Quote:
Originally Posted by lightfootdriver Sir, you write beautifully. |
Thank you, kind sir. I like to believe I don't have much of an ego, but it never hurts to get it massaged every now and then, a
champi for the soul, if you will.
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Originally Posted by lightfootdriver It felt like you let go of a piece of your heart. |
I really, truly did. I fell hard for Red, and I'd be very lucky to have this kind of car-ma connection again. But as I had explained to the guy who bought the car, and as wife tried to explain to me as lovingly as she could, it makes no sense to spend something like 2-2.5 lakhs on fixing a few things (rear shocks, tyres, the screen, and some other minor quibbles), and then keeping the car for just 6 months or less. It makes zero financial sense.
For once, I let my head win over my heart. May it be the last time ever.
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Originally Posted by lightfootdriver I am fighting a hard battle between head and heart as I finalise on my first car. Heart wants something YOLO, while brain says buy something modest your middle-class upbringing approves of. And your post is just the right food my brain required to let itself loose on this one. I am now convinced that I'll buy my first car that brings butterflies to my stomach and strucks a chord to my heart.
Thank you!!!!! Your post made a very difficult decision so easy. Heart wins this one. |
Believe it or not, I get such a huge kick when someone tells me that my prose moved them enough and shook them out of their reverie to consider buying something with a touch more fun than the usual. It's a release you get from something I'd like to call textual intercourse.
When I started this thread, I of course wanted to document my journey with the car, but equally, I wanted to demystify the whole stigma around bringing home an aged German lady (as long as your significant other is willing to have it as a
souten, of course), and everything that entails.
Perhaps more importantly, I wanted to tug at heart strings, and inspire people to buy a fun car instead of a commuter class appliance. Everywhere I go, I see white, grey, or silver econoboxes, with people looking a bit glum behind the wheel. Nothing wrong with that, but if you can add some spice to your life, why not? Listen to the heart, man. It knows you.
No, fun and exciting doesn't mean expensive or German only. I drove a Jimny recently and was very taken aback by how much I liked it and how nice it felt to drive, if a bit slow. I don't know how Maruti let this thing get sold here, it's a car unlike anything else from their stable.
My point being, fun comes in all shapes, sizes, and exciting colours. Go. Have some fun. Create memories. Thank me later. Or curse me, whatever. Your call.
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Originally Posted by lightfootdriver P.S. For my first car, I can safely extend my budget to 20-25L cash, however my head suggests to buy something pre-owned (vfm) around 10L. I've never let my heart win on expensive purchases, this might just be first. |
Why not a happy middle ground? Depending on your comfort levels, add a bit more to that, 13-15 lakhs can get you a very nice pre-owned car.
I saw
this 328i for sale at BMW Premium Selection in Bombay, and it seems too good to be true.
(Edit: I see you're in Bangalore. If you, or any BLR folks, want me to go see this for you, I'll gladly do so. Just drop me a DM. I have no hidden agenda, except to put you in a fun car).
But it's not just 328i's. There are a good deal of options out there for the fun-loving enthusiast. Go. Have fun. Let the heart have a field trip, because it almost always knows what you want before you do.