Longevity, Rights, Ethics, and Happiness in a Complex Universe

Tuesday, May 13, 2008

Confessions Of A Non-Driving American

As a youngster, I always took it as a given that I'd get my drivers' license someday.

In December 2008, I will turn thirty years old. I still don't have a license. This no longer bothers me in the least. But it certainly seems to unnerve others, as I often find myself in the position of being expected to justify and explain my indefinite non-driverhood. Apparently, according to some, non-driving Americans are somewhere on the rarity scale between the Northern Hairy-Nosed Wombat and the Yeti.

But contrary to popular opinion, no, we are not mythical beasts. Plenty of people don't drive, and yes, some of us live in the good old US of A. Non-drivers include children 16 and under, elderly persons, blind persons, neuro-atypical persons (though neuro-atypicality certainly doesn't necessarily preclude driving), urbanite hipsters, skate punks, exercise enthusiasts, farm workers, and others who just plain don't like driving.

In other words, despite the car-obsessed culture we North Americans live in, not all of us drive. And while some of us may want to drive, not all of us do. And it's high time we had our say.

So here's my story, for what it's worth.

First Attempts

The first time I attempted to operate an automobile, I was about sixteen. I don't remember much about that attempt, except for the fact that it didn't last very long. Nobody was injured, but I seem to recall someone yelling "STOP!" after I'd gone a few clumsy feet in the driveway.

I didn't attempt driving again until I was eighteen, for a variety of reasons. For one thing, I didn't need to drive in order to get anywhere I needed to go; my high school and the public library were within walking distance, so even though I sometimes got a ride with someone, I wasn't stranded when I didn't have a ride.

For another thing, I didn't see the point of trying for a license when I couldn't afford a car -- I had no expectation that my parents would buy me one (and it bugged me to hear other teenagers talking as if they were somehow "entitled" to cars), and I didn't have personal funds sufficient to buy one myself, let alone deal with insurance and gas and maintenance.

And finally, I simply wasn't all that interested in driving, as I was plenty busy with school, and my hobbies (reading, art, computer games) didn't pose heavy transportation demands.

But one day, my stepmom randomly asked me if I wanted to try driving again. I accepted this offer, and managed to make my way slowly around the parking lot of the local junior college in her tan minivan. I don't think I did too horribly, but it wasn't exactly an experience I was compelled to repeat soon afterward; it was very mentally exhausting. And soon I got caught up again in other things that didn't involve driving or attempting to drive, and the whole idea of doing so simply fell off my radar.

Round Two

Fast forward another three years or so. I'd transferred to university after completing my general education requirements at two local junior colleges, but I was home on summer break working as an engineering intern (at the same company I now work for; they hired me on after I graduated). My parents were starting to get concerned about my non-driving status at that point, judging from their repeated and pointed suggestions that I get my learner's permit. Eventually I guess the nagging got to me, as I went down to the DMV one day and passed the written test, thereby qualifying myself for behind-the-wheel instruction.

The day the driving instructor showed up in the little gray automatic with the extra brake was the first day I actually went out on a real road (as opposed to a driveway or parking lot). I was 21 years old, and still more or less optimistic that all I needed was a bit of practice in order to become a skilled, safe driver. So practice I did. And within a few hours of instruction, I was definitely a bit better than when I'd started at controlling the car. I was able to start it up, make it go straight, and steer, (albeit somewhat clumsily) around curves in the road.

The instructor had me drive on residential streets for the most part, which weren't too bad, though I had some trouble whenever there were other cars in the vicinity, as I found it very difficult to predict their behavior and judge where they were in relation to the car I was in. There were several incidents in which the instructor either had to slam on the extra brake (which I didn't find overly discouraging, as I knew the pedal was there for a reason) or grab the wheel from me in order to avoid Massive Crunchy Death, but I pressed on. We tried going up a really twisty mountain road at one point, and I actually didn't do too badly there, as there were very few other cars and the ones that were present seemed to be driving carefully and fairly slowly. And a few times, I ended up on the freeway.

