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Singing My Loudest — Why I Love My Car

September 17, 2017

I went to the movies last week and saw Baby Driver,  a movie so full of amazing action, romance, sweetness, fast cars, evil, and the most fantastic sound track, it has me thinking about cars and music, and how sometimes the combination can be life-changing.

I also now understand why people get so attached to their cars.

My car is not flashy. It’s a 2006 dark gray/blue Honda Pilot. I didn’t like that color, my ex picked it, but since I’d made all the payments on the car, I got it in the divorce and it’s grown on me. It’s only broken down on me a couple of times in over 150,000 miles, which is a pretty decent record. My Pilot drove me out of California with a couple of El Sauz burritos, two horchatas, Brandon, my step-son-co-pilot,  and two dogs in the back — after a divorce that shredded romance for me and left my soul gasping for air.

Pilot, driver's seat.JPG

The driver’s seat of my Pilot

I took turns with Brandon driving across the country, almost 2500 miles. I wish I’d taken photos of our journey — but I have none. It was a great trip for me, and the most time alone I’d ever spent with Brandon.  He’d originally agreed, thinking the kids would be along too. When he found out it was just me, he could have backed out, but he didn’t. I’m still so grateful he went.

We walked the dogs, talked a lot, practiced Italian, went to Prairie Dog Town — a place that claimed to have the world’s largest Prairie Dog, got a ticket in Kansas (I was driving) and arrived at my brother’s home in Ohio after four days.

Kids with Bernie and dogs

I never noticed how worried Bernie looked in this photo until now. I think I know why.

Brandon got a flight back to New York — he had to be back for work — and I finally landed on my dad’s doorstep. I knocked on the door of the house where I grew up, and when my father opened the door, I broke down in tears.  We hugged for a long time, just standing in the doorway and finally made our way, up the three steps into the kitchen.

I felt like a pathetic loser. How lucky I was to have a dad who loved us enough to take me, my two kids and even the two pooping dogs in.

I stayed there for two years,  unable to buy a house because of stricter loan requirements. I worked on re-inventing myself, helping my dad while he helped us, and trying to stay sane.

Having my family there was wonderful, but getting divorced, losing my job two weeks later, then having to sell the home we painstakingly remodeled for 13 years, and losing with my entire way of life and lots of friends, was a challenge. In the wide scope of things, and compared to serious life and death situations some people endure, I know it was definitely a first world problem. But being career-less and moving my family into my childhood home, with my 95 year-old father with worsening dementia, was not what I imagined I’d be doing at 55.

My escape road

My escape route

So, at night, after I tucked him into bed, sometimes I’d run an errand, just for a ride alone in my Pilot. I’d drive down the roads I used to drive on when I was a teenager looking for fun, only now I was driving to escape.

I’d put one of the CD’s in the car that my daughter painstakingly made for me, roll down all the windows, even in the dead of winter, and sing at the top of my lungs.

A couple of favorites were “Dog Days are Over” by Florence and the Machine, Diego Garcia’s, “You Were Never There,” Bon Iver’s, “Holocene,” and a song by Cults called “Bad Things,” that had this line in it: “I’m gonna run, run away, run, run, away…” you get the idea.

I’m quite certain, I looked like a lunatic, but it kept me sane.  Screaming those lyrics was pretty cathartic, but I couldn’t run away. I had my dad to think of, kids and dogs and a career to resurrect. I had to stay and figure out what the hell I was going to do.

But those moments, when it was just me, my car, my sadness and frustration, loud music and country roads in front of me, made that Pilot more than just a car. It was a friend, who carried me away and let me sing at the top of my lungs when I needed it.

Two years later, I drove back across the country so my daughter could finish high school in the same town she started kindergarten, get a better education, get to know the cute boy she’d met on summer vacation, and I could figure out how to start over in California, the place I had contacts and a track record. It took a few  starts, but at least I’m on a path now and have more of a plan than I ever did before. I’ve heard the saying, God laughs at plans, but you have to start somewhere.

I still have my Honda Pilot. I can’t imagine ever getting rid of the car that carried me out of California and brought me back in, a stronger, more whole person still singing at the top of her lungs.

  • Reply
    Colleen Rudnicki
    September 17, 2017 at 5:42 pm

    Fran, this is so poignant, it really touched my heart. I love this, it is so transparent! I remember seeing you a few weeks after you move back home, and you really put on a good front. I never ever would’ve known how heartbroken and upset you were. Maybe I was just so happy to see you. I’m glad things are working out better for you. Fran, you are so much stronger than you ever give yourself credit.

