I don't think any of us here can say we've never bought anything "used". I'm sure, as well, most of us have done so at least once with regret.
My first used vehicle as an adult, was a used truck. I already had a small car bought new, but I wanted something to head up in the hills for camping. I didn't want new and pretty, I wanted broken in and cheap. There was an ad in the California newspaper for a Toyota Truck, 120,000 miles but in good shape, for $3500. There was ust a name and a phone number. I was hesitant to go alone. having a mental picture of some truck seller sitting in the shop at his house wearing garments made out of the skin of the last 3 people that answered his ad.
So I took my partner at work. He's tall, he's imposing looking. Firearm or not, he'd keep me from being made into a vest.
When we showed up, the truck was in the driveway. Clean as a whistle, the camping shell COVERED in Grateful Dead stickers. The seller was a "deadhead".
The fellow came out, long hair, clean clothes, and as nice as good be. I asked him if he'd come down $500 to $3000 and he said "well, no, you see I had this drug deal go bad and I need the bucks".
My partner is trying not to smile. I'm picturing all the marijuana seeds that are probably in the carpet of this thing, but it's really in good shape and I had $3000.
Suddenly the guy REALLY looks at us. Let's see, clean cut, toned arms, white starched shirts, blue pants, dark sunglasses (that fashion sense that just screams Academy) and gets this sort of panicked look on his face.
"uh. . oh, .are you guys. . COPS?
"Mister", I said. "I'm just a nice gal looking for a cheap truck".
I got it for $3000. No seeds, it ran like a top and with the stickers on there, I'd get lots of waves from people who looked like the name on their birth certificate really was "Flower" or "Moonbeam".
There were 300,000 miles on it when I finally sold it, still running, still reliable. Best decision I ever made, to purchase that thing, stickers and all.
I've also had some not so good used purchases. The chain saw which made a better door stop, a $400 car I bought to drive to school that once got a ticket for "impersonating a motor vehicle" and a used riding mower that flung out its muffler on a tight turn (fly free!!!!)
But there are treasures to be found if you look closely and more so if you look past the shiny new carton, and the fancy sales pitch. We place so much value on the obvious, not seeing past that slight ding or scratch, that may be the best pistol you ever owned. We place too great of value on shiny fresh looks and a catchy marketing slogan until too late, we realize we elected a spokesmodel, not a leader.
Sometimes though, we look deep, look past a little dust, a couple of scars, and start an adventure. It's that giving over to our gut feeling as to the validity of something or someone, that often reaps the most reward. Look in your gun safe. Is what you treasure the newest or the shiniest? That which you prize the most may be that firearm for which the number of deer that had fallen before it were legion,. Your most treasured possession, a weapon in which you knew that the fierce heat of its holding, there in the blaze of a new autumn, would renew you better than that plastic fake camo looking one.
Look to your friends, are the ones you trust with your life, likely to be some 20 year old driving Daddy's Lexus or some person your age driving an old truck or some classic car that's seen some life.
Look at the world around you, to that which has withstood time, things carefully tended. Stop at the gun show and talk to that 80 year old veteran about something more than the price of his brass. Chances are he won't just regale you with stories of the war, no riposte of sweaty storytelling of gunfire and noise which all war stories are composed of, no ragged lines of gaunt infantry beneath the tattered flags of courage. No, what he will tell you quietly, is simple This was my gun, it served me well, but I'm willing to sell it. Let me tell you about it. And what stories it can tell.
The tables of new AR15's are interesting, like a 20 year old in shorts is interesting. But give me the tables of Mausers, of Colts, of wood and flint and powder, the galloping thunder of guns which have fired through the fading fury of smoke into the night.
I don't care if my safe is full of plastic and shiny and new. Our lives are sublets anyway, and too quickly gone. Give me something with history, something of strength and purpose and years, that will give as much back as I can possible give it in return. Not everyone understands.
How do you explain to someone whose life is driven by "what will the neighbor's think", that there are just some things essential to you, that when you see them, you not only recognize them, you wish to experience. But I think it's probably the same thing I think when I see a woman's closet with a 100 pairs of shoes and think "why on earth would someone want a closet full of shoes?" If I won't ever understand that frame of reference, why would they grasp mine?
