If it has tires or
testicles, it’s going to give you problems. The bumper sticker was catchy, and summed my
life up to a capital T. I reckon I’ve had as many relationships as I’ve had
cars, and at the age of 62 years, that could really add up. Fortunately there had been no major car
accidents and only a couple of divorces.
I’ll always
remember my first. It was a used Toyota station wagon, a god awful brown, definitely not a cool vehicle to be driving.
But the price was right and it was the best I could afford after finishing
college. It was good on gas, held a shitload of stuff in the back, and served
me well for as long as it lasted.
My other first was
somewhere between summer vacation and an alcohol induced haze in the 1970s.
Too many lemon gins, ‘panty remover’ I think they called it back then. It
obviously worked, but at least I still had the car and never had to see the guy
again.
I was determined,
my next set of “T’s” would be better. In
fact, stayed married to the guy for a whole two years and drove his light blue
Monza, that semi-looked like the closest thing I’d seen to a sports car. We were casually sitting watching the Oscars
on TV when he turned in the academy performance of his life.
“ You’ve found another
woman? Get your ass out of here and I’m
keeping the car!” I drove that sucker into the ground, neglected oil changes
and any other maintenance. It just seemed the right thing to do. When it died
on the side of the 401 in rush hour traffic, I didn’t care.
It was time to
start anew, find something with class, a good engine and was sporty. Oh yes, I found it in a second generation
used Camaro, the last model with the long hood. It had a V-8 engine, blue
racing stripes down the side, and was ridiculously fast. As I pushed the gas
pedal, that guzzler sucked back on the fuel gauge as dollar signs spewed out of
the exhaust pipe. I was making decent
money at work, and life was good.
In the meantime, there were no men causing me
problems. Perhaps, that’s why the Camaro was my favourite. Unfortunately back then, I never found a man
worthy of being in the passengers’ seat for any length of time. Sometimes life
is like that, but being single was cool and I did a lot of test drives.
When the Camaro
sighed its’ last breath, I decided after considerable debate, that a virgin was
in order. A brand spanking new white 1986
Toyota fit the bill. With popup headlights and a retractable sunroof, I was in heaven.
It was good for the first few years, but
perhaps the sun beaming through the roof addled my brain. Once again I found myself hitched as in
wedlock. Perhaps lock is the keyword
here.
The car worked
well, the spouse not so much. I actually kept up the maintenance contract with
this car, and tried to be supportive to my oft unemployed husband. But damn, if
you can’t even fill out your unemployment forms correctly, some things need to
be left behind. The difference this time, I had a child to consider.
My next two cars
were as cheap as I could get them. The first was a Hyundai, eight years old, a
bargain at $3,000. The only kicker, it was a standard. I’d never driven a
standard before, and refused to take it on a test drive. Sometimes I can be bullheaded, a bit of a know
it all, or at least pretend I am. I’d
figure this out on my own, without anyone watching.
I paid for the car, jumped into the front seat
and lurched out of the dealership parking lot. I checked my daughter frequently
for whiplash as I depressed the clutch to change gears. Later on the expressway,
I realized it actually had a fifth gear. Something most of the men had been
lacking. That smooth ride that lowers
the RPM’s and still keeps the motor revved.
That car lasted
four years. In the meantime, there was no testicular activity accosting my single
status. After all, I had a child and responsibilities. The next car made me rethink my past. Here I was, teaching my now 16 year old
daughter to drive a newer but still used Hyundai, standard. We practiced in the
library parking lot, worked on using the emergency brake and easing off to
start from a full stop on a steep uphill climb. She aced it like a pro. A chip
off the old block methinks. My genes, not his!
I’ve given up the
whole testosterone thing, had a few high test jobs where I had to grow my own
set of balls to deal with great and not so great men in the workplace. But for
the most part, steered my own path to where I am today. Happy, confident and driving
a brand new Hyundai. It was my second virgin and it has awesome tires.
Damn, my heart
still yearns for that Camaro. It was a really hot car, sleek and silver, and
when I think back so was I. Now I have the silver, mixed in with the gray, and
sweet memories of those test drives.
Connie Cook lives in
Port Credit, Ontario, and when she’s not working at her real job as a
Registered Nurse, aka the one that pays the bills, she writes. She’s been a
frequent flyer at Brian Henry’s courses and credits the classes for her
development as a writer. Connie has had short stories published by Pacific
Magazines, Commuter Lit, Chicken Soup for the Soul, Royallite Publishers and
most recently Feminine Collective. Her novel Diana Darling Private Detective is
currently under a final re-write. (Or so she hopes!)
"Vehicles and Men" was previously published in Feminine Collective. For information on submitting to Feminine Collective, see here.
See Brian Henry’s schedule here, including writing workshops,
weekly writing classes, and weekend retreats in Algonquin Park, Bolton, Barrie,
Brampton, Burlington, Caledon, Georgetown, Guelph, Hamilton, Ingersoll,
Kingston, Kitchener, London, Midland, Mississauga, Oakville, Ottawa, Peterborough,
St. Catharines, Saint John, NB, Sudbury, Thessalon, Toronto, Windsor,
Woodstock, Halton, Kitchener-Waterloo, Muskoka, Peel, Simcoe, York Region, the
GTA, Ontario and beyond.
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