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You’re probably not surprised to hear that my wife Melissa has taught me a lot about love. But did you know that Melissa’s car has also schooled me on the subject?

Melissa’s car is a blue Honda Fit. We call her Zippity, on account of her ability to zip around the road with aplomb. She’s small, she’s sassy, and she knows it.

She’s called a Fit because, even though she’s small, she can fit an astounding number of things inside her. Before we had our touring van, we would go to gigs with Zippity. We’d pack a PA, speakers, a keyboard, a keyboard stand and bench, boxes of merch, and all our food and clothes into Zippity’s little self. And she loved it! Even packed full, she continued to zip around the road with her usual ease and flair.

But the most important thing about Zippity, and the reason I’m writing this post, is her license plate. It says BIG2U.

Zippity’s plate is quintessential Melissa. The first time I hung out with Melissa and we were saying goodbye, she said “I love you.” Not in a you’re-my-future-spouse-so-let’s-get-married kinda way. Melissa is simply full of love and likes to share it.

I, on the other hand, am much more reserved. I come from a family of East Coast WASPs and stoic Midwesterners. We don’t need to say “I love you.” It’s implied.

At one point, early on in our relationship, Melissa looked at me and declared, “I just love you sooooo much.”

How did I respond?

I said, “I’m very fond of you as well.”

At the time, Melissa was mortified. Now she knows that “I am very fond of you” is a huge declaration from me. It is the total equivalent of “I love you sooooo much.” Squeezed through my WASP/Midwest filter.

I have, over time, learned to say “I love you.” Even my WASP/Midwestern family says it to each other now.

But still. We don’t go overboard.

So here I am, driving a car that declares its love every time I get behind the wheel. And not just any love. BIG love! BIG love to YOU! Meaning everyone who sees the car.

I have to admit, I mostly block out this fact from my awareness. I’m only reminded of it when another driver smiles at me with a broad grin. At first I wonder what’s wrong. Are they laughing at me? Did they catch me in a particularly enthusiastic car karaoke moment?

No. It’s the plate. I have wished them BIG love and they are returning it in kind.

It’s not unlike my experience of being married to Melissa. She has offered me BIG love and I do my best to return it in kind.

Driving Zippity is an extension of that process. I am taking my love on the road. I am offering it to everyone who sees me.

No, it’s not in my WASP/Midwestern nature to offer love to everyone on the road. But offering this love to the world is in my elemental nature as a spiritual being having a human experience, even a WASP/Midwestern one.

So Zippity is stretching me. She is stretching me into my spiritual essence.

And there’s another thing.

Zippity is now 18 years old. She’s encroaching on antique status. She still has her zip, but she’s become a little… How do I say it? I could say shabby. I could say dilapidated. But Zippity is a loyal and wonderful vehicle, so I’m going to go with weathered.

It happened virtually overnight. One day, she was her shiny, zippy blue self, and the next day she had big worn patches on her roof and hood.

It doesn’t bother Melissa at all. She loves that Zippity is still such a great car on the inside no matter what she looks like on the outside. She loves that we’re being frugal by keeping Zippity until we actually need to get another car.

I, on the other hand, am not so generous in my assessment.

When I drive Zippity around town now, I feel a slight sense of embarrassment. Yes, I’m offering BIG love to everyone on the road, but I’m doing it from a slightly shabby weathered vantage point. Will they still want my BIG love, even if it’s weathered?

The answer, of course, is Yes. Love can never be weathered. Love is timeless and infinite and will never stop emanating from our beautiful little Zippity, no matter how old she gets.

It’s yet another way that she is stretching me into my essential nature. Not just by forcing allowing me to offer love to everyone on the road, but encouraging me to offer it to myself as well.

Even in my embarrassment.

Even in my misguided notions that Zippity and I are somehow unworthy of offering such love just because the external package has become a bit weathered.

I mean, hey. I’m getting weathered as well. Does that stop me from becoming more aware each and every day of the love that lives inside me?

No. No, it does not. In fact, the more weathered I get, the more loving I become.

Thanks to Melissa.

And Zippity.

What’s your experience with becoming more weathered and more loving? Share your comments below!

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