Home » Before You Do Something Stupid With A Car I Want You To Think Of Her

Before You Do Something Stupid With A Car I Want You To Think Of Her

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My friend Heather is amazing. In addition to being exceptionally bright and an extremely talented actress, she’s also a warm and loving person. The way I can best put it is that she’s one of those people who, when something good happens, you want to immediately tell because you know she’ll make you feel even better about it. I have so many blessings in life, and there’s so much I’d love to tell her in person, but I can’t, because 20 years ago she was needlessly killed by someone being stupid with a car.

I can’t believe it’s been 20 years. She was always a little older, a little cooler, imbued with the kind of wisdom of two more years on Earth, which is worth a lot you’re so young. I’m not young anymore, but she always will be.

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This is turning out to be harder to write than I thought. There was a rough outline in my head about what I’d say, and it doesn’t quite feel right. If you don’t end up reading any further, the crux of it is that I am the last person who can tell you not to do something dumb with a car. I love doing stupid things with cars. The important difference is that I try to be careful about doing it in a way that, if something goes wrong, I am the only one who gets hurt. The kid who killed my friend, who was also unimaginably young at the time of the crash, didn’t think like I do, and now all of us have to live with that mistake. All of us but her.

Maybe this doesn’t work if you don’t know Heather, so I need to talk about her a little bit.

It was a fluke that I got to know her. She was a year older. We went to rival high schools and, though we shared a love of theater, we didn’t really mix in the same circles. She was also just so much more of a fully formed human being than I was, and, for all my false confidence, I’m not sure I could have talked to her were it not for a bit of good luck.

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Her high school was hosting its annual debate tournament, and it was about to turn into a disaster. Judges were being sent to the wrong rooms, rounds were being missed, and people were starting to notice. I was president of my school’s Speech & Debate team and was friendly with her school’s team (both of our football programs were bad, so the rivalry was more for amusement than pride). The tournament director asked if I could help, and, having already qualified for state, I was in no position to say no.

I had two requests, though. I’d need a walkie-talkie, and I’d need a runner to go with me to help cover the rooms.

As you might guess, I did not need a runner. I just made it up. I saw her across the room, a volunteer from the drama department somehow glowing in a green Conroe High School Theater t-shirt. I could barely see anything else.

She probably caught on fairly quickly that her assistance was not absolutely necessary, but she was kind enough not to let on as we wandered the halls trying to put everything straight before the whole tournament went off the rails. It was great. I don’t remember anything I did to help, but I do remember not wanting the problem to be solved too quickly. Just listening to her talk about her life, her schoolwork, her dreams… I barely felt nervous talking to her, even though I couldn’t ignore that she was very cute.

The nervousness didn’t come until the end when I asked her for a number. If we’d have gone to the same high school and she’d have known how much of a dork I was, this might not have gone so well. We exchanged notes and poems via text and AIM (she always loved Emily Dickinson). What followed was the briefest of romances–she did get to learn how much of a dork I was.

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Heather On The Phone

Though I wasn’t happy at the time that it ended, she gave me real confidence to back my bluster. It also probably didn’t hurt my romantic prospects that the girls at my school saw me dating someone as impressive and beautiful as Heather. Most importantly, I gained a great friend. A confidant. A hype man. Someone always in my corner.

There’s no way to know how someone’s life is going to turn out, I suppose. Everyone has a friend they think will make it as an athlete, musician, or actor. It doesn’t always happen, but with Heather, I don’t have many doubts. Her college was not too far from my own, and I was lucky enough to see her perform somewhat regularly. She’s just one of those actors who feels like a person you’ve watched your whole life, even if she’s only been on stage for 10 seconds.

It’s been 20 years. I almost couldn’t believe it when I saw it on Facebook. In the back of my mind, I knew this was coming. While I think about her often, the business of life and the passage of time mean that I don’t talk about her every day. It’s on her birthday and the day of her passing that her friends and family all post in the shared Facebook group, which, other than this job, is one of the few reasons why I still look at Facebook.