Of course, not everything that is used is useful, not everything of weight has measure.. There will be things you find that end up costing you more than money. But you still seek those treasures that remain. You may find them on a table in a hall, you may find them, in a house where they've been locked for far too long. You may find them just breathing, at that same moment in time you are, that small place on a planet spinning in space, destined to meet.
If you've reached adulthood, you've experienced it. You're walking, talking surrounded by noise and clutter, and people clutching at you, demands on your time, living your life, you thought, quite happily. And there it is. Life isn't exciting but it's steady. And like that moment in Jaws, where the camera looms in on Sheriff Brody, and the whole world focuses, it does. For just a moment. And you suddenly notice every little detail around you, the sun running straight and empty, like gash down the corridor, a tiny spider web there at the corner of the room, the sun piercing it, illuminating the empty spaces there between the delicate strength.. And you see what it is you desire, held in that moment with conviction, that sense, that feeling of home.
And you know, you were meant to hold it, for just one moment, that small piece of history, that large piece of yourself you never knew you needed. And you reach for it, one of those impulses, inscrutable yet unassailable which occurs at intervals in all of us, driving us to set down the known and the safe, and seek the possession of something rare, blind to everything but hope and fate.
Or you can just push it away, leave it behind, common sense taking over, and go home quietly to die.
You won't do that a second time.
For you are like I am, and some night when you are old, you will lay in that tent, that old firearm by your side, unable to sleep, but quiet and peaceful, listening to the nights whisper. The past was your future, but you couldn't taste it until, it too was past. Anything else was an illusion. You lay there without regret, for seeking that which you needed, that moment of time, when history and fate were held in your hand and you knew what you wanted. Perhaps it was just a moment, before you set it away, perhaps you made it yours for all time, but in that moment the two of you were joined, it was grace.
A need so necessary, part of the history that remains.
23 comments:
I like being touched deeply by the present and the potential of the future as much as the shiny items of the past. I live, in a way, in all three.
Ultimately it is the value in someone's heart that is of value to mine.
Amen.
There are things that I have had and things that i have wished for but when I look around me i am most grateful for what I have, and to those that made those things possible.
An excellent post. . . all of your posts are great, but this one "grabbed" me.
Well said, and yes, I HAVE asked the old man about the gun, got the story and bought the gun... and will treasure it for the history.
Old NFO - Tam and I pulled the buttplate off one of my Swiss Mausers one evening and found a little piece of paper with the name of the soldier that originally owned it. It was probably 60 years old. Is there any kind of search engine to find the owners of these weapons? I googled the name and address and didn't find anything. I love this gun, but if I found a son or grand or great granndson who was a shooter, I'd give it back to them, a piece of history.
Beautiful and true.
I have my great-grandfather's shotgun. The only story I have of it is that it was his quail gun. Wish I knew more.
The RPS in the sidebar. Don't you like RPN calculators? I bought an HP 15C in '84 and still use it in preference to "regular" calculators. It's a lot more durable too. :-)
Hat Trick: My beloved 15C is about a year older than yours. I can't give it up.
Just downloaded an RPN for my Android phone.
And Brigid is as brilliant as she is beautiful - I'm sure RPN in second nature to her. As is RPS.
From heart to head to heart. You reached mine again with your beautiful words.
North - no giving away my secrets now. I hope you and your lovely bride have a wonderful weekend "child free" while S. is at camp. :-)
Years ago in the dark ages, while doing the Uncle Sam thing a friend picked up a 44-40 from a local pawn shop for 15 bucks. We had a blast blowing up the swamp rats. Also had a 44 mag but that old six gun was a classic from the 1800's. I went home... He went to Nam a little later. We lost contact.
You are so right about the beauty that comes with the age of fine vintage.
I once had an Antonio Zoli silver snipe o/u that went with my ex-wife. Other than the bird dog she took, I miss that gun the most, but it came from my then father in law, and right is right. Nice find Brigid, it will certainly provide you with years of service and happiness that no new-fangled blastomatic in the latest camp pattern could provide!
"... clean cut, toned arms, white starched shirts, blue pants, dark sunglasses (that fashion sense that just screams Academy)..."
Somehow I get this whole X-Files vibe from you when you talk about your work.
