I love driving, and I love cars, but I hate public roads and traffic.
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Love it. Ticks all my ADHD boxes. I can drive for days and just be calm.
I'm neurodiverse too, do you mind telling me how it ticks your ADHD boxes?
Lots to pay attention to. If I put on tunes and drive all the anxiety and oddness disappears. There is enough going on to calm my brain. I was a paramedic for years and that driving was even better. A bit reckless, fast, attention seeking and grabbing, attention to detail, patterns, concentration, all the things.
That's really interesting... for me it works the other way there's too much going on!
I see you were a paramedics would you consider doing an AMA? I bet people would be interested
Like driving goods train or goods truck
It's a struggle for me. I absolutely love driving; tearing up country roads in a shitbucket firebird was literally my only solace as a military brat growing up mostly in the southern US. That has never left me, and the ability as an adult to do things like drop $1500 on Michelin Supersports and drive a vehicle that needs the 93 octane fuel has only made it worse.
That being said, as I've gotten older I've been coming around to "we need to end capitalism before it ends us" and car culture is a huge part of that. That leaves me as a huge enjoyer of fuckcars type posts and ideas as well as the owner of a little Japanese sports car that is a big part of my identity and basically my only safe space. I'm very conflicted about it
Okay, what I love about driving is that when I feel my mind is wandering too much and I want to do something which can get me to focus, I usually go for a drive (early mornings are the best because of less traffic).
Driving needs your entire attention to be on the road and your surroundings.
For commuting to work, I use public transit (bus) since I don't want to deal with driving in peak hours
Love driving until I have to pay more attention to other cars than the road itself.
That's a good way of putting it
The infrastructure does not exist in order to make me like driving because 1) we live too close to one another and 2) too many other cars on the road. 3) speed limit
I love driving for adrenaline. But I hate driving for functionality.
Obviously I have sold my car before I lose my house
Daddy why are we poor?
Vroom vroom
Very much dislike driving. It is isolating, toxic, expensive and boring. Walking among people, or taking public transportation is much nicer in my opinion (not from the US)
I love to drive when I want to go a place that is far away and the route is interesting, it becomes part of the experience.
I hate to drive when is a chore, like commuting to the job or going to stores that are only placed were the only way to go is by car.
I only learnt to drive a few years ago. I love it. Where I live now, the bus service is ok but it definitely is worth having a car (remote island). I used to be very anti- cars. No driving was one less car on the planet. I had to learn though. The only other person in my family who drives can no longer.
40 years ago, I loved driving. Even 20 years ago it wasn't bad. Lots of open roads near by. In the big city, rush hour was 30 mins in the morning and an hour or so in the late afternoon. Other than those times you could get around the city quite well. There were always some yahoo drivers but they were a small part of the population not a majority. Now I walk whenever I can, take the bus sometimes and only drive if I know I can do it in the lower traffic (although still busy) times. I'd like to bike more but unless it is a completely separated lane there are too many badly driven vehicles to take chances with my life.
As in operating a car? Yes, it's fun. When I have new tires I got on the toll road and go real fast around the smooth curves!
As in driving to get places, like work or the grocery, in traffic? No. I take the bike or walk.
So, I like to drive but don't like needing to drive.
I love it, driving my toy car is one of life's greatest pleasures, even just going out for a cup of coffee.
That said, I also love working from home, in a university town I can bike everywhere, or take my one wheel down to the grocery for essentials etc.
Idk why this seems so hard to understand to some of the fuckcars community, but liken it to vegetarianism (which as it happens my community is heavily vegetarian)
In the same way I strive not to eat trash low tier meat, and instead only consume quality, well cared for products.... I will happily push redesigns of communities for more pedestrian and pev centric ideals, but it does not need to be black and white such that it would sacrifice cruising the foothills and mountain roads I love so dearly.
I love taking a casual drive to nearby small towns, especially on less busy freeways at non peak hours. And I also love using my 30 year old nugget that's getting rarer to see around. I do also love a good road trip across states.
However, I really don't like driving in cities or basically when I have to. The city I'm in at the moment leaves a lot to be desired for bike lanes (unprotected bike lanes on the shoulder of a major highway is the only route into town for me) so its a toss up between do I ride there exhausted and trusting idiots in high speed boxes, or do I join said idiots.
I like cruising. There's nothing like a state highway in the US that's popular enough to be well maintained, but not so popular that it's crowded and in the suburbs. They whisk you past some amazing sights and pieces of Americana that are quickly fading.
As for commuting, anything more than 20 minutes one way is either hell or a trip needing some level of planning between walking to the fridge and sending man to the moon.
Was an anxiety trigger. When I removed it from life other areas improved. Understand some do not have the luxury and am appreciative.
Hated it from the very first moment. Tried everything to make it work.
It sounds backwards, but I like driving because it's a time when I can't scroll or play games. I drive to the next town over (about an hour's drive) 2 or 3 times most weeks. It's a good chance for me to listen to something, or just ponder. I've been listening to the Bible over that drive more often lately.
No.
It's exhausting, and I'm not good at it.
And when I say "I'm not good as it" I don't mean below-average. If anything, I'm an above-average driver, but the average is abysmal and most people on the road should frankly not have licenses.