I remember getting the call. It was the next day, and her college roommate was on the other end of the phone. I was probably excited because I thought it was going to be about everyone meeting up one more time before the summer was over. Heather had been doing summer stock theater in Farmington, New Mexico, and had secured a job in New York that would make it possible for her to start auditioning — the first step in what I’m sure was going to be an amazing career.

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Time stopped. It was awful. All the cliche denial and anger. It just didn’t seem possible. I didn’t want to believe it. I still don’t want to believe it. It’s painful in a way that still hurts two decades later. I keep having to stop writing this, because it’s just a little too fresh still. Somehow.

This is where you come in, I suppose. You should know that the person who killed her was driving a modified truck and was doing what you might call street racing. It was late at night, and Heather was leaving the performance in her metallic blue Mazda. She went through a green light at a normal rate of speed; he went through a red light at way more than the speed limit, and that was it. In a terrible act of cowardice, he fled the scene. He was later caught and went to prison.

My faith tells me it’s my obligation to forgive, and I’ve long since forgiven him. I’m sure that’s what she would have wanted. She was always thinking of other people. Her parents were visiting that week and saw her performance. During her last day on earth as just a 22-year-old, she told them that, if she didn’t make it in the business, she’d at least like to help other people try to follow their dreams.

That’s who she was. That’s who we lost.

Her dream does live on in that way, though. For 20 years, the Heather McGaughey Four Corners Theatre Academy has been helping young performers in the area work on their craft. It’s a beautiful tribute, but also a thing that didn’t need to exist. Or at least not yet. Not with her name on it. Not until the naming was out of recognition for her long and impressive career.

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I know that most of you are not inclined towards putting anyone else in danger. That’s not the sense I get from most of this community. But things happen. Temptation exists, and I know I’ve felt it. All I’m asking is, when that temptation appears, you think about Heather and ask yourself if it’s worth it. If you’re sure that if it all goes sideways that everyone involved was aware of the risk.

Accidents happen on race tracks, and that’s a tragedy, but those people know they’re on a race track and should know the risks. My friend Heather wasn’t on a race track. She was just going home, ready to start her life. It’s not fair, and it never needed to happen.

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Beasy Mist
Beasy Mist
7 hours ago

I’m sorry, Matt. I don’t know what to say outside of that, and thank you for sharing this.

Ishkabibbel
Ishkabibbel
8 hours ago

When I got my license I thought I was Dale Earnhardt. I was dangerously, absurdly, baselessly overconfident behind the wheel, and I’m thankful every day that no one was harmed due to my inconceivable stupidity. My only saving grace was that my first car was barely capable of speeding, and thankfully I came to my senses after a relatively short time.

I now have kids uncomfortably close to driving age, and the thought of how I used to be scares me to death.

Andrea Petersen
Andrea Petersen
8 hours ago

This is one of those things that feels weirdly universal in a terrible way. It seems like every high school, every friend group, every generalized young person association somehow has a story of someone’s life cut horribly short by reckless driving, either as an innocent victim or as the unsafe driver. On the one hand, it seems so crazy to me that this just happens over and over, year after year to the point where that loss becomes a universal experience. On the other, well, young people will be young people, a new bunch is added every year and they have to learn their own tragic lessons. I’m so sorry for your loss

Geekycop .
Geekycop .
9 hours ago

Matt, I’m right here with you. I lost one of my closest friends to a crash at about that same time when we were both just starting college. What you provided is a wonderful tribute to your friend and I really appreciate what you’ve done here.

Thanks so much.

Deathspeed
Deathspeed
9 hours ago

Thank you for sharing this. Although I have calmed down now, it makes me think about the stupid stuff I did 30-40 years ago and how lucky it is that I didn’t hurt or kill anyone. I’m going to make my teen son read this.

