How emotionally attached are you to your car?
Discussion
Well, I never thought this would happen to me, I've had a number of cars over the past 10 years.
Yesterday I've sold my Alfa 159 2.4 diesel, a car I've used as a daily driver 'till last year for 5 years. The car was sitting there, I drove it occasionally but it didn't make sense to keep it.
It was a heavy diesel burner, nothing spectacular. Looked very nice inside and out, 130k miles now.
I've got what I wanted for it, by a young guy who's in love with it from the moment he saw it, so I know it's in good hands.
Yet...
I'm truly sad to see this car go. It wasn't particularly exciting or fast, but it really hurts me to see this car go. I'm actually convinced I'm going to shed a tear for the first time in years when I hand him the key.
I know I need to MFTU though, but I had to share it.
Yesterday I've sold my Alfa 159 2.4 diesel, a car I've used as a daily driver 'till last year for 5 years. The car was sitting there, I drove it occasionally but it didn't make sense to keep it.
It was a heavy diesel burner, nothing spectacular. Looked very nice inside and out, 130k miles now.
I've got what I wanted for it, by a young guy who's in love with it from the moment he saw it, so I know it's in good hands.
Yet...
I'm truly sad to see this car go. It wasn't particularly exciting or fast, but it really hurts me to see this car go. I'm actually convinced I'm going to shed a tear for the first time in years when I hand him the key.
I know I need to MFTU though, but I had to share it.
Cheer up - you can always buy another.
I understand how you feel though - I used to be really attached to my motorbikes and Land Rovers - now that I'm a bit older, not so much. Still like them - just not as emotionally attached as I used to be.
You come to realise that they're just inanimate objects that come and go; maybe having a relationship/kids/pets was the catalyst for change.
I understand how you feel though - I used to be really attached to my motorbikes and Land Rovers - now that I'm a bit older, not so much. Still like them - just not as emotionally attached as I used to be.
You come to realise that they're just inanimate objects that come and go; maybe having a relationship/kids/pets was the catalyst for change.
Nope, its just a tool for the job, ie it goes quite fast and is cheap to run.
My days of owning cars I care about ended when I moved to Edinburgh. If the 20 limits, congestion or idiot tourists don't get you, someone else will drive into your car in a car park. It's happened to me 4 times up here, and if you walk down any street in edinburgh, I guarantee 50% of the cars will have significant dents and scrapes, even the new ones.
I couldn't keep something I loved outside in these conditions.
When I leave, i'll get something I care about again.
My days of owning cars I care about ended when I moved to Edinburgh. If the 20 limits, congestion or idiot tourists don't get you, someone else will drive into your car in a car park. It's happened to me 4 times up here, and if you walk down any street in edinburgh, I guarantee 50% of the cars will have significant dents and scrapes, even the new ones.
I couldn't keep something I loved outside in these conditions.
When I leave, i'll get something I care about again.
AH33 said:
Nope, its just a tool for the job, ie it goes quite fast and is cheap to run.
My days of owning cars I care about ended when I moved to Edinburgh. If the 20 limits, congestion or idiot tourists don't get you, someone else will drive into your car in a car park. It's happened to me 4 times up here, and if you walk down any street in edinburgh, I guarantee 50% of the cars will have significant dents and scrapes, even the new ones.
I couldn't keep something I loved outside in these conditions.
When I leave, i'll get something I care about again.
Don't close your heart to love, man!My days of owning cars I care about ended when I moved to Edinburgh. If the 20 limits, congestion or idiot tourists don't get you, someone else will drive into your car in a car park. It's happened to me 4 times up here, and if you walk down any street in edinburgh, I guarantee 50% of the cars will have significant dents and scrapes, even the new ones.
I couldn't keep something I loved outside in these conditions.
When I leave, i'll get something I care about again.
I've got kids and of course the car pales in comparison. I'm aware it's just an inanimate object and far from rare or perfect.
I was just surprised it hit me as hard as it did. I think it's more the journey I've done with this car, getting self employed, getting married, getting kids, moving to the new house,...
I was just surprised it hit me as hard as it did. I think it's more the journey I've done with this car, getting self employed, getting married, getting kids, moving to the new house,...
ZesPak said:
I was just surprised it hit me as hard as it did. I think it's more the journey I've done with this car, getting self employed, getting married, getting kids, moving to the new house,...
