New Car Shame—Same Shame With A Different Name

New Car Shame—Same Shame With A Different Name

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I’m going to rat myself out. Tell on my bad self. Tattle, like that snotty little kid back in grade school who thought he was the boss of everybody.

Well, I AM the boss of me and I’m here to tell you—I struggled with Shame on Saturday. Big Time.

I have to fess up because we talk about shame so much on this blog—how on earth could I look at myself in the mirror if I acted like it never touched MYlife.
Of course, it does! It’s not on the menu everyday—but more often than I’d like to admit.

What kind of whatever I am (blogger, advice giver, sister, friend, wife, nosey posey) would I be if I kept this to myself?

Now, there are numerous types of shame, many which I’ve experienced and some, by the grace of God, I have not.

This was not registered sex-offender shame, nor was it young divorcee or I wore a penguin costume to work on the wrong day shame.

This was familiar to me. Similar to bathing suit dressing room shame, only different.
Oh yeah, I knew this Shame.

We became intimately acquainted ( it slept with me most nights) during the year or so my store struggled financially—and every year since then it comes around less and less, but there are exceptions.
Trigger situations.
Believe me, I can still recognize Shame even with a different face and better shoes because it continues to wear that same cheap cologne and shit-eating grin.

Let me explain.
I have a ten-year-old car with almost 95,000 miles on it. It is not some piece-of-shit clunker with a bumper held on with masking tape. Don’t get me wrong, I’ve had one of those. But this is different. It’s been meticulously maintained by yours truly and it’s one of those German Imports, a classy tank.

I’ve mentioned several, well maybe not several, is several more than three? Okay, then three. I’ve mentioned maybe three times that I wish it had Bluetooth, you know, for my phone. There, I admit to a tinge of Bluetooth envy. But never in a million years did I ever say:
“God, I hate my car, what a colossal piece of shit, I wish it was better, I need a new car!”

So, are we clear?

My current car is perfectly lovely. I could even go out on a limb and say it would be a lot of people’s dream car.

Shame. Oof. I can smell its strong cologne already.

Being that my car was getting close to having one hundred thousand miles on it, my husband, the car guy, gear head numero uno, began to ask me what car I thought I’d like next. My answer most times was: the Same car just newer I guess. The other times I told him I was perfectly happy with my existing car.

“What color would you get IF you were to get a new car?” he baited me.
“Blue, dark blue with tan interior.”
I chose that combination mostly because it is almost impossible to find. It would take him months and months to come up with a car in that combination.

I kept the New Car Shame at bay—or so I thought.

Thursday he emailed me a car at a local dealership fitting that exact description.
Shit.
“Let’s go check it out on Saturday” he suggested.

That is my husband’s ideal day. Vehicle shopping. Add a steak dinner and a nice bottle of wine to that and he could die a happy man.
I loath shopping for a car, besides, I really thought the one I was driving was just fine, Thank you very much.
But my mouth overrode my brain—it does that a lot. “Okay,” I agreed.

Now you’re all thinking oh, boo-hoo, he wants to buy you a nice new car. Where’s the problem? Quit your whining!
Well, that’s what I told myself all the way down to the dealership. But as we all know, logic and reason are no match for Shame.
Shame kicks their asses every damn time.

After we looked at it and I sat in it and even gave it a test spin, my husband eyeballed me with that “Let’s take it” look I know so well.

I froze. I stammered and stuttered, staring off into space, my eyes spinning in their sockets and I’m sure it appeared to the gregarious salesman as if I’d suddenly suffered a stroke.
“Can you give us a few minutes,” my husband asked after he observed my bizarre behavior, sending the salesman back into the showroom to stew in suspense.

I could feel the hot river of shame burn in my veins as it replaced all the blood in my body.
I observed it. I named it. I even cursed it. Well, duh!

I wanted to shout I’m feeling Ashamed! at the top of my lungs so it would crawl out of the shadows and dissipate.
That’s what happens when you acknowledge Shame. It leaves. I can only exist if it’s kept a secret.
But it had inhabited me so completely at that point I could barely gather my thoughts. A sinister voice had taken over the Pollyanna Land that normally resides inside my brain, spoon-feeding me well-disguised bullshit.

It was a sickening, sad, and sorry case of New Car Shame.

Now, I could get lost in the minutia of this moment and how horrible it all felt. I could do that. It’s kinda what I do. How my right eyelid was twitching compulsively and it suddenly felt like all the saliva had left my mouth. How everything went into slow-motion, like walking through deep water on stilts.

What? I think he’s talking to me. What’s he saying?

“What’s wrong with you? Isn’t this what you want?” he asked, not used to seeing me frozen and silent.

This man is a good man.
He is incredibly generous with me. Probably too generous. (See there it is).

Here’s what I SAID—out loud—remember? No more secrets.

“I don’t currently have a job that brings in any money. I don’t pull my own weight. At the moment, our relationship is financially lopsided and unbalanced. You are literally supporting me—for now. ( I always have to add that). Who am I to have a new car? Such a nice new car? (the rabbit hole was in sight). This is all making me extremely uncomfortable. Why are we doing this? Why are YOU doing this?”

Now, here’s what I was THINKING—thanks to that piece of shit, Shame:
You shouldn’t reward me for not working. You don’t gift an unemployed writer a snazzy new car. That comes later. Let me PROVE my worth. Let me drive my existing car into the ground. Let me wait until the bumper is held on by masking tape. I don’t deserve a new car. Not one so nice. Not This car. Especially not this car.

