Showing posts with label used cars. Show all posts
Showing posts with label used cars. Show all posts

Saturday, June 24, 2023

A Look Back: Wise Words from a 22-Year-Old Barbie

First off, my apologies for my rather prolonged absence. Nothing is wrong. It's just when the weather gets warm, it becomes less and less likely I will spend a weekend day inside writing but today is very hot and I've been outside a lot lately so thought I would spend some time writing a blog today. Wow, lucky day!

Lately I have had several friends and family members who have kids that are either graduating from high school or college. Many of those kids are being gifted with cars, which made me think back to when I was heading to college hoping that I would also be lucky and get a car. Looking back, I have no idea why I was so optimistic. 

I thought it might be fun to jump in the Hot Tub Time Machine and go way back 35 years and give you you all a glimpse into the crazy mind of 22-year-old Barbie, a sassy senior Journalism major at Texas A&M University, and at the time a weekly columnist at my college's newspaper, The Battalion. If you missed the whole Barbie story, you can catch up here

Being one of the very few liberals on campus and without question one of the most vocal because of said gig, my columns were typically met with more ire than most. Got loads of hate for my criticism of the students who destroyed the shanty shacks that had beeen set up on campus to protest The Apartheid in South Africa. You can't even step on certain grass on campus without getting yelled at. Yeah, it's a thing.

I eventually decided it was safer to just write about my life instead of tackling political topics. Less hate mail that way. 

So behold, the very earliest version of the "World According to Barb," that originally posted in 1988. Sadly, you will see my writing hasn't evolved much and my sense of humor is still quite immature today, to which you can all attest. 


Oh, Joy the Search for the Perfect Auto

Over the past weekend several important newsworthy events happened. The US warship mistakenly shot down an Iranian jetliner killing, all 290 passengers, Attorney General Edwin Meese announced his resignation, and my parents bought me a new car. Well, it's not really new, but close enough.

This might not seem to some of you as a monumental event, but then again maybe I should back up and bit and fill you all in on the whole story. 

First off, I must explain a little about my parental unit. My parents believe firmly in two principles: One is that regardless of the amount of money one has, children are not to be spoiled. They must work for things they want and not just be given them. 

The second principle is that a car is simply a mode of transportation from Point A to Point B, not material possession. As a result, my family's driveway resembles a used car lot. In my family, you don't stop driving a car until it stops running. My dad still brags of a car he once owned, appropriately named the "Vomit Comet," which he bought off a friend for $50 and drove for two years. 

A lot of kids, when embarking on their freshman year, are given cars for graduation gifts by their parents. Well Bob and Barb Jones were not those parents. It was entirely out of the question. "But all my friends are getting to take cars to school," I pleaded to no avail. My parents were not ones to fall for that sort of logic. 

Fortunately, it turned out to not be such a tragedy since I was living on campus and everything could be access on foot.

My sophomore year I again pleaded for a car; instead, I got a bike. Not a new bike, but a friend of my Mom's Sears Jiffy 3-speed with goober handlebars and a basket with plastic flowers hanging off the front. I was horrified. I was going to be living off campus with no car.

The nearest grocery store was three-fourths of a mile away. To get my groceries home, I would have to steal a grocery cart and cross a busy 4-lane road and push it all the way back to my apartment—a very humbling experience. I would try and look as it had forgotten where I had parked my non-existent car. My friends called me the "bag lady." What are friends for?

Then came my junior year, and I felt assured that this was going to be my lucky year. Well, there was good news and bad news. Yes, I was going to have a car to take to school with me. The bad news was the car I had to take. 

Close your eyes and imagine every student's idea of a nightmare car. Yes, that's right a station wagon! Not just any station wagon, however, but the same one my parents bought when I was 11. It had 130,000 miles on it and it definitely was showing its age. Now imagine the worst color imaginable. Right again...Yellow!



Since the car had been collecting dust in the driveway for a decade and not driven in ages, I felt certain the old bomb wouldn't start. My (bad) luck continued, and the "Banana Mobile" as my friends called it, started on the first try with a sizable cloud of blue smoke bellowing from its tailpipe. Lucky me, right?

