My significant life changing purchase – a car!

Thank you all for your good wishes on our new granddaughter! She was named yesterday and I’m looking forward to taking the younger boys to meet her later this week.

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In other significant for us news, we have become car owners!

When we moved to Israel almost seven years ago, we decided not to buy a vehicle because buying, maintaining and fueling a car here is so much more expensive than in the US. Public transportation is very good and a car seemed like an unnecessary luxury, particularly when we came here without a job and wanted to stretch our savings as long as possible.

It was a good decision then that really made sense,  and for the ensuing six years it continued to be a good choice. We felt comfortable not having a car, there was no sense of deprivation or doing without – in fact, it was a relief to me not to have to deal with a car.

However, this last year and particularly the last few months (since both of my older daughters got married) have become increasingly challenging for me. Since my five year old doesn’t consistently walk moderate distances when he’s tired and as of last July I refused to put him in a stroller, traveling by bus with him is something that I try to minimize. Without older children who can keep an eye on the younger ones when I go out, just getting the weekly grocery shopping done has become a pressure and that’s where my ‘free’ time goes.

I was increasingly feeling maxxed out with the little time for myself needing to be almost painfully carved out, and the time strain that was being created was significant. A couple of months ago, someone asked why this was an issue for me, since after all, I’ve been homeschooling for 18 years and was used to my kids being around. I told her, “I used to have a car and I could take the kids with me if I needed to go out; I wasn’t stuck and unable to go anywhere.” However, I didn’t consider the significance of my answer to her until last week.

That was when I recalled our brief conversation and it suddenly became obvious to me that this major issue that has significantly impacted the quality of my life would be shifted if I had a car.  Previously, I kept thinking that the issue would be resolved as my son became more mobile; car ownership was so off my mental map that it simply didn’t occur to me to revisit the initial decision we made when we moved here.

Well.

That conversation was suddenly catapulted to the front of my consciousness when I saw a car listed for sale on my local neighborhood list that seemed like it would be a good fit for us. I spent a couple of hours considering if it was ridiculously self-indulgent of me to have a car before calling my husband to let him know I thought we should seriously consider purchasing a car. My husband readily agreed since he had already mentioned several times in the past that at some point he wanted to get a car but I was the naysayer. (When we ran the numbers to check the anticipated expenses, his only question was, “Why didn’t we do this a long time ago?”)

Once I allowed myself to recognize how much having a car would shift this major energy block in my life, things moved very quickly. We bought a car the very next day.

I can say without exaggeration that after using it for just a few hours this afternoon and evening (and knowing this is something I can regularly do) my life has changed. No hyperbole.

This afternoon I was able to pop my tired five year old into the car and take him with me and ds9 on an errand. This errand is something I’ve wanted to do for almost three months but logistically it was too hard to do without a car.

So we zipped over to get it taken care of – in ten minutes it was done. The boys enjoyed watching the workmen cut down the mirror and reframe it, an experience they wouldn’t have had before since I would have left them at home. I’ve always loved having the kids be part of those daily experiences – each on its own is nothing major but they add up to enriching and expansive experiences.

Since we had plenty of time before swimming lessons began, we went to go the local community center to get ds5 a bus card with his photo on it. This errand has been on my list for months. He’s almost six and I wanted to get him one since he turned five. Now he has one!

We then noticed some activities taking place in the community center, which I learned were for families who have children with special needs. Maybe I never knew about this, maybe I was told about this and mentally dismissed it as completely irrelevant for us because getting out was just too hard.

In any case, today we joined them. It was so nice to watch ds5 play (he knew another child there from his Pesach camp), to chat with another mom, and to feel so relaxed. Relaxing and going out with my five year old haven’t been synonymous for me for quite some time.

From there we went to swimming lessons, and the biggest, most significant thing happened when the lessons were over.

We were home in five minutes.

Five minutes.

Instead of 45 minutes.

Instead of coaxing him to walk a little more. Instead of tugging at his hand and picking him up and then insisting that I can’t carry him and he’s going to have to walk, yada, yada, yada while he sits down and from sheer exhaustion refuses to move. Then finally getting to the bus stop, getting on the bus, and after getting off coaxing him again to walk the distance from the bus stop to our home. All over again.

We were home and I was still smiling and ds5 was still smiling and ds9 (who has lessons at the same time and is part of this weekly round trip experience) was still smiling. I had energy to give everyone dinner.  My husband probably did a double take when he walked in and wondered if it was really Sunday since I smiled and had a conversation with him with no mention of being so tired that I was about to collapse. Instead I enthusiastically told him how amazingly enjoyable ds5 is to spend time with when I don’t have to marshal all my resources to physically get him where he needs to go.