The freeway experience was probably the biggest eye-opener of all with regard to what the demands of driving actually were. I actually liked driving on the freeway in some respects -- the "going really fast in a straight line" part was exhilirating, and several times I had to be reminded to note the speed limit. I also appreciated the "no stoplights" thing (as it meant less fiddling with the controls while simultaneously trying to pay attention to the road). But when it came to steering, merging, changing lanes, entering, or exiting, I was pretty well flummoxed. It became apparent to me fairly early on that freeway driving required a lot in the way of rapid responsiveness, and that even tiny movements of the steering wheel could have major effects on the car's trajectory when said car was careening along at 80 MPH.

I obviously didn't end up crashing and dying, but frankly I still chalk that up to luck and the presence of the instructor. But I finished my six hours (or whatever it was), and got the little permit certificate. I was pretty proud of that, and still figured that all I needed was more road practice.

After finishing up with the driving instructor, I mostly went out on the road with my dad. I could tell he and my stepmom were doing their best to help and encourage me, but at the same time, I also felt really pressured -- they would randomly quiz me on things like three-point turns (using napkins to represent cars) during dinner, and I was not very good at answering accurately in real-time, which frustrated both me and my parents alike. Once they had me drive the lot of us to the pizza place, and not only did I end up "drifting all over the road like a drunk", I also over-shot the driveway to the parking lot, and was in tears by the time we actually reached our destination. Another time, I was out driving with my dad, and he had to prevent me from driving through another car -- basically, we were at a green light (which my brain took to mean "go"), but the car in front of us wasn't actually moving yet.

Sometimes I seemed to do okay, but gradually I started noticing that I was really only "okay" when I had the whole road to myself. Any other large, moving objects, and I'd suddenly become exceedingly confused -- it was almost like the presence of even one other vehicle would break the whole scene around me into little pieces, which I then had to scramble to figure out the significance of. I'd been vaguely aware of this when I was driving with the instructor, but I'd not figured it to be anything unusual; I still figured at that point that everyone processed visual data the same way I did, and that if other people could drive, there was no reason I couldn't learn as well.

But the more I went out on the road, the more it became clear to me that I wasn't getting any better at dealing with multiple random moving variables in my visual field. Sure, I was getting better at manipulating the steering wheel and signal lights, but I was also still regularly forgetting which pedal was the gas and which was the brake, and just generally not dealing well with any outside motion or unpredictable situation on the road.

I began to dread practice sessions, but I tried to maintain some semblance of enthusiasm. Not only had I been culturally conditioned to think that I "needed" to drive in order to be a respectable adult, I also figured I'd be a huge disappointment to my parents if I didn't drive, and I felt very guilty about being so poor at it. I got plenty of advice from various people on what my "problem" supposedly was: that I was "just nervous", that I still hadn't gotten enough practice, that I wasn't really trying, that I was "relying too much" on other modes of transportation, etc. None of those explanations really felt right, but I couldn't articulate what was actually going on, so I vacillated between feeling ashamed of myself for my "laziness" and trying to ignore and push the idea of driving out of my mind altogether.

I tried driving a few more times when I returned to university after summer break -- my very patient and supportive boyfriend Matt was plenty willing to lend me vehicular access for practice purposes. I drove around in the school parking lot a bit (though that was kind of unnerving, as there was a pen of goats at the edge of the lot!), and drove once or twice from Matt's apartment to mine. But then I got busy again with school, and driving fell off my mental map again until after graduation.

Third Time's The Charm?

Fast forward again, this time to 2004. I'd graduated college the previous year, and Matt and I had moved into a small apartment in Santa Clara following my getting hired on permanently at my job. I started having more contact with my family again, as they're local to the Bay Area, and once again, I started feeling ashamed and angry at myself for not having a license. I was 24ish and decided that I would get my license once and for all before turning 25 -- no more excuses, no more procrastinating.

Finally, I figured, I was really and truly ready. I had a patient and willing licensed driver to help me (Matt), a cute shiny new Ford Focus to zip around in, and plenty of wide streets and parking lots to practice in. I marched into the DMV and renewed my expired learner's permit, and prepared for my first parking-lot re-acquaintance with the driver's seat.

