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Ellen Eldridge

mental health journalist

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Hail to the bus driver

Posted on June 11, 2025July 14, 2025 by Ellen Eldridge

The alarm sings happily, way before it’s time to smile. The sun hasn’t yet lit the sky, and Russell is making coffee and yogurt with granola as I turn off the alarm and roll over. My fancy pillow has the power to cool my head, so I flip it over and hug the pillow with my face.

I look at my phone, deciding what I have to do today. The calendar tells me I’m interviewing someone about buzzing the brain non invasively with magnetic pulses. I remind myself to check the camera battery, and … find the camera.

I’m sweating as I sit up to drink my coffee. I grab a large chunk of granola and eat it while I mix the yogurt with a spoon, pulling the chunks of peach from the bottom of the yogurt cup.

We sip our coffee and catch up on the news. It’s 06:00 and the Marines are in California.

We talk. I whine. Russell listens. It’s been 17 years, and we’ve never really fought. That’s all his nature, though, and I remind myself how fortunate I am.

By 06:30, he’s out the door with his bookbag on his back. It’s strange seeing him leave for work without a guitar.

I remind myself how I came through it all and have everything I ever wanted. Well, assuming the kids get up and let the dogs. I jest.

Russell cranks the engine from the porch and moseys down the sidewalk.

He doesn’t have to climb to get into the driver’s seat of his cream-colored Tahoe with the Mandalorian and Star Wars stickers, but he keeps a step stool to help his 82-year-old mother get into the truck.

After buckling his seat belt, Russell rolls down the window and looks at the bricks lining the Hope Driveway that I built on a whim. I smile every time I see the river rocks crossing the yard next to the mailbox.

He says it’s been helpful navigating my landscaping because now he’s learning to drive a school bus like his dad did.

The truck rolls over the curb toward the four-way stop that will one day soon be a roundabout as I let the Shih Tzu use the yard.

I scramble up the steps as the Tahoe leaves my line of sight.

I smile and sing to myself, “Hail to the bus driver, bus driver man.”

Category: Momster

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