Gee... you even have Monica's Red Hair.
As usual, you weave several meanings into your essays, making it fun to read.
What is necessary? Its not quite a need, nor does it quite fit as a want. It does have a qualitative component. Hmmmm....
I wonder.
Arisaka T-30, hook safety. I wish it could talk, I'm sure it has a story or two to tell (but since I don't speak Japanese I probably couldn't understand them anyway) ;)
I prefer to think of some things as "Experienced", and better for that experience.
I dont know what it is but i was born in 1949 and just about every gun i now own is older than me,its like this with my cars as well i just dont like new cars my current one is 15/16 yrs old and i just love driving it,the oldest rifle i own and still use was made around 1851 and i love to use it even if it is a pain to clean.
The memory is the key.
The thought that as long as I leave my mark on the world I will not be forgotten,but ...
What is this piece of history, but a link to those that lived before.
What is this artifact, but a promise of what is possible.
Don't forget that the new-fangled doodads of today are the antique collectables of tomorrow.
What would you rather have a collection of other people's memories, or a life having lived your own?
That is the value of the present; what new memories are we passing on.
Josh
Brigid- My 'guess' would involve a trip to Switzerland... But I'm betting they DO have records for all of those guns buried in some military office over there.
One summer day, I was on the phone negotiating the sale of a broken airplane (we prefer to call them projects, as aviators can see the struggling phoenix in every ash-pile, waiting for caring hands to help it fly). The owner was speaking of facts and figures, airspeeds and climb rates, when he suddenly paused.
In a very small voice, then, he told me her name. I was sold at that moment - not because she has some glorious name and lineage like Maid in Tokyo, but because he shared her heart, her soul, and their love story. How could I not fall in love with my little phoenix in transition?
Three years later, she rose from the ramp and flew again, and I nearly made her old owner cry. He has a new bird now, but as soon as he heard his old love flying around the airport, he came to see her and run his hands over her again, to rejoice in her restoration.
It's a love story - and so many old things accumulate that love, awe, hope, respect, and life over their years that they become something far more than themselves.
Fighter jets are awesome - but there's not a fighter pilot out there that wouldn't give the shirt off his back to fly a P-51D.
An owner of a Mustang once said, as he touched his girl gently on the cowl, "At some point, you're no longer the owner. I'm just a caretaker of this piece of history."
Ah, let me tell you about her - but better, when the weather cools, when my bank account recovers, let me introduce you to her, and let me take you for a flight - let her tell you about herself, and our love story.
Lovely words, Wing/Whim.
I have old stuff.... AND!!!... I am old stuff.
- I drive a rusted out 1985 Toy Truck 4X4 that will still climb around and over most obstacles including brand new, fire breathing Detroit steel mired in the muck. The old girl odometer sez 250K plus miles. However, many of those miles were logged as wicked off road, low range, gear grinding crawls thru mud and snow and such with chains on all four wheels. Yeah, I like to hunt and fish without other folks nearby.
I shoot old firearms.
- 7mm Swedish Mauser that is a tack driver out to 200 yards with 140 grain handloads.
- S&W 1500 (Miroku?).270 that spits out 150gr. Speer "Grand Slam" bullets at three to four hundred yards with relentless accuracy...as long as the shooter keeps his head clear!
- S&W Model 29, "N" frame, "Highway Patrolman" .357 Mag with a 4 inch barrel. It has been Parkerized and has Pachmyer grips.
That ol' Snuffy is heavy and solid, and spits out hot loaded 158 grain Hornady XTP's with enough muzzle blast and flip to remind me that I need to go back to the range more often.
-- Then there is the old game getter Browning Citori 12 ga. I dunno how many rounds I have put thru that old girl. Literally thousands....from 2&3/4 inch, 1 oz. 7.5shot target and dove loads to massive 3 inch "00" buck goose loads (when they were legal!) I have brought more bird to the table than I could ever count.
On a Wing - lovely, as you both are. Thank you for bringing her to my little home and letting me put my hands on her. She's a sweet little airplane and a steady flier. You're very lucky.
Sven - You have such tales, you will never grow old, but will simply grow richer like wine.
Josh K. - yes, memory. Some times that is what keeps us going each day.
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