And...I did okay in parking lots, as usual. Not great, but okay. I then went out on the road with Matt, where I noted the same phenomena as I'd experienced in the beginning of my quest to become a real driver: being "fine" on straight stretches of road with no other cars, but randomly forgetting how to use the controls in the middle of navigating an intersection, and not reacting in safe or appropriate ways to unexpected events or moving objects in my visual field. And don't even get me started on those unprotected left turns -- without fail, it always looked to me like the cars going in the other direction were coming straight at my front bumper, which led to no end of dangerous overcompensation on my part.

But I felt better. Less like a failure. More like someone who was actually growing up, who was actually "trying".

The only problem (well, aside from the obvious safety issues that entered the picture every time I ventured out onto the road) was that after every session, I'd come home feeling utterly brain-dead. I would return to my apartment after less than an hour of driving practice end up doing nothing for the rest of the day beyond clicking random Internet links and wandering around the living room in circles.

It would have been one thing if I was actually becoming a better driver. But I just wasn't. And I wasn't doing much of anything else aside from work and household chores, either.

So eventually, after much internal deliberation, I decided that my energies would be spent better elsewhere than trying to get a drivers' license.

Realizations and Trade-Offs

It's worth noting how dysfunctional my overall self-image was at the time I was most concerned with trying to get a license.

For a while after deciding to cease my attempts at becoming a driver indefinitely, I second-guessed myself relentlessly:

Maybe I stopped practicing one session too early -- maybe another hour on the road and it all would have clicked!

Maybe I just need to find the right book or Web site or teacher -- maybe if I keep looking a little longer, I'll find something that will work for me.

Maybe I AM just too lazy. Maybe everyone who learns to drive goes through the same thing I've been through and worse, and I'm just weak-willed and making excuses to cover for it.

Those "maybes" (and plenty of others) danced in my head for months. Even though I knew I'd made the right decision (for the sake of my personal safety and productivity in my non-work life), I was still concerned that I was going to be a "burden" forever, and that people were always going to end up feeling "pressured" into driving me around. I thought of the well-intentioned people who'd been telling me since I was a teenager that I ought to be able to drive because I was supposedly "smart enough" to do so; I felt like I was almost assuredly letting them down.

But: the fact of the matter was that even after several years of on-and-off practice, I still couldn't get behind the wheel and consistently keep track of what was going on. There were moments -- brief moments -- wherein I felt like I was truly in control of the vehicle, but it only ever took one too many moving objects outside, or someone honking the horn, or a bird flying by, etc., to throw my brain completely off-track.

And by "completely off-track", I mean "totally unable to process any incoming information in a manner meaningful to driving".

My hearing is very sensitive. I'm sure this helps me appreciate music; I wouldn't trade it for less acute hearing if I could, any more than I'd poke my eye with a stick to reduce the painful glare of the sun. But it also means that car horns (and worse, car alarms) fill my entire skull with a hot, opaque red-blackness that effectively blocks out everything else in the universe.

My visual information-processing system works atypically. I didn't know until just a few years ago that not everyone saw things the way I did. I had no idea that it wasn't "normal" to see the world as raw shapes, colors, and patterns as opposed to readily-recognizable "macro-objects". I didn't have a clue that most people could look out their car windows and instantaneously parse out what shapes were attached to other cars, which were attached to trees, etc. -- for me, this process has always been at least semi-conscious and also energy-intensive to maintain.

And...cognitively speaking, there's something about my overall brain functioning that makes safe driving totally unsustainable for me. I don't know exactly how to describe it, but as near as I can tell, my brain does a lot of "buffering". That is, I take in a lot of information all the time, and rather than immediately making automatic assumptions about its significance, I sift through it slowly and painstakingly.

This sifting process is part conscious, part unconscious, and while it definitely contributes to my ability to absorb certain kinds of knowledge like a sponge (and to learn certain skills very very thoroughly), it also means I have periods wherein my motor, speech, and other "basic" skills aren't 100% reliable.

For example, I've written before about how walking into an unfamiliar place feels rather like walking into a kaleidescope to me -- sometimes I literally freeze in place when hit by a barrage of visual input, whereas other times I sort of dart off (not necessarily voluntarily) into a corner or other location-shape that feels instinctually "safe" to me.

Mind you, this isn't a terrible thing as far as I'm concerned.

I think there's definitely a place in the world for people who process information the way I do (just as there is for people who process information in other ways), and overall, the universe (at least the parts of it that are accessible to me) looks stunningly beautiful most of the time from behind my eyes.

