Showing posts with label Automobiles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Automobiles. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 27, 2011

Drive

Somehow I feel the failure, partly because there is a sting of truth in it, & partly because I tend toward anthropomorphism, grieving for the loss of life for a plant, believing that electronic equipment hates me, & knowing that I failed in my love for an automobile.

I have always held that Happiness is not a state of being, but rather Happiness is in the moments. For a few tiny moments in my considerable life, the stars aligned, my luck stuck, & all the points came together & everything worked. That was when I experienced an extended era of ecstatic enchantment. The blessed bliss brought prosperity, pleasure & possibilities for a life well lived.

The early 1970s: goofy, original good looks that only the young can posses because they don’t understand that it will all be gone someday. I could do nothing wrong. It all came easy to me: meaty roles in the theatre, meaty men in my bed, attention, admiration, humor, hilarity & hopefulness. Boston, LA & NYC.

Seattle 1982- 1989: Hot boyfriend, hot apartment, hot buzz about my acting on stage & in commercials, films, & TV. My image is on the side of buses, on the back page of the newspaper, on billboards, & I am mentioned in the press. We can rarely go a day without my being recognized & commented on by strangers & feted by friends. The hot boyfriend considers that it may not be all that good for me, but he remains a fan, attending all of my opening nights. I gym daily. I have single digit body fat. Sexual performance is never an issue. Never a mention that I might party too much.

Portland 2002-2006: comfortable, curious, & cultivated. We own our own home for the first time. Our Own Home. The boyfriend becomes my husband. We have respectable employment. The Husband is thin, tan, talented, sleek & sexy. He wears beautiful clothing at work & no clothing at the beach. We have hundreds in checking & thousands in savings. We vacation in NYC, seeing Broadway shows & shopping. We weekend in Palm Springs, imbibing & inhaling poolside.

For a couple of weeks, I had been eyeing a bronze Volkswagen station wagon at a car lot on the way to the gym. On one of those happy days, I walked into the lot & drove out in that station wagon. After decades of driving clunkers, I had a real automobile for the first time & it felt fine.

In my beautiful new car, handsome silver fox husband at the wheel, singing along to Tegan & Sara’s Walking With A Ghost & Dave Matthew’s American Baby from my summer mix, driving along a rustic rural road on Sauvie Island on a perfect August morning, headed to the nude beach with a book, blanket, & a thermos of vodka lemonade, having already dropped a half a hit of E… I was experiencing perfectly, profoundly happiness.

2011: barely1 ½ incomes, bills, hospital visits, prescriptions, old dog, crushing depression, strained relationships, strained budget, strained bank accounts. Yesterday, it was agreed that the Volkswagen would go. I calculated that we would save us $8000 a year by not paying car payments, insurance, gasoline, & maintenance. We will sock it away & someday purchase an old pick-up truck so we can go to Lowes, the salvage shops & nurseries. We will join ZipCar for $75 a month for 15 hours of driving (enough for the Husband to deal with clients). They pay the insurance & the fuel. ZipCar has a car parked just at the end of our block.

We will not be able to be able to be spontaneous. If the Husband forgets an ingredient in tonight’s dinner, it will require a trip to the supermarket 10 blocks away.

I have that tingle of tumult for trying something strange & unaccustomed. We will walk when willed. Bicycles are in order. I don’t need a lot: house, garden, dogs, books, music, local watering spots. Using the ZipCar & leaving the neighborhood will be our big adventure.

Your host, a decade ago, with his 1970 Ford Pickup Truck


In Seattle, I a drove a red 1970 Ford pickup truck & the Husband got around in his yellow 1960 Ford pickup. It seemed too daunting to get them both to Portland when we moved. The Husband sold his truck & I traded with my father, my pickup for a junker. I always mourned the letting go of those 2 trucks. Now with the giving up of the station wagon, I feel remorse. Why does this place I find myself in make me maudlin & make me cry? It is just an automobile; they come & they go. It always ran perfectly, it never gave me any trouble & the bronze Volkswagen Station Wagon came into my life at a point when my existence was uncommonly, uncharacteristically upbeat, & dare I say, for a moment… happy.



This photo of Junior has nothing to do with the post, except that loving him makes me happy.
A gentle reminder that the love you take is equal to the love you make.

Saturday, April 9, 2011

Two For The Road

The Husband & I are just about to hit the road. We are traveling 6 hours NE of Portland to the city where I grew up (ages 6-18) & The Husband went to high school. In the late 1960s, we actually lived within a 1/2 mile of each other & we knew some of the same people.


My parents live in the country, about 15 miles from Spokane, but we lived in town while I was in school. I left on the day I graduated from high school, but I returned in the summer of 1977, after being exhausted from the experience of living in NYC in the mid-1970s. At the very same time, The Husband returned after living in Europe. We both came back for the same reasons & I like to think it was so that we could meet. I returned to Spokane, a city that we both did not really like, to put myself back together, regroup, & decide what was next. For a short time, I enjoyed being a very a big acting fish in a very little theatre pond. It was rather thrilling to get work & attention in my hometown after being one of millions attempting to make it in NYC (I know...if you can make it there, you can make it anywhere).

Spokane, The Lilac City, is a mean little town that does not take kindly to anyone who is perceived as different. But it is a pretty small city, with a gorgeous set of waterfalls right in the middle of the downtown, & of course lots of lilacs. I believe there is one gay bar. The Husband has observed that the entire place seems frozen in 1971.


Riding in a motor vehicle that the other is driving is always driving us to divorce. We each dislike how the other pilots an automobile, no, that is too polite... each of the other's driving make the other fully daft. But, we seem to do well on a road trip. We have a few games that we indulge in the automobile: Favorites (favorite flower etc), Best (best year etc), & Unlikely Casting (Carol Channing as Lady Macbeth). A car trip is the only time we ever stop at a McDonald's. We both are crazy for fried potato products, & we let traveling be an excuse to indulge.

I may not do any posting until our return to Post Apocalyptic Bohemia on Tuesday. I will miss you. Be good while I am gone.