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I currently own an '07 Solar Orange 350z, (no it's not a ferrari, or a lambo, or a vette..but it's nice!)
I hear...
"Are you washing it again?"
"Are you waxing it again?"
"why are you washing the wheelwells?"
"Do you really have to clean the inside part of the wheels?"
"Why are you waxing the wheels?"
"gee...I've never seen anyone clean their license plate"
"why are you under the car wiping/cleaning things?"
"why are you wiping the engine compartment?"
I say....
"Get yer butt off my fender...."
"Get yer dirty oily hands off my paint..."
"Stop leaving garbage in my car..."
"Get the hell away from the car..."
o O (did that jerk have to park so close to my car?)
"Don't slam the door!...the door works fine it's not a GM..."
"Don't kick the side of the door/car when you get in" (you'd have to own a Z to understand this one...)
(I could go on forever...but you get the idea...)
I Don't know...MAN! is it just me?...am I @nal or what?
Yes! I must be...but damn, I paid for the car...I want it to be nice...
I'm not a "take yer shoes off before you get in" type of maniac....but I expect "others" to respect my pride and joy....
is it me? or are there others "out there" that have the same issues?
(thanks for the rant!)
Tera
Is there a reason the some people find fault in the way you keep your car clean?
but I expect "others" to respect my pride and joy....
You'd fit right in at one of the community/hobby sites I run. Many of the members are now friends of mine. I respect them. But I don't understand their obsession with their cars. One of my admins spends 4-6 hours a week just washing and detailing his and his wife's cars.
I guess it's just a reflection of their desire for perfection in the things they build as part of the hobby. It seems obsessive to me but I'm sure people would consider some of my quirks obsessive too.
I'm sure they are people like me whose car gets washed when it rains.
I too am one of those. I firmly believe that dirt and dust form a protective layer, and that regular car-cleaning will eventually cause wear on the paintwork. Once a year I will hoover the inside, and I've been known to wipe off large bird deposits from door-handles.
Why don't I care about how my car looks? Because it is a car - a simple machine to burn petrol in order that I can get from A to B. A clean car doesn't do that job any better. Perhaps I have enough other interests not to need to find meaning in my life through keeping a car shiney...
My daily ride gets washed every other month.
I'm a little more fanatical about what goes on under the hood. Definitely no dust or grime there.
Trying to keep a car or truck clean would be a losing proposition and a great waste of time.
Agreed, besides you have no control over pooping birds or mall rats who say "cool, look at that clean car" and hock one on it just to ruin your day. Let's not talk about car keys . . . .
Cleanliness in anything you do is a good thing. Cleaning a car extends it's life by preventing the paint from oxidizing, and it is conductive to inspection for damage or areas needing repair. A good washing "every now and then" is a required maintenance procedure.
Retentiveness about anything you own is obsessive. A car is just a thing. The time you waste on polishing up your ego can be spent polishing up relationships with people, there's something of value that needs your attention.
You have a right to keep your car too clean if that is how you wish to spend your time.
The problem with people is they expect everyone to be just like them. Wouldn't that make for a terribly boring world?
If I drove it more often, I might remember more. But I'm bicycling to work 4-5 times/week now. I just realized that I put more miles on my bike than on the car in July. And my wife drives the car too!
[edited by: LifeinAsia at 9:10 pm (utc) on Aug. 3, 2007]
Although I will have to admit that using billet polish on my A-arms (suspension) was probably going a bit far.
I now for some odd reason worry about how clean the outside is, and have a place that I prefer to take it to be hand washed. They do an excellent job for a £5 ($10).
But then my idea of hell on earth would be to attend a car show, much less take part in one.
my youngest son will have little fits if you even drop a gum wrapper in his nice truck BUT when in my car bags filled with fastfood garbage and leftovers are flung causly in the backseat, "Will get that when we get home...weeks pass and it is still in there with others added to it. Heh, good thing I am not as obsessive as he is.... :)
Is it me? or are there others "out there" that have the same issues?
Oh, you want anal? Talk to Edward's peers, those who know him well, and they will tell you that Edward takes anal to a whole new depth. ;)
First rule of engagement with my automobile...
Don't touch the door, ever.
Second rule...
Don't use your hand to hold on to the pillar while entering the car.
Third rule...
Don't you dare say anything about other vehicles within my vicinity, I know they are there, I have great peripheral vision.
Fourth rule...
If your body cannot handle a small amount of "Gee" Force, or, if you are pregnant, you cannot ride in the automobile, sorry.
Fifth rule...
Oh, I could go on and on. And, with the new 2007 BMW Z4 M in the driveway, anal is going to take on a new meaning.
What I really don't like.
Fingerprints! People just don't realize that the oil from their fingertips leaves a nasty little mark on the car. Plus, you've just left yourself open to identity theft. ;)
Touching the Door
On rare occasion is there a Male in the passenger seat of my automobile. Its usually my 7 year old daughter or just today, my Mom. Hehehe, the neighbors were laughing watching her trying to get in to the Z4 while following my rules of engagement. :)
My daughter knows not to touch the door handle from either inside or outside. I've even asked her to open the door while she was inside and she shook her head no. Luckily I had the key fob with me. ;)
All glass must be perfectly "see-through". No smudges, streaks, etc. This is difficult to achieve if the glass is hot. It must be cool to get a true "clean". You know, the kind the birds run into. ;)
If you see me parked allllllllll the way out at the end of the mall parking lot, please don't drive all the way over and park right next to me. I know you did that "just because". Schmuck!
I will not park in high traffic areas. I will never park next to a Handicap spot, no, no, no. Been there, done that, and sure enough, got whacked by poor ole Grandmom. That was years ago and she got me good. Brought tears to my eyes. Easily fixable.
Man, I could carry this rant on forever. And get this, I live in California where the air is so thick with soot that you have to blow the car off every day to keep it from building up. It can get pretty nasty around here with fallout, especially on the Freeways at rush hour which is from 0400 to 0100. Yes, that is 21 hours of traffic each day, with the exceptions of weekends. I don't drive in that stuff if I don't have to. About 10,000 miles per year average. I used to do 30-40,000 per year. No more, no way, never ever again!
And YES, I am an absolute obsessive-compulsive.
As I tell my Mom...
I'm OC in the OC
And no, not OCD, just the OC part. Haven't reached Disorder stages. Don't think I will. I'm just too freakin' anal, about everything, not just the car.
Want to drive me insane? Leave a small scrap of paper on my floor - or better yet, a half-empty bottle of water in my cup-holder. ARRGH!
You're not going to survive being a mother.
Oh sure I will ... who do you think I learned this OCD behavior from? My parents! We weren't allowed to eat or drink in the cars, and we weren't allowed to leave anything in them once we got home ... no fingerprints on the windows ... the list goes on and on.
I'm looking forward to passing the family neuroses down to my child!
People that think 'it's just a car to get me from here to there': Is your home just a box to sleep and eat in? That's all it is to you? Objects ARE NOT permanent, or all important but they have meaning, value and importance. How one takes care of these 'things' (car, home, self, etc) is often a good reflection of how one will take care of a relationship.