But it's not the greatest thing in the world when it comes to being able to drive safely. I can deal with it while walking, or even biking -- but in a car, everything is going way too fast for any of my compensation mechanisms to kick in.

One can't get away from trade-offs, at least not in this reality.

And given that fact, most (if not all) people are going to run up against situations in their lives where they have to choose between accepting some aspect of how they are configured and making the best of it, or continuing to fight to "overcome" that aspect.

But How Do You Get Around?

Believe it or not, there are ways to get around even when one lacks a drivers' license.

Right now it works out that my place of employment is on the way to Matt's, making it quite convenient for us to car-pool every morning and afternoon. He's assured me that he doesn't mind driving me, and since he's not a passive-aggressive liar by nature, I'm compelled to believe him. And if he couldn't drive me for some reason, I could ride my bike, take the bus, or possibly even rollerblade. I'm not "dependent" on him for rides to work; it's just convenient given our circumstances right now, and if I had to, I could certainly find some way to effectively commute.

I also presently live within easy walking distance from the bank and several basic stores where I can purchase water, food, and even underwear should the need arise. I can take the bus to any doctors' appointments I might have if need be, as the routes run by the local Kaiser facilities. I can even take the train to San Francisco if there's something worth seeing there. And I don't even live in a particularly urban area -- I'm smack in the middle of the South Bay suburbs.

This is not to say that transit is perfect around here -- there are some locations between which no convenient transit lines seem to run. I occasionally have to visit a lab in Fremont, CA for EMC testing, and if I were to take transit between here and there, the trip would surpass two and a half hours (whereas it's only about 20 minutes or so by car).

This makes me "dependent" on getting rides from co-workers when I have lab work to do, and at first I was embarrassed about this -- but then I realized that nobody even thought to question the fact that I also needed help with lifting and moving heavy equipment. If it's okay to need help in one area, why not in other areas as well? It would make just about as much sense for me to feel guilty about needing rides to the lab as it would for needing help carrying a 70-pound power supply -- which is to say, no sense at all. Plus, the reason my company sends me to the lab in the first place is because of my engineering knowledge -- knowledge that is not in any way affected by whether or not I can drive.

Bottom line: everyone has areas in which they need help, and areas in which they can help others, and there's no reason for anyone to be ashamed because their skill set isn't typical of their culture. And if people truly want to their cultures to become more inclusive, more flexible, and more capable of fulfilling the basic function of civilization at large (enabling all citizens to access food, shelter, and opportunities for self-determination and creative contribution), services like transit are major areas to pay attention to.

Acceptance Is Acknowledging What's In Your Toolbox, Not "Admitting Defeat"!

Faced with a trying situation, it is reflexive for people to ask themselves, "What could I have done to prevent this? What caused it? And how might I prevent similar situations in the future?"

There's nothing wrong with asking these questions, just as there's nothing wrong with acknowledging a difficulty or admitting that something is bothering you. And of course, each of us has our own ambition(s) and goals and projects, which necessarily entail the honing of existing skills or the acquisition of new skills.

But: the idea of sitting there being mad at what "could" have been prior to my birth no longer makes any sense to me. I used to go around feeling several sharp and conflicting flavors of angst about all the "what-ifs" and "might-have-beens" that I saw as having affected my life, but nowadays I'm seeing how counterproductive that sort of thing can be. I mean, it's one thing to look at the circumstances of your life and try to figure out the various ways in which you could improve certain aspects of your existence, but it's quite another to obsess over every little thing that could have conceivably contributed to any difficulty you presently experience.

What's strange to me, I guess, is how often I observe people coming to the conclusion that "working with the available materials" (where the "materials" in question are the various factors that have gone toward shaping you as a person, in conjunction with your past and present life circumstances) is tantamount to "admitting defeat".

I find it difficult to even write this, because of how often this kind of statement gets interpreted as meaning, "Nobody should ever bother doing anything to improve themselves or their circumstances", and how often notions like "acceptance" are seen as expressions of untoward "relativism" and calls for effective stagnation. I don't mean anything like that, though, so hopefully this explanation is clear enough on that front.