Depends on why I'm driving. A regluar rush-hour commute isn't enjoyable but almost all other driving is. Last year I drove from the UK to San Marino and back - with stops on the way. By the end of the trip I was happy to get home, but I still wanted to do the driving.
No; I'm a shitty driver and other drivers that are problem drivers combined with my shit driving scare me.
I think I picked it up from my parents (who are both terrible drivers also). I'm sorry everyone! I'm working on it. Really I am!
It's fine I understand haha. Are you neurodiverse? It can be linked
Yeah, I have ADHD. It is both my crime and punishment lol.
I would love it but people are assholes all the time
I mostly dislike it because traffic and idiots in cars. It can be fun, but usually it's just frustrating.
I like to drive but I hate traffic. Not only traffic jams but also just normal traffic. I live in a densely populatd country, so I prefer the train. But I absolutely loved driving in rural Chile or Scandinavia.
I like driving and I drive for fun. However, I work from home. Before covid, I certainly didn't like driving during rush hour, that was too stressful.
Yes, mostly. Depends on the car and the road.
Old car, Ford Falcon AU, didn't really like driving. It's a shit car, just unbreakable so it was a good purchase.
New car, Nissan Skyline GTR 370, love driving. The economy is shit and it needs premium for a fun $2/L, but it's just nice to be in. Stuck in traffic? Comfortable, good audio, good air con. Open country roads? Plenty of power, handles great.
So if car is fun, I like driving, if car is not fun, don't like driving.
Driving yes, quite a bit. Especially if you can get out on a racetrack. Was decades after I had left schooling before I realized all that stuff they try to teach you in physics about friction and momentum all actually have real world application for us normies. Would have learned so much more in school if I could have put 2+2 together back then, but I also can't imagine putting 14 year olds out on a racetrack either.
And even when not racing, just the freedom of being able to hop in the car and drive to another state is just downright liberating. Bored? Well, shit, hop in the car, let's go have an adventure! (I will admit, at my age, 'adventure' is code for 'ice cream shop', but it still makes me smile, so fuck it.)
That said, most of us only use our cards for commuting, which is the worst possible experience. It's no wonder so many folks hate driving, their only experience with cars is the bad one. All of us just sitting in traffic wishing we didn't have to go to work. I am seriously angry at our world for not pushing much harder for remote working. We proved it worked great during COVID, and yet here we all are back in the office.
I love riding my motorcycle. I only drive a car on Saturday to get groceries. Beyond that, i daily a bike. I have two for different purposes. For sure, i love my harley. I have to commute about 30mins to work, so i get a bit of time everday. Just enjoy the feeling of being on 2 wheels. Even in the rain, or 110+ heat.
I've never had a driver's license and I never will. Expensive, polluting and boring.
I love some aspects of driving... I love my car and how nice it looks when it's clean and shiny. I love feeling the acceleration and driving through twisty roads. I love being outside and feeling the sun, while seeing all the varying sights across the city. I love the freedom of going anywhere, and effortlessly carrying passengers and cargo with me.
I don't like traffic or contributing to traffic. I HATE that we feel the need to pave over our shrinking green space for new highways. I hate the salt and pollution that comes with so many roads and cars.
Its all about the what and where. I cant stand city traffic, but an empty winding road feels like freedom. The car you are driving also makes a lot of difference. I personally only buy cars that are fun to drive. I had a smart roadster and now i drive a miata (mx5 where i am from).
Kind of. The act of driving itself is not pleasurable from me on it's own, but I mentally connect it with road trips which I love.
And this is the only situation in which I drive. If I had to use a car every day, I'd despise driving completely.
Hate driving, been doing it 30 years now, sucked the whole time. There's nothing like a thorough train/subway system.
Hate driving when there are other cars. So I hate driving. I didn't mind driving when I was on the I80, cause it was big and wide and more empty but fuck getting to the I80 from here. NJ has bad drivers and I'm one of them. Gimme better transit, NJ!!!
Hate it 99.9% of the time. I briefly lived somewhere where everything you would need was a 5 minute walk from home and it was incredible. My city is designed to be as inefficient as possible and to force as many people to drive as possible.
I love driving. I love my cars. Plus my commute to/from work has very little traffic and it’s probably the highlight of my day. And that’s what I love my job too.
Depends. Commuting is dumb, I would rather have robust public transit. But night driving and blasting music while looking out over the city lights is pretty dope.
Not really but public transportation usually sucks so I’m doing most things by car nowadays. I’m probably getting old but the idea of driving at lethal speeds through crowded spaces actually terrifies me. I’ve never been in any serious accident but to think that I’m sitting in some death machine is unnerving.
Hate driving cars. Love riding an e-bike.
In a car, I feel much more vulnerable, ironically. I'm a big chunk of metal that's hard to miss if anything goes wrong, and that even minor mistakes will result in expensive damage.
I love it. My secret is that I try to walk more in the city when it's possible, or avoid peak traffic hours if driving. I don't have a regular 9-5 commute. I also regularly drive a curvy route with fairly new asphalt that has very little traffic, because it's actually a shortcut compared to the highway which has a bit more traffic.
Love. Its just commuting to work along with other drivers who don't know the rules of the road that make the experience unpleasant.
But a Boss 302 can make even commuting fun. 😉