After we moved to Wyoming, my parents bought a house about three miles out of town, in the middle of a 14-acre field. It was a great house, and I find myself missing it quite often.
The house was nestled back about 1/8 of a mile from the road at the end of a long, curvy driveway. There was a turn-about that went around a decorative well right in front of the house. I will draw a picture to illustrate....(that sounds so redundant!)

That picture is completely off-scale, and the turn-about hugged the well much closer, but art is not my forte, and you get the idea...
When I obtained my driver's license, my parents bought a 1971 Chrysler Newport the color of pea-soup-vomit. It was because "cars should be built for safety, not appearance." I think they desired I never ever want to drive. They nicknamed it "The Green Bean". My friend Tiffani and I nicknamed it "The Beast". I don't have any pictures off-hand of our particular car, but here's one similar, complete with a person so you may reference the ginormous size and semi-putred appearance of this car.
Ahh, cars, the bane of every parent's existence and the goal of every kid of legal driving age.
ReplyDeleteI remember my friend Alex. Alex turned sixteen when I and my friends were still fifteen, so he had the unenviable job of driving us around if we paid for gas. Alex had a silver 1988 Ford Probe. Many good times were had in that car, even though the most that we had to do was drive around "the loop" which consisted of the main streets in the small town where I lived. I recall one time in particular...we met a group of Canadian girls, as one is capable of doing when one lives in a border town. I promise that this story does not get inappropriate. Anyway, the Probe was a two door turbo, so there was no way we were fitting four girls and three guys in the car without some serious space management. You might be asking yourself, "What does one do, Eric"? The answer is that you cram the four Canadian girls into the car and put your friend Jeff in the trunk. Yes, this actually happened to me. Jeff was a little strange, he did not mind the trunk as girls climbed all over me. It is one of my fondest memories. Alas, Alex dropped the transmission on the overpass west of Ranier, MN, and the Probe was toast. It was his first stick shift and he was still learning. But I digress.
The point is that cars represent the freedom that we believe that adults have until we grow up some more and realize that things are not all great. I am reminded of that AARP commercial where the kids talk about how the adults can do whatever they want all day. When we realize that a car is just a way for us to get to work, it loses its appeal and becomes merely a tool to accomplish a task. But for that fleeting moment in the spring of our lives, it gives us the ability to do everything that we ever wanted to, and for that, we are thankful.