So off I went cruising in the Banana Mobile. Now considering the advanced age of said car and high millage, I knew the humiliation of driving this car would be short-lived, and excitedly looked forward to its dying day. Well, it lived and it lived. It was the eternal automobile, and I felt sure that this car would see my death before its own ultimate demise. 

[SIDE NOTE: For some reason I don't add (probably because it was humiliating) that one day, the entire rusted-out bumper fell off and rolled down the street, just as I was driving past the Dixie Chicken, the school hangout bar. This bumper was made of steel and the size of a modern-day Kia Rio, so obviously I kept driving. I thought that would warrant a trade-in of sorts, but no. my mom just drove it to the junk yard and for $20 I got a new (old) bumper that came with a "Honk if you love Jesus" sticker. Yep, that happened. Sorry, back to story.]

I drove it my entire junior year and senior years, and just when I thought I would have to hire a contract killer to get rid of this vessel, it happened. While I was home for the weekend this spring, my Dad discovered some major problems and deemed it unsafe to drive.  That was one of the happiest days of my life. I was finally going to get a car...or so I thought.

Sunday rolled around and no new car had materialized. My parents smugly handed me the keys to the maxi-van. It is not a merely a van, mind you, but at MAXI-van—a whopping 3 feet longer than your average van. 


I stared at them in disbelief. I once thought you would have to work really hard to find a car that is less cool than the wagon, but let me tell you a white, wood-paneled (because they got a deal) maxi-van is about as close to uncool as one can get...unless you do airport pickups for a living. 

"You will have to drive this for a couple of weeks or so until we find something else," my mom said. Well, the weeks turned to months, and I was beginning to think I was cursed. But indeed, it happened, and the rest is history. I now have my new own car--and it's not yellow! 

UPDATE: Once my siblings and I finished college and moved away, my parents immediately moved to buying only expensive premium cars. 

Summer is here

The season we all live in Chicago for is here! I hope everyone is having a great one, thus far. I promise to write a few more blogs before summer ends, have a few topics in mind. Until then, I hope this finds everyone healthy and happy.

Ciao for now,

Barb(ie) 


Missed any blogs? Links below!


Friday, November 12, 2021

"There's a Sandwich in Every Beer" and other Jon-isms

Hi everyone! Can't believe we made it to fall already. About 15 minutes from now it will be Christmas and then it will be 2022. Wow, that went fast. 

I've kept you all updated on both the ups and downs of my love life so thought I might mark the one-year anniversary of our first date by telling you a little more about my man. 

A few things about Jon

Man's divine right to hot tubs. Jon strongly believes that as American citizens we have certain inalienable rights, one of which is to be able to sit in hot tubs everywhere. In some areas of the country, the beachfront is public so everyone has a right to be access and enjoy certain areas of the coastline? Jon believes this should also extend to include hot tubs, especially those at expensive hotels. Those are his favorite, despite the fact that these swanky establishments often put security in place to protect the sanctity of their respective hot tubs. Fortunately this is never a problem. He's perfected his tactics over the years, and while I'm sure he would not want me giving away any of his "hot tub poaching" secrets, safe to say his success rate is very high. Once he's breached the perimeter and safely landed, it would take an act of God to remove him. The upside is he's going to drop some cash (beer, food) so these hotels should welcome him with open arms. 


"There's a sandwich in every beer." This is typically his response whenever I ask if he's eaten. Perhaps it's the fact that I'm a mother and not a fan of skipping meals, but I do feel the compulsion to ask this grown-ass man if he's eaten. Jon will go half the day without eating or will eat something for breakfast and then not eat all day. Or eat nothing until mid afternoon. But fortunately he is likely not to forget to drink a beer at some point so...well there you have it.

Keeping his mechanics employed. Jon owns multiple used cars, none of which are ever running at the same time.  So needless to say he spends a lot of time transporting cars in and out of the shop. He has a Range Rover that was built during the first Bush administration that is a constant money pit, two Toyota FourRunners and recently purchased a used Porsche Boxster. Yes, clearly might be a mid-life crisis thing, but my ex husband's midlife crisis involved a 20-something, mall food court worker (going to have to wait for the book for that whale of a story) so I guess I should be happy that his manifested this way. 

