We raised the stakes at the dealership by bringing along a cranky 9 month old, over-tired 3 year old, and a small stuffed duck that quacks for a long, long time when you squeeze it.
Oh, the elegance we’ve enjoyed as the proud owners of a 1996
Honda Accord, with her 170k miles, hanging front bumper, and delightfully
irreverent windshield wipers that turn on whenever they please. All this is nearly at an end. For the old gal is now burning oil, and we
have already sunk untold (or, more accurately, embarrassing to tell about)
moneys into keeping her running. Time to
put it to rest and get a car that doesn’t require re-routing to avoid highways.
Not that my husband hasn’t enjoyed it. I think he rather enjoyed his scrappy
professor-mobile. It told the world: all
I care about is SCIENCE! Professor G
doesn’t need your flash or material markers of success. He’s got degrees for days! [Side note: this is what happens when you
meet your mate at eighteen years old.
You don’t really have an opportunity to get a wider view of how their
eccentricities will manifest.] But even
he, Mr. Take-What-You-Must-But-Leave-Me-My-MATLAB, has admitted that he’d like
to drive something a bit sturdier. He
is, after all, regularly in the position of wooing graduate students (to work
in his LAB, people! C’MON!). And while
the Honda may or may not chase them into the arms of another university, it will likely nudge
them toward business school.
What do we want? A family car. As big as the wagon used to seem, two car
seats have taken up more space than I ever dreamed. I can wedge myself in between them only at
contortionist angles with the acceptance of significant pain. Plus, kids be needing stuff! They’re hungry, they’re hot, they’re cold,
they’ve soiled themselves, they’re bored.
So much stuff. Something a little
roomier than the station wagon would be awesome.
So, we’re back to the car buying. The first time we bought a car together was
when we graduated college and Will's parents helped buy him a car. We had our budget, the wind at our back, no
children or even mutts to speak of, and off we went. After about 15 minutes in a car dealership,
we just wanted bus fare home. Will and I
are sensitive people, often to a fault.
And car dealerships? I’m not sure
why, but they make me awfully sad.
Hordes of sales people all working late into the evening, livelihoods
dependent on the luck of which customer they happen to glom onto. This could be utterly projected despair. For me, every aspect of this job is what I
would not want, so that’s the tainted lens I see it through, I suppose.
The sales strategies I’ve come across can be lumped in two
categories: sales people with looks of resignation and melancholy in their eyes
causing you to want to buy a car just to cheer them up; or a manic, slick-guy
vibe that leaves you confused and panicked that you may accidentally buy a car
if you aren’t totally vigilant. Not sure
which I prefer. At least with the latter
you end up with a car and the whole thing can end.
Right now we are in the throes of negotiation. Which means I get five calls a day from car
dealers. I keep saying “YOU WANT TOO
MUCH MONEY.” And they’re all, “Just come
on back. Let’s take a look at that trade
in. We’ll make it work.” So I then reiterate “Our trade in is worthless
so just SELL THE CAR FOR LESS MONEY.” I don’t know what they think a face-to-face will do. There was no, shall we
say, chemistry in these
interactions. I even required a Diet
Coke to stick with the whole ordeal, which delicious poisonous caffeine nectar
I gave up long ago. Unless the strategy
is to drain our life force till we drive off the lot in a shiny CR-V… That’s actually a solid strategy. “Ok, let me just go back to talk to my manager again and….” “Oh God, STOP! You’ve got
me! I’ll just buy the thing! WHAT DO YOU DO BACK THERE WITH YOUR MANAGER? I
don’t want to be here any more *sob*.”
We do need the new car before ye’ oldest car bursts into
flames. Soon enough I will have my pound
of flesh in the form of mud flaps or a free cargo mat. And they will sell us a car. We will get a reasonable deal, because I am
not terrible at this. Better, at least,
than my husband. During our second car
transaction many years ago, I asked if I could get a better price if I took a
car off the lot that they were having difficulty moving. One, I was told, was in an unpopular
color. I was shown this Superman blue
Jetta, and my (should have been) silent partner offers: “That’s not a bad color
at all! I like it!” Simmer down there, Pollyanna. I got this.
This whole thing would be a lot more pleasant, too,
obviously, if this were not money we neither wanted nor readily had to spend. It has conjured up the always fun:
“Lord. Maybe I need to get a job.” “Yeah, that would help.” “WHAT ARE YOU TALKING ABOUT? DO YOU KNOW WHAT
YOUR LIFE WOULD BE LIKE IF I WORKED FULL TIME?” (Husband exits stage left, walking backwards and muttering
incoherently.)
The big car reveal, I believe, will come in the next week or
so. Till then, feel free to start
sending me amazing bumper stickers. I
will accept “I’d Rather Be In Ann Arbor”, “Is that your FINAL answer?”, and “Lost Your Cat? Check Under My Tires.”