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April Graham
Robert Kloss
English Composition
15 February 2022
Gearhead
My head is filled with moving gears, controlling different parts of me. My
language, my identity, my body working in sync. Components and parts working together
to move something, create a force. A force fueled and ignited by my desires and beliefs.
Refusing to be contained by a conservative society who thinks women only belong in a
kitchen. Sometimes breaking down, only to be rebuilt better than before to handle the
increase in stress and heat with ease. Sharing a language only fellow gear heads
understand.
A language that is a mix of technical dialogue and street slang. Humor used to
cover up the struggle when working on the vehicle becomes a huge challenge. Working
with the guys in the shop is kinda like a really good episode of the Office. Constantly
playfully taunting each other and trying to not hurt ourselves, a momentary distraction
from a not always so fun job. Non gear heads are kept away from the shop, not for their
safety but that they would be appalled by the verbiage that is thrown around. The words
“dumbass” and “shit” fly out of my mouth and bounce off the walls at lighting speed. Not
a space for the easily offended. A fun work environment created to cover up the hardship
of the job. Vehicles are not easy to work on as a simple issue could be caused by 100
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different things. Technical terms are used in the understanding and describing the
complex systems used in vehicles. A non gearhead would complain or ignore the odd
smell emitted from their vehicle. The gearhead wants to know why. I have a compulsive
desire to fix and diagnose the vehicle. I enjoy fluently explaining my findings, that the
motor has blown a head gasket due to a bad piston ring, allowing compressed air through
the cylinder walls to pressurize the crankcase. Forcing oil and coolant past their seals.
Creating a sweet smell of burning coolant as the fluid oozes out, dripping onto a hot
metal manifold, sizzling.
I was born to be in the garage, working and fixing and definitely not giving a
damn about getting my hands dirty. The language of the gearhead is in my blood. As a
child I took great joy riding along in my fathers 1972 Chevelle, strapped in my car seat,
the roar of the motor making me giggle in excitement. As most do, I outgrew riding in the
backseat and found myself behind the wheel. But I was not your typical teen driving to
parties or the mall. After getting my license my after school activity was sneaking my
mother’s Ford Mustang to the drag strip on ladies night. The drag strip offers a legal
place to race, a place for gearheads to meet, smack talk, and then let their vehicles finish
the conversation. The owner of the vehicle that runs the fastest ¼ mile is respected for
their hard work and knowledge of pushing a motor to its limit. Though not said in words
the vehicle’s performance speaks for them. A wordless establishment of the pecking
order. When I pull up, I know very well I haven’t modified this car and am new to the
scene, let alone the only female racer. The guys walk around like wolves, eyeing their
competition. But I hold my ground, filled with excitement and itching to show them what
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I got. They announce my name and before I know it the light turns green, I’m gone.
Everyone in the window becomes a streak of light. Overcome by the sound of the motor
revving out, my smile wide but not as wide as the gap I just put between my opponent
and I as we speed down this stretch of road in the middle of a farm field.
Little did I realize how such a thing influences my identity. A lifestyle of constant
problem solving, risk taking, and getting my hands dirty. This lifestyle is communicated
to others when I speak and how I act. In high school I was often greeted with raised
eyebrows whenever I went on an excited driven tangent about my latest weekend of
working in the garage. Eyes bright, as I squealed about the newest part I installed. Saldy,
my peers did not understand my excitement. Pushed to the side and labeled an oddity by
my sports interested peers and fellow females who were more interested in what boys
thought of them. This ground the gears in my head as I tried to figure out what I should
do. My conversations began leaving out details about my garage filled weekends. Trying
to fit in and learn their language, I became frustrated, constantly conflicted, and hateful
towards my peers. I then isolated myself, for even when I played their game I could never
win. My jokes were not funny, my knowledge was boring. I spoke without passion and
my demeanor was closed off. The shop helped me diagnose my internal turmoil and
remove that muffler. I took automotive shop classes in highschool and found a group that
understood my language. In the shop I was free to swear (when the teacher wasn’t
listening), laugh at myself, learn, and make mistakes with my peers. I felt useful, making
a motor run and learning about the inner workings of it. My peers in the shop became
family, embracing our culture and a shared passion. My peers found me funny, helpful,
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and full of knowledge in contrast to my non gear head peers who just never understood.
My voice was loud, and I wanted everyone to know how much time and effort was spent
on these machines, my identity truly empowered.
My language only continues to evolve. No longer spending my days drag racing
behind the wheel of a Mustang, a young adult freshly graduated, I purchased a diesel
truck that would take me from the lakes of Illinois, to the mountains of Utah, and back.
What I drove was a way of communicating. My hard work hung on the front of it, a
handmade custom grill, a thundering exhaust you’d have to be deaf to not hear , and a
Rosie the Riveter decal proudly displayed on my back window that attracted fellow gear
heads and strong females along my journey. Rolling our windows down on the highway,
using sign language of a thumbs up and pointing at the window. The wind whipping my
hair everywhere as we exchange shouting words out the windows: “WANNA RACE?”, “
I LOVE YOUR TRUCK!”, and the good ole comment “IS THAT YOUR TRUCK OR
YOUR BOYFRIENDS?”. That comment always got responded with “ITS MINE” and a
middle finger. Other comments leading to races against strangers initiated with a head
nod or the honk of a horn, the terms “SEND IT”, “HELL YEAH”, and gibberish yelps of
“YEE YEE” thrown out the windows of both vehicles as we speed up. Such un-academic
terms coming out of the same mouths that could accurately explain the steps of tearing
apart their prized vehicles piece by piece along with the applied sciences of horsepower
and torque. Oh how people call us “garage monkeys” when we are truly geniuses
disguised under all our dirt and grime.
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My identity and knowledge were strengthened by the communities I attracted
through my language. I met other strong females who valued the hard work put into
building something over how they themselves looked or what silly boys thought of them.
Other women in the car scene are hard to come by. So used to hanging with the guys,
unrestricted burps, conversations consisting of “cool bro”, “yeah”,” I dont know”.
Commonly messy , their tools laying all over the place. I love the guys , still like
brothers. But I was always so excited when other women got involved, our conversations
usually full of details and interest. Us women gearheads were educated and hard working,
you had to be in order to be seen in a mostly male dominated industry. Persevering
through the initially doubtful looks of other male mechanics and constant questioning of
your knowledge of cars. For the first time I found I could communicate with people of
my gender, female peers in highschool always treated my lack of society defined
femininity with distaste. At a large automotive trade show called SEMA I met a lovely
group of women gearheads. High pitched giggles followed shrieks of laughter as we
talked about mistakes we had made working in the garage, sharing funny stories,
describing our builds, the vehicles we drive, and sharing our hardships and fighting
inequality in the workplace. So different from the laughter that taunted my thoughts in
highschool. Women who could rock heels and steel toed boots. Women I couldn’t find in
highschool and who I look up to for inspiration now as a college student. A community
of gearheads I would have never found had I not embraced my language. I hope that my
language will continue to attract the people who share a knack for working in the garage,
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that those younger than me will become fluent in it and allow our paths to cross. To share
knowledge, experiences, and our passion for all things with an engine.
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