Monday, October 8, 2012

About Cars…


            I think I inherited my dad’s philosophy about cars. “Cars are simply a tool to get you from point A to point B safely, and faster than walking.” Oh sure, keep them clean and fixed up, but they don’t have to be new. In fact, as far as I know, the only new car my dad ever owned was a 57 Chevy that he had before he got married. Mom always got the better car; he drove a work van.

            My dad was also a Mr. Fix-it  He could fix almost anything, and some things that shouldn't have been able to be fixed. I inherited that trait too. Living in California for so many years, I am convinced that u can get almost anything for free (or very little) if you’re not in a hurry and it doesn't have to be new.

            We have owned 12 cars. We have only paid for two of them. One of those was a lemon. There are a few that really stand out in my memory, not because I liked them particularly, but because they were “God Gifts”. 
           
The first memorable car was a blue, four-door 1974 Ford Maverick. It was given to us by a friend. It was in very good shape body-wise. It just had a cracked engine block. Good find, but I didn't have any free money to spend on the car. While we were saving up, the school I was teaching at was broken into, my classroom included. Although they stole mostly junk, I still got a couple of hundred dollars from the insurance company. Money in hand, I went to a local junk yard to see what I could find. Usually all the good engines in this particular yard are already pulled and in a separate room. As I looked around, there was an engine, exactly what I needed, with the transmission still attached lying right there in the aisle. When I asked one of the yard workers how much he wanted for it, he just scratched his head and said, “Where did that come from?” he finally said, “$150.00 and it’s yours.” This was cheaper than the price of just an engine! When we got it home, we realized it had just been rebuilt. The car must have been in an accident. It didn't even have to be rebuilt. We used most of the peripheral parts from the old engine and put it all together. It ran like a dream! We drove it for years. It took exactly the amount of money that I had gotten from the insurance claim. Well, there was $10.00 left over, just enough for a tank of gas.

            The second car was technically never really mine. A friend gave us a car that used to belong to her brother. It wasn't even in that good of shape, but it ran. A mechanic had told her that it had rotten freeze plugs, a nasty fix on this type of car. She asked us if we wanted it to fix up. I reluctantly took the car. Upon closer inspection, the leak turned out to be a bottom radiator hose. After one cut with a knife, I slid the hose back on and fastened the clamp.  A few days later, I sold it for $350.00. Not bad for 15 minutes of work.

The third car was a blessing in the middle of chaos. I was having a rough year. I had lost my dad, and now I had to spend most of August on a jury for a civil trial. We had a new baby, and this made the old car too small. I was having bouts of fierce heartburn. A friend of ours was checking up on me, and I mentioned the car problem. She reminded me that her husband was a used car salesman. (He happens to be the only used car salesman I ever trusted.) They invited us to stay at their house while we looked for a car. He found a van, and even made the financing fit our budget. We even got to drive it back east to visit my mom.

The forth car was actually supposed to be a purchase. We had to make an unplanned move one school year, and needed a second car to get around. A friend told me he had just purchased his dream jeep and had a car, a 1988 Nissan Sentra, which he wasn't driving that we could use. It needed some work, but it ran pretty well. After a CV axle and a replacement door lock from a junkyard, it was ready to go.  It even had the insurance paid for the year. At the end of the year when the registration was due, he asked me if I would like to buy it. He even said I could pay him when I got the money.  I changed the registration that summer. On the first day of school, I noticed a note on my desk. It was from the family that let us use the car. I taught their children and she was also a faculty member. Expecting the usual “welcome back” note I was stunned to read these words:
“Thank you for teaching our children again this year. They really look forward to your class.
Oh, and by the way, consider the car paid in full.”
Yes, I cried, and prayed, and thanked, and drove that car for many years more.    

            The fifth car surprised even the giver. Our van (the lemon) was dead. We were driving all the children to school in the Nissan (loved that car) and then my wife would use the car if she needed it.  My wife was working for the school also, but at a different campus. One of the other faculty members had seen the “prayer chain” request for our vehicle needs. They had a van that none of their children wanted to drive. They wanted to give it to us, but warned it had a pretty bad oil leak. Being a decent mechanic, I was up to the challenge. We picked the van up at school. It was nice! We now owned a 1994 Plymouth Grand Voyager Sport. We drove it to show my wife’s parents, and then home. I would deal with the oil leak later. The next morning I check for leaks. Nothing was found. This went on for a whole week. Later that week, the lady who had been so gracious with the car gift, excitedly commented, “So your husband found the leak”. When my wife said that we were still looking for it, the lady grew pale. She explained that it would fill the bottom of a small pan put under the car each evening.
My wife seems to have the best explanation. It was a “God Gift”. He took what they could give, and fixed it for us. We have since stopped looking for the leak.

            The Truck
            Not long ago, my daughter was putting to rest her old worn out Toyota. We had notified our Church’s prayer chain to pray for a car. I too was driving a little Mitsubishi that was not long for this world. It had a manual transmission and no one else in my family would drive it. (Frankly, I’m not sure they knew how.) A dear friend and school parent called me a few days later. He said that he had a truck for me. He was reading his emails in the study when he came across the pray chain email. It was then that God put a thought in his heart. Give that truck to the Cross family. He went into the living room and told his wife that they needed to talk. She smiled and said, “I already know. We’re supposed to give the Crosses the truck.” Sure, that happens every day, right? OK,  so I went to look at the truck. I figured it was going to be a little, semi worn-out, “beater” truck. As I rounded the corner into their court, I was speechless. It was a 1999 Dodge Ram 1500 in great condition with only 69,000 original miles! To top it off, it had already had its semiannual smog check. What a blessing it was!  I got to give the Mitsubishi to my neighbor’s brother-in-law and my daughter found another small car to get her around. I still am amazed when I thing of all of the undeserved blessings the God has showered on our family. Not long after, a coworker at my summer job commented on the truck. When I told them the story, they said, “Wow, now you don’t see that happening very much!” I just smiled. In our corner of the world, it happens more than you would think…

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