The car wash boys have seen it all — and most of the time, they didn’t even want to.
I recently took my car to my suking car wash. While waiting for them to work their magic, I got to chat with a few of the regulars. And let me tell you, their stories are insane.
Inside every average-looking sedan, SUV, or van lies a tiny ecosystem of forgotten items, sticky secrets and mysterious smells. It’s the car wash crew who braves this jungle, armed with basahan, vacuum cleaner, tire black and mental strength.
Ask any seasoned car wash boy and they’ll tell you that no two cars are the same. Some are spotless, with the faint scent of lavender air freshener and well-aligned floormats. Others are like war zones.
You open the door, and boom — a half-eaten burger, a sock, a stack of receipts, an empty energy drink bottle, and… is that lumpia on the floor? The car wash boy doesn’t flinch. He just sighs, puts on his game face and reaches for the vacuum.
“Sir, may galon ng ice cream pong tunaw na naiwan sa trunk.”
They’ve found the usual suspects — coins, used tissues, candy wrappers, balat ng saging.
Sometimes, it’s not even the item that’s weird — it’s the volume. One guy’s car had seven umbrellas. Another had so many branded coffee cups it looked like the car had its own branch.
“Boss, itatapon na po ba ‘to o steady lang sila dito?”
Aside from bizarre objects, smells are a whole different level. There’s the “amoy sapatos,” the “nilagang mais,” and the ever-iconic “amoy kulob.”
The worst is the “what died in here?” smell. That special kind of stench that clings to the upholstery, your soul, and even your dreams.
Car wash boys don’t complain. At least, not out loud. They just open all the doors and hope for divine intervention.
Car wash boys develop a sixth sense over time. They can guess a person’s personality based on their car interior.
“Pag maayos po yung likod, mukhang mabait. Pag puro energy drink tsaka yosi, stressed na stressed ito sir.”
“Pag may sapatos, brief at mga damit na pang-lakad sa likod… laging puyat yan. May sikretong malupit po yan.”
“Pag may mga religious items sa dashboard sabay may mga resibo at discount cards ng motel... no comment po.”
Sometimes, the car wash turns into a mini confession booth. Drivers suddenly open up about their car expertise, relationship issues, traffic trauma, or why their car has a distinct smell.
“Naiwan ko kasi yung baon kong adobo dyan sa loob nung isang araw.”
If you saw the Interstellar movie, one day is a lifetime in adobo hours.
Car wash boys restore your sense of dignity. They’ve seen your trash, your secrets, your personality. They hand you back your car looking fresh, smelling nice and pretending like they saw nothing.
They are the unsung heroes of our messy motoring lives. They’ve navigated sticky floors, melted candy, and rogue cockroaches, all while smiling and saying, “Okay na po, boss.”
Don’t forget to tip next time you visit the car wash. Especially if they had to deal with lechon skin from last week’s birthday party.