His mechanic assured him the Boxster was in mint condition! Two weeks later he awoke in the middle of the night to hear his car alarm blaring in a midst of a thunderstorm. Then he realized that not only was the alarm going off but for some reason his windows have rolled themselves half way down. He thought he had the issue resolved--after McEyver'ing some fix--but later while driving to a meeting, the alarm started going off again. Long story short, it's back in the shop. Shocking, I know. As is the Range Rover.


The big winners in all of this, of course, are his auto mechanics who all coincidentally own very large, expensive boats that they do allow Jon to visit. So you know every time he purchases yet another "money pit" used car, they immediately start thinking of what's the next boat toy Jon is going to help them buy. 

Has ukulele, will play...whether you want him to or not. When he let his eldest daughter take his guitar to college in Boston, his new instrument of choice became his ukulele, which he brings everywhere. Literally everywhere. And, he will play it, whether you want him to or not. He has a pretty good voice though I must admit his falsetto, to which he often defers, lands squarely between "not good" and "God awful." What he makes up for in natural skill, however, he more than makes up with raw enthusiasm. He brought it to the Turks & Caicos this winter. My daughter thought it was adorable...for the first hour...as he worked his way through the alphabet, her enthusiasm waned. 



Make fast. Having lived in Chicago for many years, Jon is an expert driver/parallel parker and navigator. That said, he firmly believes that you can park pretty much anywhere, even double park, if you have your flashers on. Apparently he thinks the proper use of your flashers can negate any silly driving or parking ordinance. One time he joined me at dinner with some friends. He joined mid-meal and offered to give me a lift home. We came out of the restaurant an hour or so later, and there was his giant Range Rover with this SUP on the top parked in a no-parking zone...with his flashers on. 

Best years ever. Jon has two beautiful daughters whom he cherishes, and we have certainly had a great run, thus far, and I know he loves me. Despite this, I can feel fairly certain that no other chapter of his life will ever surpass his four-year, post-college, ski-bum internship in Aspen. He hustled, worked multiple jobs and skied every possible opportunity. During this time, he became a competitive "extreme" skier. He was even in a movie: Aspen Extreme. When he talks about this period, which he does at every possible opportunity, he lights up. It's akin to "This one time at band camp..." 

I'm sure an ideal retirement scenario for him would involve a second residency somewhere in the mountains. I'm actually ok with that. A few times he's mentioned that living on a boat has always been a dream. Honestly there are few things I'd rather NOT do more than live on a boat. I'd take a root canal. At least the pain is limited to a few hours. Some of my darker moments have been on boats, staring intensely at the shore or any other immobile object so I didn't throw up...again.  Anyway, boats and I have a troubled relationship. A ski house. No problem. 

Walking sunshine. That's how I would describe his temperament. Every time I see him, he has a smile on his face and just seems thrilled to be alive. He blessedly tones it down in the morning, but overall he has a very sunny disposition. He greets everyone with a smile or sometimes a wisecrack, and he is game for damn near anything...as long as beer will be served. 

This temperament was put to the test recently when Bowie, my youngest dog, got into this jacket while we were visiting my parents, chewed through an interior pocket, got into his wallet and proceeded to eat five $100 bills. I walked into the scene after the fact finding just pieces of bills, staring down at three clearly visible faces of Benjamin Franklin. 



I knew enough to know that wasn't a bill I carry often, but could hardly process it. Fortunately, he took the news in stride. My guess this is at least partially due to the fact that he recognizes the value of a good story, and I know for a fact that I will quite literally never live this one down.  

Was there a bill extraction from that damn dog's poop later?...I don't want to talk about it. Let's just say my love for this man should never be questioned. Enough said. Funny side note: Bowie completely ignored four $1 dollar bills that were nicely folded, sitting on the top of his suitcase.





Shitty weather cometh...Why am I telling you this? Because it means more blogs from me. Silver lining, amiright? I'm sure this makes you all feel better and will make the 4 inches of snow predicted for the weekend here in Chicago seem less awful. Hardly, but hope you are all ready. 

Get started on the Christmas shopping, folks, so the supply chain fairy doesn't lob a turd in your Holiday punchbowl. 

More to come and Happy Thanksgiving!!

Barb

Missed any blogs? You can catch up with the past blogs with links below:

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