  • Reply
    Fran Tunno
    September 17, 2017 at 9:32 pm

    Thank you Colleen. I really was happy to be back, but sad at the same time for all I lost and all my kids lost. Thank God for wonderful family or we would never have gotten through it. Thanks for taking the time to write such sweet note. I appreciate that you often take the time to read and comment. You are a wonderful cousin! xoxo

  • Reply
    Chas Madonio
    September 18, 2017 at 12:07 pm

    Way to tough it out Frannie. Remember, if it doesn’t kill you, it makes you stronger.

    • Reply
      Fran Tunno
      September 23, 2017 at 5:50 pm

      Thanks Chas, you are absolutely right about that! xoxox!

  • Reply
    Nicol
    September 20, 2017 at 8:57 am

    Wow, Fran, what an extraordinary post. Brings to mind many, many things I’ll save for our next cup of coffee, but, I’ll tell you one thing: I have always been grateful for my family, as you have mentioned, and I will go out to my car with a brand new appreciation for all it has carried me through too.

    • Reply
      Fran Tunno
      September 23, 2017 at 5:52 pm

      Oh Nicol, I totally get it. Thank you for the support. Yeah, a good, reliable car, you just can’t beat it! Coffee soon!!!!!

  • Reply
    Mary J. Tunno
    September 20, 2017 at 5:31 pm

    Nice, Fran. And fun seeing that picture of the road at Dad & Mom’s house. Cars get you to it, Jesus gets you through it. 🙂

    • Reply
      Fran Tunno
      September 23, 2017 at 6:05 pm

      Thanks Mary. Yeah, that’s a good shot. Takes me back for sure!

  • Reply
    Charles Burkett
    September 26, 2017 at 5:11 pm

    Beautiful in so many ways. You’re still the best.

    • Reply
      Fran Tunno
      September 27, 2017 at 10:13 pm

      Thank you Chuck! That you not only read, but take the time to comment, means so much to me. xo

  • Reply
    Leslie
    September 27, 2017 at 5:42 pm

    You’re a strong woman, Fran! To lose a job in the midst of fresh grief over a divorce, that’s a tough blow!
    I went through a devastating divorce myself and, like you, I capitalized on my car radio (and cassette tapes…. it was the early 90’s) as an excellent means of coping.
    I would haul myself out every morning and begin my drive to work, practically dragging my face on the ground, and as soon as I pulled out onto the street I’d put on some music and turn the sound waaaaay up, while singing/screaming at the top of my lungs. By the time I got to work I’d mustered up the energy to power through the day.
    I told myself that if I blew out my speakers or went deaf, I’d worry about that later. It seemed a small price to pay, compared with surviving the gutting of my heart.
    You’ll be happy to know that I can still hear and my speakers survived, though that car is long gone. I sold it to my nephew.
    Kudos to you for reinventing yourself and making a good life for you and your kids. I greatly admire you!
    In case you’re wondering, I remarried and I’m very happy…. my “new” husband is an amazing guy who is so kind and good, and we’ve been cavorting down the path of blissful matrimony for 24 years now.
    And as for the doo-doo-head first husband who broke my heart into bits, he’s divorced from a second marriage and now shares an apartment with his loser brother. So there you go. And for the record, my heart has mended quite nicely.
    Take care, Fran! You’re fabulous!

    • Reply
      Fran Tunno
      September 27, 2017 at 10:25 pm

      Oh My God Leslie, that was an amazing and wonderfully uplifting response to my post. It fills me with hope that you were able to find someone who was good for you. Maybe one day I will too. I am also not afraid of deafness because at least it will show I did some serious living! Love you to pieces for taking the time to write such a heartwarming response!!!!!

  • Reply
    lafriday
    September 28, 2017 at 10:36 am

    After my husband left me, I too went on the road. Since I had a 22-month old in tow, most of the singing I did at the top of my lungs was to kid songs, but it worked too. I told the tale, “A Map of the Heart” on my blog: https://forcedbloom.wordpress.com/2015/09/10/a-map-of-the-heart/ Thank God for the sanctuary of our cars and road therapy.
    BTW: I think you are just stronger and better with every passing year, so keep singing and driving and being fabulous! Love you!

    • Reply
      Fran Tunno
      September 28, 2017 at 5:33 pm

      I remember that blog post and I totally get it! Cue: Helen Reddy, I am woman!

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