That is a veritable Molotov cocktail of Shame. And I was throwing it back like a barfly.

So there. I’m ratting myself out. I went there, to that dark place of unworthiness. I was So freaking ashamed of myself.

“You are the hardest working unemployed person I know”, he said looking me straight in the eye which was made difficult by the fact that mine were spinning and I had started to wander, walking in circles to clear my head.

“You have manufactured a writing career out of thin air, which you work tirelessly on EVERYDAY. That has not gone unnoticed by me.”

He was right goddammit! I have so many irons in the fire these days that my fire is full. You couldn’t squeeze another iron in that fire if you tried.

“And explain to me what in God’s name any of this has to do with a car. You need a new car for MY peace of mind.”

Shame triggers. They make no sense.
They are ridiculous and if you try to sidestep them like I did, YOU look ridiculous.

So there you have it—my story of New Car Shame, and how it ALMOST won. I have named it so many times and now I’ve written about it so it must skulk away, back into the shadows, preferably back to hell— because it is my wish to be free.

Do you have a Shame story to share?

Carry on,

xox

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6 Comments
  • Kathleen says:

    aaaahhhh I know this feeling well…since I have stayed home raising kids for the past 18 years , not bringing in a PENNY, my husband carrying the whole load with out ever complaining….I have had this feeling of shame …so hard to receive…..but I sure hope you got that car honey….
    xo

    • jbertolus says:

      I suppose it is similar to stay at home mom shame/guilt, except for the fact that I’m not spending my days molding a child into an amazing human being!! LOL!
      Yes I did get the car and it’s beautiful.
      xoxJ.

  • Dominator says:

    You always amaze me at how courageous you are at facing your challenges and sharing them with us.
    Bravo, you made me tear up… again!

  • wishing4peace says:

    Wow! What is it with us that we beat ourselves up over things like this? I did almost the exact same thing.

    My previous car was over 10 years old and had over 100k miles. (We watched the odometer flip on a trip down to the Keys. LOL) It was not a POS, but it was starting to have minor issues. I had been wanting this one vehicle for about 3 years and saving my pennies for the down payment. (I did not want a huge monthly car payment. My previous car had been paid off for over three years and I was saving that money towards the next car.) But, like you, I had qualifiers for this “new/used” vehicle that made it nearly impossible to find. Hence the ability to save for the “Dream Car” for such a long time.

    During the saving & looking time, I wrestled with the “should I” of the situation. My car still ran. It still functioned in a perfectly acceptable capacity. “Why do I NEED a newer car?” I do not NEED a newer or different car. ..so-on and so-forth. Meanwhile I am diligently squirreling away money into the “car fund.” The fund exceeded the amount I had budgeted for my down payment. I worked really hard for it. I put the funds away and did not touch them in spite of other life situations that arose. (Unless it was repair to the old car. )

    Then the call came form my friend at the dealership that the exact model, of the proper age, in the desired color combination, with all of he little extras that I had specified had arrived. It was a trade-in and out getting detailed / checked over and “could you come in this evening, because I can not hold it for you.” (No pressure, right?)

    I had to “go it alone” because my BF was working. My cell phone battery was dying. I was doing this all by myself with no back up. No “bad cop” to help me negotiate. No fatherly advice telling me what I should or should not do. (Yeah, like I’d do that THAT way, anyway. I’m the one who usually does the exact opposite of what I’m told. So I guess that it was a good thing that I only had me to listen to.) Just me. By myself. Like that was not slightly intimidating. (Riiiiiiight.)

    So, papers signed, obligations made, check written… My first thought was “What the he!! did I just do?”
    That night, as I am sitting in my living room, with a beautiful shiny new(ish) vehicle in my driveway and my poor ole ‘hos tied out by the curb, I am fighting waves of guilt like the tide rising in the Bay of Fundy.
    “What did I just do? I do not deserve this? THAT car in THIS neighborhood? What was I thinking?” AARGH.

    So you know what I did? I took inspiration from you, Janet. I sat down and wrote in my little notebook. I wrote
    “I deserve this. I earned this. I worked hard for this and because I worked for it I OWN it. It is mine and I am worth it.”
    The next day, I went to work in my shiny new(ish) car. Instead of getting the dreaded “oh please” or the “I can’t believe her” looks, my friends said “congratulations” and “finally” and “you have been wanting that for a long time, I’m glad you found it.”

    Thank you, my friend for being an inspiration. Thank you for reminding us that we deserve the best and the Universe wants the best for us too.
    Big Hugs & Much Love,
    S

    PS The Old Car lives down the street from my house and is functioning perfectly well for a young family who desperately needed an SUV. Against the “fatherly advise” from my “at work Dad,” I let them take and use the car and make payments. They paid it off in less than 6 months.
    Have faith in the good in people.

    • jbertolus says:

      “Have faith is the good people” I LOVE that so much and I just adore you Steph! Thank you for sharing your story! I thought this might resonate with all of the less than perfect among us!;-)
      Big hugs and Immense gratitude,
      xoxJ

Hi, I’m Janet

Mentor. Pirate. Dropper of F-bombs.

This is where I write about my version of life. My stories. Told in my own words.

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