Squirrelmaster
Squirrelmaster
10 hours ago

Matt, I feel you on this. It was a tough read for me because I lost a good friend in similar circumstances about twelve years ago. We went to high school together, college together, and worked together. I transfered to a new office, but made routine trips back and would visit him when I did. One trip we just couldn’t make our schedules align on a particularly short trip, but no big deal because we could hang out next time. I get a call the next morning as I’m driving through an ice storm to inform me my friend had died in a car accident caused by foolishness. Even a decade later it still hurts, and I don’t expect that to ever change, nor do I think I would ever want it to change.

Be safe everyone.

Always broke
Always broke
10 hours ago

This was powerful. I did stupid things as a kid I’m not proud of, luckily no one was hurt. I see too many today, seemingly worse but that’s probably my perspective. If you have kids interested in spirited driving take them to a track

LMCorvairFan
LMCorvairFan
10 hours ago

I’ve lost far to many friends over the decades to vehicular deaths. I feel your sense of loss Matt. It never gets easier to deal with. I try to be responsible, but sometimes I make decisions in the heat of the moment that on later consideration were dumb and not worth the risk.

Be careful out there Autopians think twice about that move.

Parsko
Parsko
10 hours ago

Matt, this took a lot to write. Thank you for sharing. She is looking down right now beaming with pride and love for you.

Parsko
Parsko
10 hours ago
Reply to  Parsko

Hattie’s Jam might hit hard. But, it might help.
https://youtu.be/GRXPEeJ4T1g
https://youtu.be/tIKqCjxOpeU

Last edited 10 hours ago by Parsko
D
D
11 hours ago

I appreciate you, Matt.

I’m probably a bit older than you, and I have kids approaching Heather’s age. There’s a level of dumb shit that I see these days that didn’t exist when I was young and I wish I didn’t have to worry about it for my kids.

Cerberus
Cerberus
11 hours ago

They say that time heals all wounds, but I think “they” must have never cared very much. I find that the scars add up and you live with reduced mobility. Forgiveness is a big step, if not always easy, but failing to do so keeps the wound open.

For some people, their biggest fear is dying, but the number of times I thought I was dying, I was completely fine with it. I think the worst thing is losing others.

Ranwhenparked
Ranwhenparked
10 hours ago
Reply to  Cerberus

It’s more that your brain compartmentalizes and suppresses the pain so that you can still function, not sure where the healing bit came from, because that definitely does not happen

Crank Shaft
Crank Shaft
11 hours ago

Sorry man.

TheDrunkenWrench
TheDrunkenWrench
12 hours ago

Remember, remember, the 1st of November.

I lost my best friend to someone doing 30 over the limit (90 in a 60, 50% faster) through an intersection.

November 1st 2019, we called it and I said goodbye to her forever. 3 months after my daughter was born, while she was SO excited to help raise and shape.

As I now write this through tears, I can honestly say I feel for you Matt.

The pain never lessens, it just hits less often as time goes on.

Someday we’ll be drinking with the seldom seen kid https://youtu.be/jxczVhG0os8

Last edited 11 hours ago by TheDrunkenWrench
Ramblin' Gamblin' Man
Ramblin' Gamblin' Man
12 hours ago

As someone who lost two friends in a drunk driving accident, I feel your pain Matt. So senseless. 🙁

Last edited 12 hours ago by Ramblin' Gamblin' Man
Matt Sexton
Matt Sexton
12 hours ago

“I love doing stupid things with cars. The important difference is that I try to be careful about doing it in a way that, if something goes wrong, I am the only one who gets hurt.

Someone who is in the throes of wanting to do something stupid, is likely not in the frame of mind to accurately make this assessment.

If you do something stupid at a track day, they will kick you out. That should tell you something. Out on the road, you are significantly less safe than you are at a track day.

Don’t do stupid things with cars.

I know this was very hard for you to write. It was hard to read. But it was very important to say nonetheless, thank you. Very sorry for your loss.

Last edited 10 hours ago by Matt Sexton
Jason Tierney
Jason Tierney
12 hours ago

This is one of the articles that makes the autopian different, and special. Thank you for taking the time to write about Heather and spread her legacy.

