Second-Hand Blues…
A.V. Walters–
If you have followed this blog, you may have gleaned that I’m a bit of a Craigslist maven. Indeed, I have been accused of being the Queen of Scrounge—and I’m not sure if it was meant to be a slur or a profound compliment. It follows from my environmental efforts, to live a little more lightly on the planet. We have become a disposable culture. Most Americans would prefer to have new rather than making what you already have, better. I enjoy the challenge of finding that which others discard and transforming it into a head-turning success. I can’t help it; I am a middle child. Generally, Rick shares my view, though occasionally he looks at one of my schemes and shakes his head. He is a magician in the world of rehab alchemy. He can make a silk purse out of a sow’s ear, in part because he has a discriminating eye for sow’s ears.
My sister rolls her eyes and says, “Admit it, you’re just cheap!” I laugh. She is a Craigslister, too. She just thinks she’s more honest than I am. Somewhere, in all of this, you can triangulate to find the truth.
January has been a tough month. My car died. A friend died. My computer went on the fritz. And, so did the back-up laptop.
The car was a high-end, performance machine—a relic from my former life. It could have been saved, but it had reached that tipping point where the repairs were more than its Bluebook value. After 15 years, it was about to get expensive. Its low-slung elegance did not fit our country lifestyle, or country roads. It was time.
My sister was so excited that I’d be getting a new car. She knew that I’d get a Subaru, like hers, for the all-wheel drive, good mileage and high clearance. “Get an orange one, like mine.”
“Not so fast, sister. I won’t be buying new. I don’t get to pick the color when I’m scouting for a good, used deal.” The deal came quick. Within days I’d located the very low-mileage car I wanted, at a good price. The color—twilight blue.
Let me be perfectly clear—I loathe blue. The color only gave me a moment’s hesitation. A good deal on a good used car is enough to ask of the universe. Buying a blue car made me walk my talk. That sister hates blue, too. So does my mother. It must be in the genes. (My sister howled when I told her.) But, beggars can’t be choosers.
Learning I’d bought it, one friend emailed,
“OMG!!!!! … a BLUE car. (That’s a lovely blue.) Will the world change its axis? Sun spots. Will they explode? The Mississippi flow backwards? It’s a lovely car.”
Some folks can’t resist rubbing it in.
With a few trips to the local Mac store, (in my blue car) I was finally able to iron out the computer problems. (That’s a whole story by itself.) I’m back up to speed, on the net, and on the roads.
I’ve met some great people on craigslist. A $25.00 set of curtain rods sealed the deal on what became one of my closest friendships. But, you can’t replace a friend on craigslist. Some things don’t come cheap and they take time. January closes, more resolved and more unresolved, all at the same time. My condolences to all who have suffered January’s losses.
We would get along well – ‘free’ is my favorite ‘F’ word 😊. I try not to pay full price for anything – and if I’m stuck in a big box store getting building supplies I’ll go through the contractors desk and ask for ten percent off.
Cheap cheap that’s me.
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Big Box–as little as I can. Sometimes I have to be reminded that things are available…retail.
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OMG – Photos!!! Hey we love our Subaru Forrester – named “Forrest” of course. And blue is my fave color so watchit! The sky and the sea and the best music – blues ;-0
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I’ll agree on the music 🙂
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Music, yeah! But why so sad, if not because of the color?
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I agree–about the disposable lifestyle. I have clothes I’ve worn for 20 years–still happy with them. When I buy new, I buy quality so it last 20 years. We decorated our house once and done–15 years ago. It’s classic, so will last. I still feel like it’s new.
Now, I want to hear the story of your computer problems, AV. What went wrong? How’d it get fixed? Hmmm?
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My desktop computer is an iMac. It was using OS 10.6.8. With the release of Yosemite, 10.6.8 was no longer supported. I was warned to upgrade. I was also warned that Yosemite wasn’t ready. Who am I to know? I also have a MacAir laptop. If I wasn’t having problems, I would probably have ignored the whole thing. However, last fall, my computer started freezing on the net. Rick’s computer was fine (a PC he smugly told me.) It all started after I downloaded files from a client’s thumb drive. I brought it in, suggesting possible virus activity, and the tech, rolling her eyes, said the problem was that I was using Mozilla. Rick uses Mozilla. ?????????? I switched to Safari and, within a couple of days it started to happen again. I called in to the Mac service desk and asked if the problem could be 10.6.8. Naw, they said, it’s something I’m doing. The only solution when it froze was to do a full restart. It got worse and worse.