What I do mean is that it ought to be possible to be a psychologically and emotionally healthy person with dreams, goals, and ambitions -- while at the same time being someone who doesn't view themselves or the rest of the universe as a pathology waiting to be cured, or a broken machine waiting to be fixed. Explored, tinkered with, and played with, perhaps -- but not pitied for what it is not.

So, no, I'm not interested in practicing driving again right now. I'm not interested in advice or well-meaning "encouragement", or suggestions as to the deep, underlying psychological factors that might be "limiting" my driving prowess. I've received enough of that to last a lifetime already, thanks, and I've got plenty of other things I'd rather be doing with my time.

And frankly, I'm plenty willing at this point to start extolling the benefits of cutting down on car use in general.

I don't expect that autonomous personal vehicles are ever really going to go away completely (as even a well-designed transit system would have difficulty accommodating people who needed to pick up a pallet of planks or cinderblocks at the hardware store, or a new sofa). But you'd have to be pretty clueless to think that present-day automobiles (and the roads they drive on, and the traffic situations they create) aren't dangerous even for good drivers.

I'm actually regularly shocked both at the sheer number of accidents (and accident residue) I see on the roads around where I live, and at peoples' callous disregard for their own lives and the lives of others. I literally saw a guy a while back driving an SUV while talking on a cell phone with one hand, smoking a cigarette with the other, and reading a map with his eyes. (I don't even want to know what he was using to steer with...).

And then there's the whole environmental-impact thing to consider: I used to worry about being a "burden" due to not having my own car, but now I'm figuring I'm probably saving some carbon via my carpooling/walking/biking/bus-riding lifestyle. I try not to be judgmental, but seriously, Hummers? In the suburbs? Please.

All in all, I'm really hoping to see the day when more folks wake up and realize this and promptly build cool, safe, robot cars hooked into GPS units for route planning, and powered by solar panels and biodiesel.

And that monorail is long overdue.

(Hey, a non-driving girl can dream, right?)

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20 Comments:

Blogger Moggy said...

I think I'd be more in favor of public transit if it didn't require that I navigate the mind-bending fixed routes, let me go where I wanted when, didn't involve other people (who are noisy, smell unpleasant, invade my space, etc.) and generally was nothing like public transit we have today. My guess is that if more of those weren't an issue, people would be far more willing to fund expansions.

I used to feel like I knew where the lines between accommodation & stagnation really are for me, so I had no real sense of guilt at not doing things that others near my age were... That seems to have changed a lot specifically since I turned 30, even though my body hasn't been making more "normalizing" options particularly realistic (even though I've been regaining cognitive skills lost in the mid-late 20s mental crash). I am just hoping that whatever I decide to do, I don't push myself severely like I did a decade ago and end up spending another few years slogging out of a third functionality crash. :-/

12:50 AM

 
Blogger Axinar said...

Probably just as well ... @ $4/gallon and more, plus insurance and all the other feldercarb that comes along with owning a car, you just might be able to save enough to actual retire one of these days.

I had a friend once who was born with a congenital condition where she couldn't see well enough to drive.

Had to become a college professor.

In ways I'm violently jealous of her.

My thing is that I don't mind driving per se, but I cannot STAND sitting in traffic ...

4:00 AM

 
Blogger Xuenay said...

I don't have driver's license either (though this is much less extraordinary in Finland than over there).

One of my reasons for preferring public transit is simply that I couldn't read a book while driving a car. While sitting in a bus or on the subway, I can. (And then there's the environmental angle.)

5:47 AM

 
Blogger The Free Spirit said...

I loved reading your blog:)(specially your bottom line para ).It's not about driving or non driving that makes sense, it's all about your perspective of life and during difficult situations , your approach or analysis towards solving them that makes it a wonderful read!!

Happy Blogging !!

12:11 PM

 
Blogger Trisha said...

I don't really like driving either. I do it because I have to - there is no other way to get around anywhere I've lived. Driving in places I'm familiar with isn't too bad - but in areas I'm not familiar with or on large highways with lots of traffics - I just don't do it. I have to ride with someone else. Or I don't go.

I would love those automatic cars they are testing! I'm guessing most people wouldn't though.

12:18 PM

 
Blogger lurker said...

