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Hot Rods Quotes to live by...

Discussion in 'The Hokey Ass Message Board' started by Boneyard51, Apr 2, 2018.

  1. tim troutman
    Joined: Aug 6, 2012
    Posts: 1,010

    tim troutman
    Member

    "how are you smart enough to operate a phone but still poop your pants". me to my 2 year old grandson Fud
     
  2. jnaki
    Joined: Jan 1, 2015
    Posts: 10,148

    jnaki

    “It is always an Endless Summer in our low key lifestyle, garage or otherwise…



    Hello,

    Simplicity is always the easiest and most efficient way to get things done, to look at any situation, or be in a relationship. No need to buy a giant diamond ring for a proposal, a huge wedding in a reserved place, or even spending tons of money on a reception. The simple ways to celebrate getting engaged, married or buying a house, simplicity is the clearest way to see and complete the process.

    But, it is all in the way you look at things as accepted in our high paced society. Traditionalists will say you have to have those rose pedals and one knee dropped to ask for a hand in marriage. Or have a grand wedding with all of the flower girls, bridesmaids or separate sides for the groom or bride’s family?

    We never got over the separation at the entrance doors. Shouldn’t it be a mingling of families and friends, not choosing which side to sit? Everyone expects the two families to know each other and get along. Separating those friends and relatives just does not seem the way to start a long lasting relationship.
    At our reception, everyone sat everywhere to fulfill the "Lets get together" idea of friendships.

    Jnaki


    Perhaps, it was the time of year, or the time of the century that was how we saw our lives then and throughout our history. From 1966 to the turbulent 10 years running was a time of reflection. Our whole society was going through some radical changes and events. We all were flabbergasted at what was going on. “What’s going on…” a song by Marvin Gaye described it best…

    Simplicity at the beginning, being together through all sorts of fun and exciting adventures were all a part of how we saw the world and our part we played in it. Understanding and adapting to change is our way of “simplicity” in all aspects of our lives. Back then and today… YRMV

    upload_2023-12-22_3-15-50.png
     
  3. Whoamel
    Joined: Jul 22, 2007
    Posts: 115

    Whoamel
    Member
    from So Cal

    Never buy anything made in England that uses gasoline, or has an electrical plug on it..
     
  4. Don't be what ya ain't

    Find out what ya are

    And be the best one of it

    .
     
  5. jnaki
    Joined: Jan 1, 2015
    Posts: 10,148

    jnaki

    “It only takes the right one to make it work right!”



    Hello,

    I heard this quote in one of those cool 50s streaming TV shows we have been stuck on for our viewing pleasure. It was fast on the screen, but memorable in our own lifestyle, so it stuck as a great quote with wonderful experiences along the way.

    Since we both came from different style of families and ways to bringing up kids, it was a wonder that my wife was how she became in college and thereafter. I was given pretty much an open book to explore the teen lifestyle, although I did not take advantage of it. My brother was the same way. We could have gone “whole hog” in our travels and surf adventures. But, our hot rod experiences and including drag racing adventures made us step back and enjoy what was going on in our daily lives.

    We had to put aside some of the teenage stuff weekly if we needed to get something done on our hot rod car builds or a specific motor assembly project. Spending the whole weekend doing an assembly of the crank, the rods and pistons was a giant puzzle, but it had to get finished. So, it was different staying home and working well into the nighttime hours. Easy does it, but there was a specific way my brother showed me and we followed it to the letter. Done once, get it right and no “do-overs!”

    Jnaki

    So, our teenage lives were different as my wife and I came from different family lifestyles. But, somehow, the mid 60s times all fell into place, meeting in college, getting along in most subjects, spending as much time together to talk into the late night, about everything happening in our lives as to how we fit into the whole surroundings. The mid 60s-early 70 were some happy times, yet sorry times for the whole society. It was one the verge of exploding everywhere.
    upload_2023-12-29_7-57-52.png "PEACE: Is the business of the future to be dangerous..."
    But, we managed to get through that time period and function as 20 somethings, 30 somethings and our lives just melded together for the best experience. As we look back to those early years, it was a long time ago and for us, as clear as if it happened yesterday. YRMV
    upload_2023-12-29_8-3-36.png

     
  6. Petejoe
    Joined: Nov 27, 2002
    Posts: 12,438

    Petejoe
    Member
    from Zoar, Ohio

  7. With us all coming up on a new year I remember the saying , Don't sweet the small stuff. Damn, I wish I could do that! Being a auto tech full time, most of the time I don't know if I want to pull my hair out or puke. OK! Its the holiday week end, I'm fine now.:rolleyes::)
     