At 8:30 in the evening, rather than being comatose on the couch, I took ds12 to his swimming lessons (for the first time this season), and enjoyed watching him for 45 minutes before driving home together. (Today I learned that my two sons in group lessons are the best swimmers in their groups. They wouldn’t have told me because they don’t know that when they’re swimming and can’t hear what’s being said, the instructor tells the other students to watch what they’re doing. I wouldn’t have known that if I hadn’t been there in person to see it.) It was really nice having this opportunity to spend time with ds12 and make a deposit in my relationship with him.

And here I am writing this now. It is almost 11:30 at night and I’m still able to think and reflect. The clarity of how deeply exhausting this aspect of my life has become after just one afternoon of not having to go through it is almost stunning to me.

Today I got things done quickly and easily. And that was nice. But what was even nicer was feeling doors swinging open. Doors of increased outings with my kids, increased time freedom and flexibility, increased community involvement and social connection, increased being present for others and myself.  And none of it feels hard. 

Letting go of hard required me to first be really honest about how constraining things had become. When things shift gradually over time, there’s not a sudden negative situation to deal with – and that makes it harder to recognize because one gets used to it bit by bit.  I started to recognize how many ‘nos’ I was saying to myself – and was willing to be open to a solution from a different angle.

It’s interesting that when ds19 called and I told him we had just bought a car a few hours before, he wasn’t surprised. Since I had never entertained the idea myself until a day prior, obviously I hadn’t discussed the possibility with our children and I asked him why he told me the purchase was predictable. He said that in the last year when I’ve periodically rented a car, it was obvious to him how much more relaxed and happy I was.

What was obvious to him took a lot of soul searching for me!

Avivah

11 thoughts on “My significant life changing purchase – a car!

  1. I am so happy for you. We too bought a car 2 years ago after managed without one for 6 years. It was a very good decision for us.
    It has lowered the stress in our lives substantially.

    I hope it shows the same positive impact on your lives, and lasts for many years.

    1. You summed up the benefits very succicntly- lowering the stress in your life. That’s a major quality of life issue.

  2. mazel tov ! yes things can get done without the car, but they really get done faster with. may you use it in good health , drive safely, and get all your errands done quickly!

    1. Since time is the currency of life, getting things done faster isn’t a minor thing! Thank you for your blessings, Rachelli, amen, amen!

  3. This is such a great post. For my job it’s really important that I understand poverty/fragility and keep myself in an empathetic mindset. I can in some ways but I’m very comfortable in others and always have been.

    This perspective of how hard using only public transit can be (in a country with a good system!) is such a good reminder. You’re an educated, resilient person with excellent supports. And this is a choice you made. The people I see every day are that bone tired but coupled with all the other stressors in their lives. And poor nutrition. And usually poor health.

    1. It’s a really interesting comment, Anne. I’ve noticed that human nature is that it’s really hard to empathize with something that you haven’t experienced personally, and even if you have, with time one’s memory fades and there’s less sensitivity to others in the same situation. I applaud your desire to be in tune with your clients and to understand the difficulties they’re facing.

  4. That is wonderful! And great timing – vacation time is near and there are often so many free events that are a headache via public transportation.
    Interesting – I have also moved to Israel 7 years ago. We do without a car, as we live in a central area next to many stores, BUT I have told my husband that as our family grows G-d willing and as the kids get older, I think a car will be more neccessary for my (our?) sanity.
    May you and your family use the car in good health and happiness 🙂

  5. Hi Avivah! I hope that you enjoy the car for many years to come!
    I was wondering why you refused to put Yirmi in a stroller at all for this past year, when it seems that it would have been so much easier, and less stressful, for you to get around via public transportation all this time.

    1. Because a child doesn’t build stamina by being pushed around in a stroller! It was because it was so much easier that I kept him in the stroller for outings until he was almost 5, but we had to finally go cold turkey because as long as using the stroller was an option, he would tell me he was too tired and wanted to go in the stroller.

  6. yup! that was me, two years ago. expecting #3 with two in a double stroller, commuting with them across town to work and daycare, 35C outside. i snapped. it changed my life. this year, with everyone in school/work closer by, it became a lot less necessary, but let’s just say i get a lot more done in late pregnancy with three tiny kids in tow than i would otherwise. we live maybe a 15-min walk from the shuk, but if the two younger kids won’t walk, i am gonna drive there. being local means that i can park for free on the streets nearby, which is a massive help, but if it’s raining and i have no stroller and/or koach, garaging the car at the clinic is money well spent. a car also means that i never shop in our expensive neighborhood stores.

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