"Do any human beings ever realize life while they live it--every, every minute?" Emily Webb, Our Town
www.silententry.wordpress.com
This kind of thing helps a lot. I'm a member of a car-share co-op so I can easily get a car when I need one. And the last time I rented for a full day it only cost $27 including gas, and I drove quite a few kilometers. I could rent a lot of car time before I'd get to the price of owning one. Eventually I'll probably need a car (or RV van ideally) for my business or mobility if I'm living more rurally. But the longer I can go without the better. I would always take the person's location into account on whether a car was actually required.
When someone I love dies I keep a few things to remember them by & that's it. My hubby however keeps a ton of things that just end up in the shed or garage or his office because I am not living in a cluttered house. So now 7 years after his Mom died the stuff is hidden away but he won't get rid of it. This makes zero sense to me.
If I lived in an area with great public transportation, where a car really wasn't necessary, I wouldn't care whether or not a guy had his own car. I don't live in such a place though, so yes, a man without a car would raise some major red flags and perhaps makes me wonder if maybe he got too many DUI's. I'm also something of a traditionalist when it comes to relationships with men and don't really want to date any who seem less "manly" than me.I tend to expect them to want to take charge of certain things.
Rebecca
Saddle up my traveling shoes, I'm bound to walk away these blues.
As Suze Orman used to say-people first then $ then things. If I lived in an big urban area I could see being car less. But where we live now-no would not date a man without a car.
This is an interesting topic to me because I believe that gender is largely learned and gender performance ("acting manly," for instance) is culturally constructed.
My personal policy is: I will do whatever I want. haha This is regardless of how normative culture views it -- manly, not manly, feminine, etc.
I have been told I "talk like a f*g." Which I am fine with... whatever that means, anyway.
I have a full beard, fish, shoot clay pigeons, and can curse like a sailor. But I also read memoirs, love disco music, and enjoy ethnic cuisine. I can't fix cars or repair appliances. But I can butcher a duck and play a little harmonica.
I like to be balanced.![]()
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