I feel miserable and inferior that I can't drive, cause most people can do so when they learn how. The ramifications of my lack of mobility are tremendous and very limiting in my life. The dependence I have sickens me.

3:38 PM

 
Blogger Marla said...

Our society does put large amounts of pressure on everyone to drive. It is expected. My oler sister who had a stroke at age six was always angry with me when I began driving. Like you she tried and tried to get her license. She finally did get it when she was about thirty years old and I sometimes fear for her safety.

I don't think everyone should be able to drive. It is good that you recognize what is more difficult for you and accept it. I am sure it is not easy but it is good to be safe.

What you say of when you walk into a new place it is like a kalidescope....I imagine M feels very much the same way. Even with these challenges you do very well? That inspires me and gives me hope that m will be able to be more independent. I doubt she will ever drive due to her difficulties with direction, muscle tone and "episodes".

5:58 PM

 
Blogger AnneC said...

Moggy said:

I think I'd be more in favor of public transit if it didn't require that I navigate the mind-bending fixed routes, let me go where I wanted when, didn't involve other people (who are noisy, smell unpleasant, invade my space, etc.) and generally was nothing like public transit we have today.

I'm sort of lucky in that when I do have to take transit for whatever reason, it usually works out to be at times when there aren't many other people on the bus. I really can't handle crowds or random people touching/bumping into me at all, so I definitely don't take it for granted that some of the buses around here are willing to run at times when the person-density is low.

But there are still problems with the service overall (such as the ones you named), and my guess is that the whole system needs some kind of overhaul -- it's going to take more than just adding more buses, for sure. As I said in my post, I don't think totally autonomous transportation is going to go away (nor do I think it should), but there really ought to be more options for non-drivers in this country than there are at present.

My guess is that if more of those weren't an issue, people would be far more willing to fund expansions.

Agreed -- especially as far as "letting people go where they want to, when they want to" goes. I'm almost thinking at this point that environmentally-friendly "robot cars" would help matters in the USA a lot more than more "mass transit" would, because no matter how efficient or user-friendly a transit system is, you still have to deal with getting from your home to the transit center or bus stop or train station, etc. And that's an accessibility issue for some people, not just an inconvenience. Maybe a combination of better train/bus service PLUS robot cars would help the most!

I used to feel like I knew where the lines between accommodation & stagnation really are for me, so I had no real sense of guilt at not doing things that others near my age were...

I used to have a ton of guilt -- not about wanting to keep up with age-peers for the sake of social acceptance, but about feeling like there must be something horribly morally wrong with me because I could do some things so well, but not other things that everyone seemed to assume were "related" to the things I could do. I feel less guilt now, but I'm definitely still trying to figure out where the "lines between accommodation & stagnation" (as you put it) are for me.

Honestly, though, I'm not super worried about stagnating at this point -- I've always got projects going on, and there are lots of things I know I want to do. IMO, stagnation would be a state in which I had no intention or desire to learn new skills or improve the skills I do have, and that simply isn't true for me -- that's actually been a pretty cool thing to realize, because I've done so much more overall since I stopped obsessing over the fact that I wasn't doing particular things (like driving) other people though I should be doing.

I mean, I've gotten more into digital photography lately, I've been doing more art, I've been working on stories (with the goal of getting one published finally), I've been making duct tape wallets, I read a ton of scientific literature on things like biogerontology and neurology, I'm randomly learning bits of Japanese...definitely not idly letting life pass me by. :)

The only thing I've found it necessary to be careful of is inertia (which is different from stagnation, IMO). I always have things I want to do, but I also have a tendency to get "stuck" -- usually either in a "low gear" mode where I sit there clicking the same links over and over again, or a "high gear" mode where I can end up not even realizing how much stuff I'm doing until I crash.

The best way I've found to deal with this is routines and checklists: I've been using the task list program on my HP Jornada handheld computer lately to good effect. I've also actually gotten into a routine of "checking" my activity levels, because (oddly enough), being stuck in either high or low gear leads to a similarly weird and unpleasant feeling, so now when I get that feeling I can go over my checklist history, figure out what's out of balance, and adjust accordingly. It's not perfect, of course, but it does work pretty well.

7:46 PM

 
Blogger AnneC said...