  8. bobbytnm
    Joined: Dec 16, 2008
    Posts: 1,728

    bobbytnm
    Member

    ^^^^ Don't sweat the petty things, just pet the sweaty things^^^
     
  9. Toms Dogs
    Joined: Dec 16, 2005
    Posts: 573

    Toms Dogs
    Member
    from NJ

    When you get something for nothing, it's usually worth it____ .:rolleyes:
     
    Boneyard51, 2OLD2FAST, 29A-V8 and 4 others like this.
  10. alanp561
    Joined: Oct 1, 2017
    Posts: 4,984

    alanp561
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    :eek:For the love of God, don't pull your hair out! It doesn't come back, and pubic hair implants look really weird:oops:. If you feel the need to puke, do it. You can always eat later;).
     
  11. jnaki
    Joined: Jan 1, 2015
    Posts: 10,148

    jnaki

    "The pessimist complains about the wind; the optimist
    expects it to change; the realist adjusts the sails."


    Hello,

    We all have lived our own lives since those early days. Some went one way and others another. It all depended on how you looked at life or how others lived, acted or thought. Most of our friends from high school and college are as old as we are, but our lives have gone separate ways. From a single entity of hot rods/drag racing to cruising, something held us together. For us, it was being friends. For others, it was instant family lives as a functional group.

    But, as one faded, we wanted to live our own lives the way we thought, not our family’s values or old friends’ values/thoughts. Money was always front and center for our friends. But for us, we struggled through some situations and made adjustments to the direction we were heading.

    In our 20s, we went to a gathering and saw our friends. They were all in their lifestyles, jobs and family lives, with the choices they made along the way. If it were high school, we all probably thought the same. But, as we all felt the changes in our own society and how the whole USA was heading, we all changed. Our 327powered 40 Ford Sedan Delivery was the only hot rod cruiser in the whole block... so there is that!
    upload_2024-1-5_3-36-58.png
    “Go your own way…” is a powerful motto with consequences and many changes to adapt to road blocks along the direction we were heading.

    Jnaki

    But, in thinking back to our sailing days, we learned even as thinking adults. Alone in a small 14 foot sailboat with our own decisions to make to see things as clear as we could, we did “adjust the sails” to make things right. So, as young adults into older, wiser adults, we must have made enough changes to get along in society and get to the point where we are now.

    Out in the open ocean in larger sailboats over the years, we had to make plenty of changes and adjust to what mother nature threw at us. But, as calmly as possible, we did adjust and felt secure enough to enjoy our quiet (except for the howling winds…) skimming over the waters for some great times and enjoyment of what we were doing. So, real life skills showed us the direction to go for our growing up times to the present. YRMV

    “… the realist adjusts the sails."
     
  12. jnaki
    Joined: Jan 1, 2015
    Posts: 10,148

    jnaki

    “Everyday we are alive, is a good day.”

    Hello,


    In thinking back to our teenage years and in our early 20s, who would have thought we would be as old as those really “old folks” at family gatherings. As young whippersnappers, we looked at the world with good intentions and wanted to be free to go and do what we wanted. A surf tour around the world was in the books, but out of the question. What was I thinking… Ha!!! College and military were pressing issues, but what a way to look at the future choices...

    But, finding someone in a college class was just what the moment wanted to happen. The old saying that a party school was not the best place to send a young teenager. But, if someone did not party at times, where is the fun in that? Back then, there were little worries going to a party. These days, young adults have to check their drinks for poisons and or something crazy. “Cover your drinks and drink your own pour...” is a motto heard around the USA.

    Jnaki

    But, looking back to those years and when we drive by those locations, a flood of memories comes like a huge wave heading for shore. Last month, in December, the Westcoast had the largest, most consistent winter storm swells of the decade or longer as some would pronounce. The surfers were in 7th heaven to ride those huge swells. As one that was able to ride what was coming in during our “active days,” we can see the glow in those young kids challenging mother nature.

    Today, we all challenge mother nature in one form or another. So far, we are still going strong and hope that the young folks are looking out for themselves in safety and security of their new adventures post high school and college. “Times are a changing…” Being so close to 80 is no laughing matter, but it is the price one pays for being very active in our younger years. Play now, pay later... is how the "Credit" era started. So, we are now, "paying..." Ha!
    upload_2024-1-12_3-52-46.png The future is "bright" for those that are in a position to make good choices...

    But, good habits and smart decisions are still the center of a great future coming down the road… for the young and even for us old folks, Yikes! YRMV
     
  13. "There's a fine line between stubborn and stupid, try not to cross the line"
     
  14. Henry Fords.....If you think you can,or you think you cant, your right either way.
     
  15. choptop40
    Joined: Dec 23, 2009
    Posts: 5,602

    choptop40
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    to be or not to be....
     