Finally, when it was happening twenty to thirty times a day, I figured maybe I should try the upgrade. I thought I’d upgrade the laptop first, as a test. I did, and though it took several efforts (a common complaint, according to the message boards.) Yosemite worked fine on the laptop, with one exception. It fragged OpenOffice, the program I used most frequently. Sigh. Still, it was a start. Heartened by my download success, I did a full back up of the main computer and then attempted the Yosemite download. After five tries I gave up. Of course the very symptom I was suffering–freezing up on the internet–prevented the completion of the very large download. (Apple operating systems are notoriously hefty, so much so that there is litigation over it!) So I had to bring it back in to the local Mac Store/Service center. Sigh.(I do so hate being treated like an idiot by young people in the wet dream phase of their lives.) I presented the computer at the desk with two issues–the connectivity issue and, as long as I’m there and they have better internet than me, the upgrade to Yosemite. If I’m going to pay the $120 bench fee, I might as well get my money’s worth, right? The “genius” at the desk plugged it in and did some quick diagnostics. “Nothing wrong with it,” he announces, “Must be your service provider. Who is it?” I tell him. He rolls his eyes. “They’re terrible–can’t you get better?” No, frankly, I can’t. I live rural. We’re happy to get what we have. He tells me I’ve made the right decision, because with my internet provider, I would never be able to download so large a file as Yosemite. (I have temporarily forgotten that I already did so on the laptop.)So he talks me out of any belief that I may have that there is actually a problem with the computer. He also harangues me about abortion. Yes, abortion. He’s Catholic and in the computer conversation he’d given me several different solutions–“choices”, to which I’d responded that I was “pro-choice.” Thus, the barrage. I’m a middle aged woman with no trouble voicing my opinion, so I gently set the young man straight.
He writes up the service ticket for the download only. My computer will be ready the next day. I head home.
The next morning, after using my laptop (minus OpenOffice)for the previous evening and the whole morning with no connectivity issues, I call into the Mac service department to voice my concern over the “genius” opinion that my problem was my internet provider. After all, the laptop isn’t crashing. And, by the way, the genius had told me I couldn’t possibly download Yosemite with my provider, and hadn’t I done exactly that for the laptop? The genius wasn’t there, so they put me through to the tech who’d done the work. Of course, the service ticket didn’t mention the connectivity problem–because the genius had already, in his infinite wisdom, ruled it out. (Never trust a genius whose age ends with the suffix “teen.”
The tech is livid. Why wasn’t he told about the other problem? It should have been checked first, before he did the Yosemite download. Of course, he’s yelling at me–and I’m yelling right back.
When I go in to pick up the computer, I try to complain about the service. I get to talk to the owner, who apologizes for the genius (though I don’t tell him about the political faux pas.) The counter personnel aren’t supposed to diagnose at the desk. I point out that the person in November had done exactly that, too, when I first brought it in. He is full of apologies. He’s all ready to treat me like a middle-aged idiot, and then he notices my Sonoma phone number. (Yes, after 15 months in Michigan I still have a California number on my cell.) Suddenly, I am treated like royalty. Go figure. At one point, there are five employees attending to my problem.
Apparently, because of this breakdown, they’re going to implement a whole new set of policies on repair/intake. They haven’t been able to find any trouble with the computer–but they don’t think that it was the old operating system. Probably there’s wireless signal interference where I live. (But it magically doesn’t bother Rick’s computer!) Or it’s an intermittent problem which will be difficult to diagnose. He cannot guarantee that I won’t have a problem at home, though they see no evidence of it on the bench.
When I get my computer home, everything works fine. It hasn’t frozen since. Yosemite? Who knows. Sorry for the diatribe, it was so frustrating, it’s cathartic to tell.
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I’m sorry you’ve had a rough start to the year. May it be smooth and happy sailing from here on out.
I grinned at your reference to the high-end relic of your past. I had one of those too. And we held on to it longer than we should have, rationalizing that it got better gas mileage than our farm vehicles. But I worried what would happen when it inevitably needed expensive repairs that can no longer be accomodated by our budget, so we sold it. I’m so glad it’s gone. 🙂 May your Blubaru serve you well.
As for bargain-hunting, I’m not very good at it but Cherie is a master. I am quite good at being cheap however. There are very few things that I expect to ever buy new again.
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We figured the old car would be a deal to someone. After 15 years in California it had the prestige of never having seen salt. Engine–good, transmission–good. It’s just that the brakes, bearings and control arms were going to cost a mint. So we sold it to a local mechanic. He can fix it inexpensively and then keep it or sell it. It follows in our efforts to recycle. For the future, used (new-to-me) works just fine. We’re still in the “set-up” phase. It feels like money is running through our fingers. So every deal, every craigslist adventure, adds up to sustainable, down the road.
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