KAREN WIGHT -- No Place Like Home
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I realize that my tastes and my husband’s are never going to mesh
perfectly. He’s a jock, I’m not. He couldn’t care less if the bed is made
in the morning, I can’t leave the house until the breakfast dishes are in
the dishwasher and the beds have their corners tightly tucked.
We’re a little like the “Green Acres” couple, just add a few kids and
trade a mixed-breed dog for the pig.
I subscribe to the theory that opposites attract, and so far it’s
worked. However, there is an issue that divides us. We’ve never even been
able to agree to disagree. The issue is the car.
Now, if Ben and I saw this issue eye to eye, literally, we would not
have a problem. But I am a full 10 inches shorter than he. This was a
good idea when I considered the gene pool for my children, but for car
harmony, it’s very bad.
And then there’s the music. My car musical repertoire includes James
Taylor, Kenny Loggins, the Mamas and the Papas, Cat Stevens and the
soundtrack to “Thoroughly Modern Millie.” Don’t laugh. My husband thinks
it’s awful too. Ben definitely subscribes to a more visceral and less
eclectic musical selection.
During the week, Ben drives a truck. It works for his business. There
is an extra seat so he can haul extra kids along if he needs to, but the
truth is, he prefers to drive the family car.
I don’t blame him. I like my car better too. It’s big, has a lot of
seat belts, a nice sound system and, basically, it’s more comfortable.
I can’t find fault in the pursuit of creature comforts, except that
every time he gets into “my” car, he adjusts the seat, rearview mirror
and side mirrors, and changes the music. It annoys me.
In the big picture, I know this is minor. But when I’m in a hurry and
hop in my car, my foot can’t even touch the gas pedal. It’s annoying. And
the music? After Ben has been in my car, my “Sweet Baby James” is no
longer “Goin’ to Carolina.”
We have never been able to establish car boundaries. Technically,
because he is the bread winner in the family, I guess it’s his car. I, as
the severely underpaid chauffeur, cook and maid, consider the car to be
one of my “perks.”
The point was driven home, again, last week when hubbie was involved
in a fender-bender in “my” car. It wasn’t his fault, but now “my” car is
tweaked.
There is a lovely white streak down the side of my black car. Aside
from looking like a skunk as I drive down the road, being in an accident
is a little inconvenient. Call the insurance, go to the adjuster, contact
the body shop and rent a car (a sedan).
I’m missing the extra car. A 1961 bug bus that Ben “had” to have to go
to the beach. I love the bus. I consider it to be a cheap and highly
moral form of midlife crisis.
It’s at the shop being brought up to speed (not literally, it will
only go 40 mph) for the impending new driver in the house. Even though
it’s a tin can and people stare at me when I noisily drive by, it is
amusing to cruise and watch people point and laugh.
The bus is so primitive that there is no sound system. There is not
even an AM/FM radio to fight over. When you are in the bus, all you hear
is the rattle of the engine.
I’m going to try to not be bitter as I drive the kids around in a
smoky sedan with red vinyl seats that our legs stick to. But I think this
gives me enough ammunition to insist that I get first dibs on the music
in “my” car for a while.
* KAREN WIGHT is a Newport Beach resident. Her column runs Sundays.
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