When I moved back to New York City years ago, one of the
greatest benefits was that I didn’t need a car.
My luck with cars has been terrible. My first car, a 1987
Plymouth Horizon, broke down constantly. I was a broke college student who
couldn’t afford a new head gasket when my car put itself out of its misery via
self immolation.
I bought my second vehicle from a shirtless man in the back
woods of Georgia who was drunk at two in the afternoon and called his son
“Molson” even though that wasn’t his name. My giant 1977 Plymouth Voyager van
was mustard yellow with a big white strip. If you viewed it at the right angle
you could still make out the lettering from the church that used to own it. It
didn’t perform much better than my old Horizon. Its drive shaft fell off on
Interstate 285 in Atlanta once.
My 15-year car-free life came to an end a few years ago when
the wife and I bought a used truck. I don’t live in Manhattan anymore and
Eastern Queens is not as much of an automotive purgatory as Manhattan. And
being involved in music means I have to haul large
speaker cabinets, guitars and drunk musicians throughout and beyond the five
boroughs.
But the conveniences of city car ownership are paid for with
the wages of anger and aggravation.
The roads are full of bad drivers and New York City is
rife with people who not only drive terribly but feel entitled to do so. I’ve
seen people in Inwood triple park rather than walk an extra 20 feet to a
supermarket. I’ve seen cab drivers wait until they have a red light to drive
across an intersection.
And parking in New York City is a misery
that never goes away unless you are somehow incredibly wealthy. The city’s
parking laws are a Byzantine morass of prohibitions that are consistently poorly-signed.
A liberal interpretation of a sign can get you a fat ticket or worse, towed. I
have not had the experience of paying vehicular ransom at a city impound lot,
but every account I have heard from survivors indicates it is a Kafkaesque
nightmare that can make someone hate our city for life.
My wife has lived in the co-op apartment we share for more
than twelve years and was on a waiting list for a parking space for five years.
We thought our parking troubles were mostly over. We have a
regular space. But the perpetual douchery of New York City driving revealed
itself again just this past weekend.
My wife had taken our baby girls to visit relatives in
Nassau County and returned home from three hours of tied-up traffic on the Long Island Expressway. to find
someone had parked in our spot.
Normally the travails of someone with a reserved parking
spot would fall firmly in the confines of “First World Problems.” But when
you’ve waited five years for that spot and you’re a barely middle-class family with
no margin for parking tickets or private garages and someone rudely parks their
Mercedes Benz in your spot, violence is justified.
If someone had left a note on the car with their contact
info and let us call them to move the car, it would have been no problem. We
would have been annoyed but impressed by their willingness to be decent upon
notice. Because of the late hour and our building management’s inability to get
a towing company right, we were stuck without legal parking for the night.
Normally this would be license to get creative with
vandalism. If this car had a sunroof, my dream of justifiable shitting through
a sunroof of a snotty dickhead’s car would have finally been realized. I would
have loved to stick bananas in the tailpipe, pissed all
over the door handles and leave a steaming log of justice on the windshield. It
would have given me joy to superglue some tasteless gay porn all over the
windows and scratched giant curse words into the expensive paint job.
But since our space is reserved, the authorities would have
us as their prime suspects easily. There was little we could do but leave a
tersely-worded note stating that they were parked illegally and we had been
forced to call the towing service (which was true, even though the towing
service was out of business).
So justice has not been served. If you see a dark-colored Mercedes
Benz S550 with New York license plate FTX-2898, please vandalize the shit out
of it. Thank you.
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