True enough - the more experiences you have with a car and the more significant they are, will have a big effect on how attached you feel to it.I've found that when I've modified (customised) something, made it my own - a bit bespoke - that's when it can be a wrench passing it on.
I miss my last car, a 1999 Subaru Legacy GT-B. It was an imported wagon, 2lt twin turbo, 4wd and ridiculously fast and fun for something so large. Oh, and it was bright gold . The thing I miss about it most is the sound it makes when you downchange from 3rd to 2nd. It was a nice burbling sound and soon as the the gearbox reengaged
Depends on the car and what you've done with/in it I think. Some are just white goods, some I've been sad to see go.
Also depends on why you're selling I think, being forced to sell something by circumstances is a very different experience to selling something because you fancy a change or want to upgrade.
Also depends on why you're selling I think, being forced to sell something by circumstances is a very different experience to selling something because you fancy a change or want to upgrade.
I got attached to my R34 Skyline but no-where near as much as the bangers (Citroen ZX/BX, BMW 740) I've owned which I got attached to in a "Top Gear Road Trip" kind of way (they all had nicknames). However those which where just bland (Peugeot 406, Citroen C5, various Mondeos) I never bonded with.
Way more so than is to be expected for one and not as much as you would think for the other.
S2000, spent year not buying a second car and then finally got it and it is everything i wanted. Fast, a little scary, roofless and superb on the local lanes. Strangely not as liked as my daily driver.
Focus ST170, bought to fill the "fun daily" gap when i got rid of my scooby 5 years ago. I bloody adore it, the engine is a little wheezy but still pulls, the engine warning light has been on for 4 years and no one can figure out why, it's only economical when on the motorway (where it is superb), the exhaust wants to fall off every year, it eats front tires (well that might be me), i have to use two different seating positions as long journeys require my knee straight and changing gear often means i need to drop the seat level so you don't feel like you're in a transit van.
And yet it is my favourite car of the two.
To the point where i will probably spend more than it's bloody worth again this year at MOT time and then claim it owes me nothing and costs pittance if anyone asks me.
S2000, spent year not buying a second car and then finally got it and it is everything i wanted. Fast, a little scary, roofless and superb on the local lanes. Strangely not as liked as my daily driver.
Focus ST170, bought to fill the "fun daily" gap when i got rid of my scooby 5 years ago. I bloody adore it, the engine is a little wheezy but still pulls, the engine warning light has been on for 4 years and no one can figure out why, it's only economical when on the motorway (where it is superb), the exhaust wants to fall off every year, it eats front tires (well that might be me), i have to use two different seating positions as long journeys require my knee straight and changing gear often means i need to drop the seat level so you don't feel like you're in a transit van.
And yet it is my favourite car of the two.
To the point where i will probably spend more than it's bloody worth again this year at MOT time and then claim it owes me nothing and costs pittance if anyone asks me.
I really doubt I'd feel attached to a brand new car, unless I had owned it for a significant period of time.
I just love the under-dog in a car, my SL320 is a perfect example - I bought it unloved and have already spent a small fortune bringing it back to life. I will be genuinely sad if / when I sell it; it is so well built and yet has been so unloved!
That's what gets me all emotional, a car that has real character - either through its history or its quirkiness
I just love the under-dog in a car, my SL320 is a perfect example - I bought it unloved and have already spent a small fortune bringing it back to life. I will be genuinely sad if / when I sell it; it is so well built and yet has been so unloved!
That's what gets me all emotional, a car that has real character - either through its history or its quirkiness
Far too much. It's noisy and slow, breaks more often than is ideal and uses too much fuel. But it's comfy, has character and goes well enough. Mostly. There's nothing I'd rather have that doesn't cost three times as much, which means it'd be rubbish at all the rough stuff because I'd care about the paint.
My old Peugeot did the opposite and attached itself to me. Every time I looked at other cars to replace it or even mentioned in conversation possibly selling it, I could almost guarantee that something would break on it the next day - it was as if it was jealous.
I finally did sell it last year....and the following night I had an epileptic seizure (first one I'd had in my life and me nor my family have any history of epilepsy) and haven't been allowed to drive since. The f**king thing cursed me!
I finally did sell it last year....and the following night I had an epileptic seizure (first one I'd had in my life and me nor my family have any history of epilepsy) and haven't been allowed to drive since. The f**king thing cursed me!
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