Well, I have been a-visiting and I have returned. A lot has happened.
I got a very late start because Thursday morning my phone started ringing. It was the insurance company with the settlement. We are quite relieved. Tim has a keen eye for bargains. This car sold for well under Bluebook. It had a problem that they tried to cover with a bit of JB Weld. Tim saw the oil leak and insisted on a repair. It was a $4000 repair. If the dealership had done the right thing to begin with, they would have made that repair and sold it at full value. Their duplicity cost them in our case.
The insurance company paid full bluebook. They have been way more than fair with us, paying for things we did not expect. They even waived the deductible. Why? We can only assume that it is because we immediately went up there, paid the tow, got it out of a $100 a day impound, and drove it home ourselves. This alone saved them two or three thousand.
So, what this means is that this has worked out quite well for us. So well that last night, watching television, a streaming company that plays one gambling ad after another (easy to win! Your winnings go directly into your bank account! Download today! Begin playing now!), I looked over at Tim and said our odds of making big money were better driving a Lexus into Canada.
So that is resolved. All they had to do was come and get the poor old car. They texted while I was driving. They continue to text every hour with texts that began 'You still have not responded,' etc. When I stopped midway in the drive I called and told them they needed to contact Tim. The texts must be automated because they kept coming in to my phone anyway. It made a long drive very stressful.
My visit was so nice. The girls are growing so fast. I cannot believe they are going to turn 8 and 4 this year. The oldest made me a clever banner of cats dressed in detailed clothing and jewels.
They are always excited to see me, and I hope that never changes. In fact there was so much excitement that a remote ended up kicked into a cup of water that was in the sofa cup holder. That put the kibosh on TV for the weekend. Not a bad thing.
We went to the library. The oldest girl loves the Ramona books. She had just finished the last one. I suggested Ellen Tebbits. She is a dancer too and has been giggling her way through the opening chapter in which Ellen's underwear are slipping down during ballet practice.
There was a birthday party which was held at a local bounce place. Two hours of trampolines, climbing walls, ninja courses. Those two girls are both very athletic and ran full bore for 2 1/2 hours. Lesson learned: one does NOT attempt to do splits on a trampoline.
A supper out at a wonderful Mexican restaurant. I had Chiles Relleños. So very, very good. Lesson learned there, too. Margaritas are a big drink, and grandma has become a lightweight in regards to alcohol consumption.
A failed bouncey ball making experience. Lesson learned: we look at why it failed. In this case it was an incomplete recipe. We found a National Geographic one with a video and two missing steps.
There were giant bubbles, chalk drawings, poppits, walks, swings, playground, church, ice cream, even a parade. What was learned? One does not wander around with a little flag stuck in her mouth.
Adult slushies were in order. Grandma once again learned that she is a lightweight in so far as alcohol consumption is concerned.
On the morning of art class, I saw them off and then headed for home once again. This time, the long drive was made even longer by multiple long stretches of one lane traffic due to road construction. The sudden flashing of an idiot light on the dash scared the wits out of me. Tim said 'Keep driving'. Lesson learned here as well. The Suburu is over dramatic. It was half a quart low on oil.
Second lesson learned: I thought the wavy lines indicated water. No. This is oil.
I am home once again. Unpacked. Laundry done. Dishwasher run. The house seems very quiet compared to that faraway house filled to the brim with excited giggles.
Driving home, I saw a huge billboard. CHAOS, CRUELTY, CORRUPTION: ARE WE GREAT YET?
Right next to it on a barn: TRUMP 2028.
I will never understand how people are so gullible to swallow his bullshit hook, line and sinker. But there are people who believe his 250 rally crowds are tremendous. They believe the reflecting pool was damaged by vandals. That he has put the Iranians in their place. That the ICE Seizure of a nun is totally justified. That the cost of groceries and gas is some how linked to Biden's failures.The list goes on and on.





Sounds like a wonderful visit!
ReplyDeleteDid you have a new car to drive out there? Or are you shopping for another car now that you have had the insurance settlement? I got a bit confused about that. Hope the rest of your summer is calm and run...
*fun, not "run" ;)
ReplyDeleteTwo things: 1) we have not received the settlement and 2) Tim is a very careful new (to us) car. He will study the situation very carefully. Mileage. Bluebook. Customer complaints. Life expectancy. This will be something that takes him a couple of months to decide. Yes. We will miss out on vehicles, but in the end, he will have the car of his dreams at the price he wants to pay. The process will take a couple months.
DeleteI am Claire.
ReplyDeleteSometimes, Mary, I am Claire too. Other times...well...not so much.
DeleteA place of goodness in the middle of the chaos that has overtaken the nation. Sounds like a wonderful visit. Glad the insurance co did the right thing, full bluebook! That's a good thing.
ReplyDeleteYou know, we have had two experiences with our insurance in the past 6 years, one for home owners when two trees fell on the old house and this against our auto. Both times they have been surprisingly generous in their settlements. You hear so many horror stories. We have been very lucky.
DeleteMy grandsons are always excited to see me too; isn't it the best thing? For so long, I thought that MAGA would wake up, as the admin's actions became more and more egregious. Now I have 0 hope of that happening. It makes me scared, sad and angry.
ReplyDeleteIt is the very best thing! I guess I see it just a bit differently. People are beginning to see. There will always be the stubborn die hards who refuse to see, but there certainly is progress. Take heart.
DeleteSo many lessons learned must mean that you are very smart now. I mean even much morether smarterer than before.
ReplyDeleteI have plenty of smarterers to go, I imagine. Some of those lessons learned were being learned by children. I would NEVER attempt a split on a trampoline. I also know not to be goofing around with a stick in my mouth. Both of those lessons were learned the hard way and involved pain. I am sure they will always remember not to forget to never, ever, ever do those things again.
DeleteI hasten to explain the alcohol lessons were me and me alone.
DeleteYour grandchildren are so adorable and thoughtful. And as for our country's leadership.... sigh...
ReplyDeleteYeah....
DeleteI'm glad you had a good time with family and came home intact. I've had good experiences with insurers, too, no arguments, just fair payment. I'm glad you're pretty much done with the car, once the check arrives, that is!
ReplyDeleteBoy, there's a lot in this post! Your time with your grands is wonderful to read about, and sure brings back memories of when ours were young. I miss those days.
ReplyDeleteI hope you can take some Debby-time to decompress!
Bullshitters believe other bullshitters. Maga is just slow to figure it out.
ReplyDelete