I don’t know why I remember this so clearly, because it wasn’t a big deal. It was an argument with a girlfriend in college. Why does it stand out this many years later? Probably because I knew I was wrong, but I was too prideful to admit it.
For most of my college years, I drove a red Volkswagen Squareback just like the one above. I can feel nostalgic about it now, but it seemed like nothing other than a 10-year-old underpowered economy car with no air conditioning at the time. (In an odd coincidence, a history professor I had at the University of Alabama who happened to be named Dr. David McElroy also drove an identical car.)
I happened to be dating a woman whose father had driven this car as a company car when it had been new 10 years before. Fairly early during our relationship, we were in that Volkswagen one day on some holiday when she asked me to turn my lights on, even though it was broad daylight.
She explained that her father had always told her it was a good idea to turn lights on for holidays, because more people were likely to be driving drunk or otherwise impaired. Anything you could do to aid visibility was a good idea, he had told her.
I refused.

I want my children surrounded by tools of creation, not consumption
Nature made me like my mother, but my father tried to erase that
When we don’t feel understood, we feel lonely even in a crowd
‘Hey, do you already have a wife? My mom doesn’t have a husband’
If you think world is about logic, you misunderstand human nature
Apple’s Steve Jobs is dead

Jesus’ face on a Walmart receipt? People see what they want to see
Fear of possible violence keeps some people trapped by misery
How does a father overcome his own issues to raise a new baby?