left, the track of course bends to the left, it's a counter-clockwise track
and it bends into the left and I'm just following the contour of the track.
So I said where are the other cars?
He says cars one, two and three in front of you.
They're about 200 yards up and they're making the turn on the last lap.
And I'm like, okay, let's get them.
So I start stepping on the gas and I'm going and I'm going and he says,
okay, you're good. They're on the right side. So stay right there, stay right there.
Go a little bit left, a little bit left. Okay, now go, gun it, gun it, gun it.
I fly past these cars and he's like, you're doing great. He says, hold on, slow down.
He goes, you're going a hundred miles an hour. I said, nah, I grabbed my head and he goes, you're going a hundred miles an hour. I said, nah!
I grabbed my head and he goes, well, you please hold the wheel.
Oh, I grabbed the wheel.
I'm like trying to be cool.
I'm a nervous wreck.
Everything's going crazy.
My heart's going 200 miles an hour.
The car's only going a hundred.
Finally, he says, OK, you're coming up to the checkered flag.
You're coming up to the flag. He says, okay, you're coming up to the checkered flag. You're coming up to the flag.
He says, stop, stop, you won, you won, you won.
I am friggin' thrilled to my core.
I jam on the brakes, I get out of the car, I stand there,
listening to the crowd roaring.
And then I hear out of the blue a car drive right by me and I said
Jake what was that and he said get back in the car that was the winner I
didn't think you were gonna stop so short and you stopped 50 feet short of the flag. Oh!
I complied, I put it in drive, I went forward,
the 50 feet, not a foot further,
pulled the car over, shut the engine,
put my head on the steering wheel,
and I was so bummed that I lost this race,
I shouldn't have lost it. But only
a second or two went by. And I realized that was so fun. That was so unbelievable. That
was so sick. That was so dangerous. That was so stupid of these guys from Pics 106, but I felt the same way right
now as I felt that day because today is realized I had a dream come true.
I got to drive a race car. That was Michael Corso.
Sadly, Michael passed away a few months after telling this story.
Michael excelled in many activities thought to be just for the sighted, bowling, skiing,
tandem bike riding, and as you heard, race car driving.
Wherever he went, he was always building community. Michael told
the story close to his hometown of Albany. After the show, he was full of joy. He said,
, Jodie, sorry I went long, but I could tell they wanted more and I just had to give it.
We do wish we had some more time with you, Michael. Thank you so much for sharing, inspiring, and moving us all to be a little more daring.
To see a video of Michael on a race day
or to find out about his scholarship fund,
please visit themoth.org.
This is all for this episode.
We want to thank all of our storytellers.
We hope you'll join us next time.
This episode of the Moth Radio Hour was produced by me, Jay Allison, Katherine Burns, and Jody Powell, who also hosted the show. Co-producer, Vicki Merrick, associate producer, Emily Couch. The rest of the Moths' leadership team includes Sarah Haberman, Sarah Austin Genese, Jennifer
Hickson, Meg Bulls, Kate Tellers, Jennifer Birmingham, Marina Cluche, Leanne Gully, Suzanne Rust,
Brandon Grant, Inga Gliddowski, Sarah Jane Johnson, and Aldi Kaza.
Our pitch came from Peter Home Douglas of Doervol in Quebec, Canada.
Most stories are true, as remembered and affirmed by the storytellers.
Our theme music is by the Drift, other music in this hour from Duke Levine,
Kristil and Brad Meldow, Darrell Anger and Bruce Mulski,
Wolfpeck and Madesky Martin in Wood.
We receive funding from the National Endowment for the Arts.
The Moth Radio Hour is produced by Atlantic Public Media in Woods Hole, Massachusetts,
and presented by PRX for more about our podcast,
for information on pitching us your own story,
and everything else go to our website, themoth.org.
anything else go to our website, themoth.org.