  16. choptop40
    Joined: Dec 23, 2009
    Posts: 5,602

    choptop40
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    to rod or not to rod....that is the question.....ha ha ha
     
  17. wahoo
    Joined: Feb 23, 2011
    Posts: 48

    wahoo
    Member

    Be careful, he may be saying that to you someday!
     
  18. 29A-V8
    Joined: Mar 14, 2014
    Posts: 397

    29A-V8
    Member
    from wyoming

    When my dad saw me trying to do something not very bright or continuing to do something over and over and it didnt work he would say

    "to keep on doing that is about as useless as tits on a boar hog" or "you might as well pound sand down a rat hole"
     
  19. JohnLewis
    Joined: Feb 19, 2023
    Posts: 533

    JohnLewis
    Member

    Yesterday is in the past, it doesn't matter- some song I heard on the radio today.
     
  20. jnaki
    Joined: Jan 1, 2015
    Posts: 10,148

    jnaki

    “Parents can only give good advice or put them on the right paths, but the final forming of a person's character lies in their own hands.” — Anne Frank


    Hello,

    I can see it now, 1949, playing in the yard with our dog and our mom looks out to see if we are still around for the morning. Normally, back then, we had a good size yard, but there was a huge field behind our garage. That field led to the Terminal Island Freeway and beyond that, the railroad berm.

    That huge field led to hours of free play, pretend time, holes dug everywhere and the endless days of playing Army in our fox holes, launching grassy dirt bombs across the field to the enemy… usually, my brother. So, did our parents teach us to play with stuff or other kids?

    We were influenced by all of the talks our mom constantly gave us daily. We were her captive audience until we could ride bikes. Then the world opened up little more and the parental suggestive guidance was getting less.
    upload_2024-1-19_3-46-23.png
    As a teen, those conversations were an everyday thing at the breakfast table. But, my brother always left early and I was left to listen, selectively, to the rabble coming my way. We knew we were making our decisions as we went along with our friends to various places and those times when we all sat around expressing our own views.
    upload_2024-1-19_3-47-33.png

    Jnaki


    Where was the guidance and drabble from our parents? It was there, but by this time we were absorbing as much as we could without admitting it. Those thoughts were there, but part of the system laying dormant until needed. One thing we noticed in our “older” ways is that despite the age difference of the times, the teenage/20 something days are/were similar, just in a different time period.

    So, were our mom’s constant babble part of the history? Yes, dormant and when the time came, probably used the information as part of our adapting to the current crisis or happenings… but, we would not admit it at the time! It was supposed to be from our own thoughts, values and minds, playing the role of adapting in our own ways.


    It was the same way with our son and when we were the alternate parents for our granddaughter, she listened to everything and did not miss a beat. She caught us at various times with facts learned from us and put it right into the conversations. That kid made us check everything we told her and check again.

    As both of them continue on in their lives, it is up to them to live the way they want. But, to remember those moments of our parental (+Grandparental) guidance that we gave out for free and hoped that it stuck for the long run… YRMV
     
  21. Sky Six
    Joined: Mar 15, 2018
    Posts: 12,174

    Sky Six
    Member
    from Arizona

    "I can cure stupid, but it will hurt".
    "I've taught you everything I know and you're still stupid".
     
  22. "Don't let your Jaybird mouth overload your hummingbird ass!"
     
  23. Unkl Ian
    Joined: Mar 29, 2001
    Posts: 13,409

    Unkl Ian

    "Paint don't make it go faster."
    Don Biederman
     
  24. DDDenny
    Joined: Feb 6, 2015
    Posts: 20,130

    DDDenny
    Member
    from oregon

    Hmmm, this sounds oddly familiar!

    upload_2024-1-25_9-25-25.png
     
  25. JD Miller
    Joined: Nov 12, 2011
    Posts: 2,428

    JD Miller
    Member

    Stupidest quote:
    "Ran When Parked"


    .
     
  26. DDDenny
    Joined: Feb 6, 2015
    Posts: 20,130

    DDDenny
    Member
    from oregon

    That may be but.............
    upload_2024-1-25_9-45-32.png
     
  27. This is just about perfect for the "internet era" where many can say derogatory things thinking there are NO consequences. I.E. typing smack from their safe spaces! Before the internet when real men had something to say, they said it to the others face.

    God Bless
    Bill
    https://www.jalopyjournal.com/forum...ar-transport-hauling-open-or-enclosed.614419/
     
  28. Especially when they sign it "Anonymous"!
     

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