We recently had to get rid of a car, a 2004 Volvo V70R, to a junk dealer. And the
car was junky, and with the grime an old car gets when it was driven a family
with lots of small kids. A car is never
quite the same after that, with a layer of trash and indefinable things formed through
the years and thousands and thousands of miles, at the peak time our family was
being created and we were most together.
Last year we got rid of another car, a 2003 Chevy Suburban
1500 LT, also to a junk dealer, who picked up the car at a parking lot of a gas
station off Route 95 in North Carolina, where it had finally quit.
Both were family cars.
All six of us, and/or other numbers or other combinations of families
and friends, on trips and places, and places of adventure, good and bad. A family car is a closed environment, with
spaces tightly defined and rigidly enforced. “Get off!
That’s my side of the seat.” Our
presence to each other was magnified by the close proximity of the car. Habits and agreements developed over the
years to help cope with the environment of noise, science, bathroom breaks,
food breaks, arguments about too many breaks, the music, games. One year we went on an outdoors vacation with
the Suburban, filled with camping and biking and other stuff and we went
rock climbing as part of the trip, even the smallest who was 6 or 7 back then. And I remember when she got stuck on a rock,
her little voice saying calmly but decisively “I am in a bit of a pickle” and
the guide heard and helped her slowly down.
We had an audio habit for a while, listening to old radio
shows on the car’s CD player. One we
drove by the signs for Grover’s Corner, NJ at night, just as the invasion was happening
on War of the Worlds.
Sometimes when the kids were very young, I would make up stories
about a young alien named Blisfik, and his adventures, and one of the favorites
was when Blisfik crash landed his space ship on the Planet Patagonia, which
everybody had big feet, and came up with an idea for building a new
spaceship. Which was quite a feat.
We even touched on logic and philosophy sometimes, carefully
defining missed opportunities and gleefully explaining why the other person was wrong as we played “I Spy
With my Little Eye” or “TriBond” (one player names three objects and the others
try to figure out what connects all three.)
We used the cars for other things too. I used
the Suburban to help clean out a elderly woman’s apartment. She had died and had no family. I brought the Suburban in case there was anything
to be donated to charity.
Our story, our family story, has been changing and too fast
to control. I realize that now. My dad is
fond of saying says life goes by in the blink of an eye and he is right. I remember once I was
at the supermarket with the three oldest, and they were all young and relatively
close in age, and I was tired, so tired, and they were acting up and I was tired, staring at them, thinking “Really?” and I sensed this little old lady
coming up to us, I could tell she was going to say “these are the best
years of your life” or some such and I raised my head and glared at her and she turned very quickly and went away. But now I sometimes think she was right, even
if it’s not good to live in memories.
We won’t need a family car anymore. Our children have gotten older and moved
out. Our schedules and coming and going
have changed. We go different places at
different times. Sometimes for big
events we all get back together again.
But never in a family car.
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