I just find it amusing that many vanilla car owners got attracted to the Mazda5. I know it's inexpensive and not a rocketship, but I don't think it's vanilla. The Sienna or Odyssey is vanilla. The Mazda5 is some sort of weird jungle coffee-flavored ice cream that has no fat, but still tastes really good.
I think you are right about most people having a theme to their automotive history. Most of mine was hand-me-downs. I will always miss my '77 Volvo though. It wasn't an awesome sports car or anything, but it was very comfortable for even 5 large guys, had a huge trunk and handled decent.
Well it wasn't that it had great handling, but that the tiny tires meant the the limits of the car cam at pretty low speeds. the chassis was fairly well sorted, but it would doing into say a 50 mph highway corner and transition from understeer to a hint of oversteer if coaxed while keeping within the legal speed limist.
On snow, it was an awesome chassis, as I could modulate it perfectly and drive down the street in a full powerslide if I wanted. I even managed to one time get the car to do a perfect circle with the front passenger tire as the pivot point. My other um "trick" was that I could do a 180 on snow and slide into a parallel parking spot like they do in the commercials (with no cars around!). No front drive car will ever be much fun to me on snow....
Would I have like a nicer, sportier car? Heck yeah! But it gout me through high school and college ticket free, while still being somewhat exciting to drive.
And for those that complain about high freeway RPMS on the 5, my Volvo has a 4spd, non-overdrive MT. At 70MPH, it was turning about 4200-4500 RPM! IT think I exceeded 90MPH once, but it was literally downhill, with a tailwind and the tech at or above the 6200RPM redline!
Another time, the alternator burned the supply wire while I was driving across the stat at night, so I have NO charging system. That volvo had mechanical fuel injection and drove 200 miles on the battery charge... Of course, I had to drive at night with no lights on, as turning them on would kill the fuel pump. also the mechanical fuel injection meant that when the starter died I was able to roll-start the car by popping the clutch until I get get a new starter in!
Ah the crazy old days!