I can’t deny that I would loathe a society void of German influence. I live for the cocoa-filled decadence that is German chocolate cake. I can’t begin to imagine Christmas without the regal Taunenbaum, and epic poetry without Faust seems much like a feast without the entrée. In fact, aside from the tiny historical blunder that was World War II, Germany has, in my mind, contributed quite nicely to the social order.
Or so I thought.
Enter Crayola, the sputtering, untrustworthy Volkswagen that is my daily German companion.
Sure, she looks innocent enough: her cool blue exterior the very color of loyalty, premium alloy wheels and an initial-embroidered headrest that once was our special bond.
This, my friends, is my very own femme fatale.
Our past has always been a bit rocky. I brought her home on a whim, always attracted to something new and shiny. From the start she made me work for her affection: learning to drive a stick being more effort than I’d ever put into a relationship before.
And yet we seemed to get along, and our first year together was the stuff they write books – or auto brochures, rather – about.
And then something changed in Crayola. She was no longer the zippy 1.8 I fell in love with. She began backing into everything. Mailboxes, garbage cans, mini-vans, you name it – Crayola hit it. I didn’t understand the masochism then, and I blamed myself, knowing full well that I couldn’t help her if she wouldn’t help herself.
So we separated.
It was two years, and the dark days she spent as my mother’s chariot made her realize how good we were together. When we reunited, it was magic. It was as if Crayola had grown a new heart – albeit simply a clutch and a fresh set of performance tires. Many a long hour we spent together, gallivanting through town, soaring down the interstate. I fed her premium, gave her baths and never left her unattended for long.
But she snapped anyway. And one stormy April day Crayola tried to kill me.
The rain was pouring, mud and sleet flinging at my windshield when Crayola halted her wipers without explanation and drove me, quite nearly, into the freeway median.
I pulled over, shaking, fuming at the temper tantrum I hadn’t known her to be capable of.
Well, that was April.
June brought with it bad brakes and threats of rear-ending every car on the road.
August was a busted coil pack and Crayola taunting me with her flashing CEL light.
And just this week, she attempted again.
I was pulling out of Fashion Place mall, cold and exhausted from a 14-hour work day. I wasn’t asking for much: merely a safe trip home and perhaps a heated seat. But she was having none of it, and her halting, choppy acceleration let me know that our relationship was, once again, on the rocks.
Despite her protests, I made it home, slamming her door and marching into the house, telling her to sit outside in the October cold and to think about what she’d done.
I gave her 10 hours, but 8 a.m. brought no remorse for her previous actions. In fact, it wasn’t until she saw my tears that she began behaving.
And so here we are, picking up the pieces of a broken relationship and trying to move on. I wonder, at length sometimes, how life could be different had I chosen another companion – Japanese or American, perhaps.
And yet, we’re here, and every day is a risk with this menacing European.
Because, my friends, you can never trust a German.
7 comments:
My sister just bought a Volkswagen. I tried to warn her...
You leave nothing not personified.
You are Seinfeld of the inorganic.
Why does she have to be such a bitch? Perhaps she misses her older, wiser friend Betty.
Hah! I love that you named your car Crayola especially since every Jetta I've ever been in smells just like crayons.
Bad, bad Crayola. You should put her in time out more. Maybe a few spankings and flicks on the ear would work !
My friend Daniel just bout a jetta too! Its so pretty. Black with beigh interior. Madonna sounds amazing in it. He named her Judy. Unfortunatly he keeps reminding me that everything accept the floor mat is hot lava.
All I have to say is that you're a genius with words. You make me laugh out loud even when I'm all by myself. By the way, I remember my first ride in Crayola. Hmmm.. I never thought she was capable of anything like this!
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