I Had To Leave My Garage 🫡

This is the story of a garage that slowly turned into something much bigger than just a workspace… and then had to be packed away.

Over the past years, this garage has been my main base, my creative shelter, and the place where countless automotive ideas turned into reality. Every tool, every scratch on the floor, every corner of this space has been part of a long journey of building cars, filming experiments, solving problems, and pushing limits with very limited resources in Iran.

But this video is not about building something new. It is about packing everything up.

Not a renovation. Not a move in progress. This is the moment right before leaving.

In this episode, I start collecting everything from the garage—tools, machines, equipment, parts, personal setups, and all the small things that slowly turned this place into a real workshop over time. Boxes start filling up. Shelves start emptying. The floor that used to be crowded with projects begins to show empty spaces again.

At first glance, it might look like a simple garage cleanup or relocation video. But for me, it represents something deeper. This is a transition between two chapters of my life and my work.

The reason behind this decision is not just growth or expansion. One of the biggest reasons is something that affects many creators in Iran: unstable and restricted internet access.

Due to ongoing internet disruptions and limitations, continuing my workflow, uploading consistently, and managing production from this studio has become increasingly difficult. As a result, I had to make a tough decision—to gradually pack up this garage and prepare to relocate my entire setup to a new space where I can continue working more efficiently.

This is not just about moving tools. It is about adapting to circumstances that are not always under control, and still trying to keep creativity alive despite those challenges.

Inside this garage, there is more than just equipment. There are memories of late-night builds, failed experiments that taught me more than success ever did, and countless hours of filming content for my YouTube channel. Many of the most important automotive experiments I’ve done in Iran started right here in this space.

Every corner has a story.

The welding machine that once saved an entire project from failure.
The tools that were bought one by one, not all at once.
The improvised setups that turned a small garage into a functioning production studio.
And the floor that carries marks from years of building, cutting, testing, and sometimes breaking things just to understand them better.

As I start packing, I’m not just organizing physical objects. I’m revisiting every phase of this journey.

Some tools go into boxes easily. Others feel heavier than they should, not because of their weight, but because of what they represent. There is always that strange feeling when a space that was once full of activity slowly becomes quiet.

The garage is not fully empty in this video. It is in transition. Half full, half gone. And that in-between state is what makes this moment real.

For the viewers, this might look like a cinematic garage packing montage. But for me, it is part of a much larger story that has been unfolding for years—building automotive content in a country where resources, internet stability, and access to global platforms are not always guaranteed.

Being a creator in Iran comes with unique challenges. Sometimes it means working without proper tools. Sometimes it means adapting to limitations that most people never think about. And sometimes it means changing your entire workflow just to keep the content alive.

Despite all of this, the goal has always remained the same: to build, to create, and to share the process as honestly as possible.

This garage helped make that possible.

Now, as I prepare to move everything to a new location, this video captures the final moments of this space in its current form. Not as a failure. Not as an ending. But as a necessary step forward.

The new garage will be different. Hopefully bigger, more efficient, and better suited for future projects. But this place will always remain the foundation.

In a way, this is the closing chapter of the original “garage era.”



Keywords / Tags

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Benyamin be channel Receive SMS online on sms24.me

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