Oberkanone
Oberkanone
12 hours ago

Painful to read. And not due to the subject matter.

Space
Space
10 hours ago
Reply to  Oberkanone

Why?

VS 57
VS 57
12 hours ago

It tends to feel Iike it’s never the right time to share things like this… but it’s probably never the wrong time. My share is a bit different from yours. Some years ago, I was driving to an event a state away on a holiday weekend. At about 3AM a person that had been partying engaged in street games and ran across the road in front of me. My speed was low and I caught some notion of something heading across, turned away and braked. Too late, hit him at about 40mph.

He lived to attempt to sue. We both lived in another state, there was no legal action, and my insurance refused to cover anything. To this day I get freaked out by any movement near my path while driving after dark. And it was all over a drunken bet with a buddy.

Canopysaurus
Canopysaurus
12 hours ago

I have lost too many relatives, lovers, and friends to tragic automobile accidents. Tomorrow is the one year anniversary of the death of a dear friend of over forty years. The incalculable sadness, the helplessness to change anything, the absolute rage over the unfairness of a life ended by sudden death leaves me hollowed out and forlorn. If only I could distill all of this anguish into a pill so that others, and especially young people could experience the pain of loss from tragic death, maybe a few would choose a more considered path, thereby avoiding being either the cause or a victim of vehicular stupidity and tragedy.

Dave
Dave
13 hours ago

Matt-
Thank you for sharing. I can only imagine how hard that was to write. If one person here reads this and realizes they are the Heather in someone life, and they hopefully have a Heather in theirs, and what the impact would be if this happened in their relationship it might cause a second thought and save a life.

Everyone else-
Think first. Then act. Or not.

Jb996
Jb996
13 hours ago

Wow. Sorry.

I guess car communities do always have a percentage of people who are okay street racing, doing uncontrolled burnouts from the cars and coffee, passing in no-passing zones in the twisties, drunk driving, etc, ’cause POWER.
And a percentage who maybe seem a bit boring, but who understand the slow-car-fast enjoyment, combined with track days, hpde’s, etc.

This is a terrible reminder for the former, about the reason for the latter.

Jonah
Jonah
11 hours ago
Reply to  Jb996

> passing in no-passing zones in the twisties

We had someone pass the FIRE TRUCK on the inside on a curvey mountain road. Unfortunately, there were no law enforcement units available in the area to pursue them…

Piston Slap Yo Mama
Piston Slap Yo Mama
13 hours ago

I can’t drive down Tampa’s beautiful Bayshore Boulevard without remembering the tragic accident of Jessica Raubenolt, who was pushing her toddler daughter in a stroller across the boulevard in Tampa a few years ago, when both were struck and killed by a street racer. The event led to widespread media coverage, public outrage, and significant changes in local policy. I didn’t know her, and still feel scarred by the coverage of her and her baby’s death.

Matt, I’m sorry that Heather was stolen from you and everyone else on this planet. Who knows what amazing things she would’ve contributed to the world?

https://www.fox13news.com/news/timeline-deadly-2018-bayshore-street-racing-crash-cameron-herrin-john-barrineau

Fourmotioneer
Fourmotioneer
13 hours ago

It’s a shame that you had to write that.

I really appreciate what you do for the site. Your writing style has a blood pressure lowering effect, and that’s a welcome benefit today

Angel "the Cobra" Martin
Angel "the Cobra" Martin
13 hours ago

An experience that is awful, but one that hopefully will lead to less of this. As a high schooler in the 80’s, we had 5 students die in my 4 years all from some sort of stupid driving activity. It was terrible 40 years ago, and it still stings to this day. As stated, all you can do is remember the amazing person they were and not how they got cheated out of a life in full.

1978fiatspyderfan
1978fiatspyderfan
13 hours ago

Wow a very powerful story that you don’t usually get on a car site. There is nothing I can say to make the story better. Except maybe continue to think about your time together rather than your time apart.

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