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We Have it Pretty Good

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Since this thread is going off the rails.

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Since this thread is going off the rails.

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Like this, sorry I couldn't resist

which Heather the old drunk one or the young hot one ??...
 

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It's the same reason why you never see four door 1973 chevys, our cars carry value thus those who have them feel the need to keep them in good condition and sell them once they feel the need to
 
I love this pull quote from the Car & Track article that's linked to the Haggerty one: "One thing won’t change, however: The happiest people in the hobby are the ones who buy what they like first and let the market worry about return on investment." That's the God's honest truth right there!
 
[h=1]I'm wondering if it's a female midlife crisis she's having to want a car of her youth.

What's funny was when I was getting my Road Runner back on the road, this same young lady said she hoped her husband didn't have a mid-life crisis like I was having, and my wife pointed out that I had been driving 73/74 Road Runners since the day she met me in 1982. I had one when we met, a different one when we got married, a different one when we went to Bermuda for three years, a different one when we got back, and on and on. As soon as I sold one, I would buy another, so my car wasn't a mid-life crisis car... it was just me being consistent about cars the way I am with homes, food, clothes, sports, and pretty much everything else. Once I find something I like, I stick with it... including my wife of 30 years. :)

But, I don't think this car would count as a mid-life car. Those tend to be cars you've always wanted but never owned before, and she had her old Probe until the wheels fell off. I'm thinking it's more of that car you buy because you loved the thrill of driving one back in the day, and you've grown bored with the weak crap that you've been driving for the past 10 or 20 years. She drives a Toyota Corolla... the most boring car ever made, so I can see why she wants to go a little retro.
 
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