IML: Imperial love / hate relationship
[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
IML: Imperial love / hate relationship
- From: "Hugh, 58 Imperial" <imperial58@xxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Mon, 10 Sep 2007 13:12:41 -0500
In the vein of Laurie's recent contribution, let me just say that bringing
"my" 58 into the family was never a deal breaker but it has caused some
intense emotional responses along the way. First thing worth saying is the
car does not belong to me. It is owned by a museum. I used to be the
chairman of the board and am now it's manager, part-time, badly paid but
loving it. I fell for the 58 hard. After a long time working on it at the
museum, it became runnable enough to bring it home, which at that time was
an apartment. I never wanted to own a house, but my wife did, and my way in
was a garage for the 58. I turned down several house because the car would
not fit into the garage or the entrance was too awkward. Anyhoo, soon
enough we found a place when the car could squeeze in with inches to spare
on each side, and almost none fore and aft. The funny thing is that the
house and the car are contemporary to each other and all cars were pretty
big back then but there you have it.
My daughter, now 13, loved the car from the get go, especially being picked
from school in it. I'd let her sit on the arm rest in the middle of the
back seat with a wee strap to keep her in place. Twas she who named it Mrs.
Blueberry. My best compliment on the name came from a real head turner
female member of my local Mopar club who said it took a real man to have the
guts to call his car Mrs. Blueberry and introduce it as such to anyone and
everyone. I hadn't thought of it that way until then but was happy to be
given the idea and the ego stroke. However, my wide hated the car,
completely and resolutely. She referred to it as my girl friend. When
people phoned she'd say, "Oh, he's under his girl friend, let me get him for
you." My boss called once and that took more than a little explaining.
Anyhoo, things changed when she started riding in it. Folks would go nuts
as we drove along. Hooting, hollering, waving, big thumbs up, honking, the
whole tilt. Funnily enough, I hardly noticed. I've been in so many parades
and other events over the last fifteen years, I just don't see it anymore.
But my wife loved the attention. She waves back and does the whole happy
owner thing. The fact that spending money on the car counts as a donation
to a registered charity and gets us tax breaks doesn't hurt either. Now she
wants me to get the car painted so it won't be so embarrassing to be seen
with it. From pull back to push forward. I'll take it.
Another sweet response came when my parents came to stay. My father hated
the car. It represented to him, the stolid Englishman, the worst excesses
of Americana. Loud, large, and a waste of the earth's precious and scarce
resources. Not my mother though, she was happier than my daughter. Sat
there in the back seat doing the royal wave like she was born to it. She
thought the time I spent polishing a newly acquired set of 67/68 hub caps,
which go so well with the 58's grill, if you happen to have 15 inch wheels
on your 58 and not the original 14s, was total madness. She said she wished
I'd spent so much time on my studies. Now the drop-out has written and had
published one book and is working on another. I'm desperate to get the
Imperial onto the cover. Time and money, as ever, are the problems. And so
it goes.
Hugh
----------------- http://www.imperialclub.com -----------------
This message was sent to you by the Imperial Mailing List. Please
reply to mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx and your response will be
shared with everyone. Private messages (and attachments) for the
Administrators should be sent to iml.webmonster@xxxxxxxxx
To UN-SUBSCRIBE, go to http://imperialclub.com/unsubscribe.htm
Back to the Home of the Forward Look Network