Princess Valiant
A.K.A. Rainy Day Auto
It is National tell your teenage daughter about Auto School day....ok so I made that up but there is a reason I say this.
back when I was younger ...a lot younger I moved in with my adoptive family....I call them adoptive because none of them are genetically related to me yet they treat me like one of their own. They were and are in the towing/salvage business. So when I came here I quickly became accustomed to being in a salvage yard setting and there was never a shortage of cars around, big ones, small ones, broken ones, fast ones, you name it. Well over time my family would get me involved with things around.....started with "hold the flashlight" to "steer the car" all the way to "pull this part for me"
when I came to be college age they suggested I take automotive classes as electives to a degree. when they first suggested it I thought they were crazy ...I assumed auto school was for boys and the thought had never ran across my mind. Well they brought it up a few times and it made me really think that I already knew how to do some things from working with cars around the yard so why not.
when I was actually in Auto School at a local community college, to my surprise I was actually keeping up with the top guys there. I was given a hard time by some of the guys who assumed I didn't belong there and some were angry that I was keeping up with them and even tried to sabotage my work a few times, but some boys are not taught very well from their parents ...so what can we do.
My school had a V.I.C.A. club and every year they have a competition and that was a life changing thing for me because that was when I really realized that I can do this, and in districts I won top champ.
So my real message is this: for those of you who are fathers to teenage daughters or those FABO gentlemen who even know a teenage girl....why not suggest auto school. Chances are that she herself will not be interested or maybe she will try and find she is not mechanically inclined.......then at least you and her will know there is no wasted talent.
It is no different then the bumble bee who can fly because no one ever told them they cant....well I never knew I could be a welder or car builder till someone suggested I could. I am not a feminist, or I am far from being a "tom boy" ...just an average girl who was pointed in the right direction. My family tried a lot of different things ....they put me in front of a piano and gave me a guitar and found I am no musician, they tried putting me in a few different sports ....that didn't work. They even tried giving me a .22 at a rifle range and found im a horrible shot, but when they gave me a wrench and a welder it clicked and I could do it.
So all I am saying is to just throw it out there to a young girl .....you never know when you just might hit the right spark. And you fathers can at least know there is no wasted talent in your house....and who knows , you might finally get some help on your project car.
back when I was younger ...a lot younger I moved in with my adoptive family....I call them adoptive because none of them are genetically related to me yet they treat me like one of their own. They were and are in the towing/salvage business. So when I came here I quickly became accustomed to being in a salvage yard setting and there was never a shortage of cars around, big ones, small ones, broken ones, fast ones, you name it. Well over time my family would get me involved with things around.....started with "hold the flashlight" to "steer the car" all the way to "pull this part for me"
when I came to be college age they suggested I take automotive classes as electives to a degree. when they first suggested it I thought they were crazy ...I assumed auto school was for boys and the thought had never ran across my mind. Well they brought it up a few times and it made me really think that I already knew how to do some things from working with cars around the yard so why not.
when I was actually in Auto School at a local community college, to my surprise I was actually keeping up with the top guys there. I was given a hard time by some of the guys who assumed I didn't belong there and some were angry that I was keeping up with them and even tried to sabotage my work a few times, but some boys are not taught very well from their parents ...so what can we do.
My school had a V.I.C.A. club and every year they have a competition and that was a life changing thing for me because that was when I really realized that I can do this, and in districts I won top champ.
So my real message is this: for those of you who are fathers to teenage daughters or those FABO gentlemen who even know a teenage girl....why not suggest auto school. Chances are that she herself will not be interested or maybe she will try and find she is not mechanically inclined.......then at least you and her will know there is no wasted talent.
It is no different then the bumble bee who can fly because no one ever told them they cant....well I never knew I could be a welder or car builder till someone suggested I could. I am not a feminist, or I am far from being a "tom boy" ...just an average girl who was pointed in the right direction. My family tried a lot of different things ....they put me in front of a piano and gave me a guitar and found I am no musician, they tried putting me in a few different sports ....that didn't work. They even tried giving me a .22 at a rifle range and found im a horrible shot, but when they gave me a wrench and a welder it clicked and I could do it.
So all I am saying is to just throw it out there to a young girl .....you never know when you just might hit the right spark. And you fathers can at least know there is no wasted talent in your house....and who knows , you might finally get some help on your project car.















