At first, the situation looked like any routine night stop. A heavily swaying man had been pulled over, and the officer began walking him through a series of sobriety tests. Step by step, the man struggled through them with the determination of someone trying to appear far more coordinated than he actually was.
When the officer reached the final test, he paused and said calmly, “If you can complete this last one, I’ll consider letting you go. I want you to use the words green, pink, and yellow in a single sentence.”
The man blinked at him as if the words were floating somewhere above the patrol lights. He squinted hard, then looked from the pavement to the sky, steadying himself on his car as if preparing for an important exam. Slowly, he raised one finger.
“Alright, officer,” he said, concentrating fiercely. “I can handle this.”
The officer folded his arms, ready for whatever might come out next. The dashcam was recording, the night was quiet, and this was usually the moment when things took an interesting turn.
The man cleared his throat and stared at the ground like he expected the answer to appear there. A car passed by, washing his confused expression in headlights. After long seconds of mumbling silently, he nodded to himself.
Then he spoke with complete confidence.
“The green light pinked, and the yellow light told me to slow down!”
The officer’s eyebrows drew together. “The green light… pinked?”
The man smiled proudly. “Yeah. Past tense. It used to be green, now it’s pinked.”
The officer sighed. “Sir, the word pinked—”
Before he could continue, the man cut him off, suddenly defensive. “You didn’t say it had to sound normal. You only said to put them in one sentence.”
Behind the patrol car, another officer tried and failed to suppress a laugh, releasing a quiet snort that echoed in the still air.
The first officer pinched the bridge of his nose. “Sir, you are clearly intoxicated.”
“Oh, absolutely,” the man replied cheerfully. “No debate from me.”
“Then what’s with the smile?”
“Because,” the man announced, tapping his own chest, “I followed the rules.”
The officer took a slow breath. “Let’s try again. Use green, pink, and yellow—one sentence. This time, keep it normal.”
The man looked wounded by the request but nodded. “Fine. Normal. I can do that.”
He straightened up, swayed, and inhaled deeply.
“My favorite colors are green, pink, and yellow, and they remind me of—”
He stopped abruptly.
“Wait.”
“That works,” the officer encouraged. “Finish the sentence.”
The man shook his head firmly. “No. Too simple. Feels suspicious.”
The second officer turned away, laughing into his sleeve. The first officer stared at the man, trying to remain professional.
“Sir, complete the sentence.”
The man furrowed his brow so deeply it looked like his thoughts were overheating. Then a spark of triumph lit his face.
“I got it! This one is brilliant.”
He leaned in, lowering his voice.
“I was driving when the green light turned yellow, and before it could turn pink, you stopped me.”
The first officer froze. The second doubled over laughing. Eventually, even the first officer began laughing—real, uncontrollable laughter that broke through his attempts at seriousness.
“Pink, huh?” he said, wiping his eyes.
“Look, officer,” the man said earnestly, “I don’t study traffic lights. I had to work with what I had.”
The officer shook his head. “I’ll admit it… that sentence made more sense than I expected.”
“So… I passed?” the man asked hopefully.
The officer glanced at the breathalyzer reading, then at the dashcam, then back at the man.
“Well,” he said slowly, “you did exactly what I asked.”
The man pumped his fist. “Yes!”
“But,” the officer continued, holding up one finger, “you’re still over the legal limit.”
The man groaned. “There it is.”
The officer softened. “You’re not driving home. But I’m not arresting you. I’m calling someone sober to pick you up.”
“My brother’s sober,” the man said, relieved.
As they waited, the officer added, “If you tried that sentence while sober, it would have been terrible.”
The man grinned. “See? Alcohol boosts creativity.”
The officer laughed. “Do not push your luck.”
When the brother arrived to collect him, the officer leaned in before shutting the car door. “Next time you want to work on word challenges, do it at home.”
The man saluted clumsily. “Yes, sir. And officer?”
“What now?”
“Traffic lights need a pink phase. It would make driving interesting.”
The officer shook his head, smiling as the car pulled away.
As he returned to his cruiser, the second officer asked, “So… did he pass?”
“Not the sobriety test,” the officer replied.
“But he definitely passed the comedy one.”