Axinar said:

Probably just as well ... @ $4/gallon and more, plus insurance and all the other feldercarb that comes along with owning a car, you just might be able to save enough to actual retire one of these days.

Seriously. I do actually contribute toward car costs (Matt and I have a Focus, and I paid for half of it, and I pay for gas and maintenance sometimes), but I'm sure we save a ton by only having ONE car and ONE driver in our household.

My thing is that I don't mind driving per se, but I cannot STAND sitting in traffic ...

Ugh. Traffic jams are evil, and one of the reasons I basically dehydrate myself before going on any trip out of town...

7:47 PM

 
Blogger AnneC said...

Xuenay said:

I don't have driver's license either (though this is much less extraordinary in Finland than over there).

I've heard that's true of many non-US countries, which is why I've lately become curious about transportation and community infrastructures outside the USA. It's obviously *possible* for large numbers of adults to live perfectly worthwhile lives without driving, but it's difficult personally to imagine what factors have to be different in order for that to be the case.

One of my reasons for preferring public transit is simply that I couldn't read a book while driving a car. While sitting in a bus or on the subway, I can. (And then there's the environmental angle.)

Yeah, I've gotten a decent amount of reading (and podcast-listening) done while riding transit -- the ability to do that is definitely a perk as far as I'm concerned!

7:48 PM

 
Blogger AnneC said...

Trisha said:

I don't really like driving either. I do it because I have to - there is no other way to get around anywhere I've lived.

That's part of the problem I see with the way things are laid out in a lot of the USA (I'm assuming you're in the USA) -- things are just built with the assumption that everyone drives their own car everywhere, which makes a lot of places inaccessible (or nearly inaccessible) to non-drivers.

Driving in places I'm familiar with isn't too bad - but in areas I'm not familiar with or on large highways with lots of traffics - I just don't do it. I have to ride with someone else. Or I don't go.

I wish more people were that self-aware: IMO, there are a LOT of people on the roads right now who probably shouldn't be driving (at least not on highways), but they do it anyway and put themselves and others at risk in the process.

I would love those automatic cars they are testing! I'm guessing most people wouldn't though.

Automatic cars would be awesome. :D And I can actually see them appealing to the mass market -- with all the nifty GPS and climate-control and automatic mirror-adjustment features in modern cars already, I can quite readily imagine automation of one sort or another creeping in gradually. I mean, it would probably start with things like advanced collision avoidance (where the car "senses danger" and temporarily wrests control from the user), and scale up from that.

I'm thinking that the first thing to focus on as far as automatic cars go would be freeway/highway/expressway travel. Large, busy, high-speed-limit roads are already designed to favor extremely consistent, predictable, systematic vehicular behavior.

And since human drivers aren't particularly consistent, predictable, or systematic in their behavior, freeway traffic is prone to getting congested and confused because all the little twitches and "oh look, a billboard" and "time to talk on the cell phone now" and "oh crap, that guy cut in front of me!" episodes add up and end up affecting the state of the overall system.

7:48 PM

 
Blogger AnneC said...

lurker said:

I feel miserable and inferior that I can't drive, cause most people can do so when they learn how. The ramifications of my lack of mobility are tremendous and very limiting in my life. The dependence I have sickens me.

I used to feel very much the same way.

Then I got over myself.

Here's the thing: it doesn't take a whole lot of initiative to whine and self-flaggelate. Being properly self-pitying does not make you more "responsible" than a non-driver who proactively seeks alternative transportation solutions, it just makes you whiny and annoying.

It does not make any sense to get stuck on driving as the be-all end-all of everything, unless you prefer a perpetual personal pity party to an actual life.

And if you really and truly ARE stuck on driving to the point where the ONLY thing that will cure your inferiority complex is becoming able to drive, you're certainly not going to find what you're looking for here on this blog. Hence, any further comments from the Itty Bitty Pity Committee will be summarily deleted.

7:52 PM

 
Blogger AnneC said...

Marla: Last Sunday when I went out with my family for Mother's Day breakfast, my youngest brother (who is 15) drove one of the cars. I'm the eldest of 5 kids and apparently soon to be the only one without a license!

The thought of that used to bother me but now I just think it's kind of funny.

And you can't really go through life comparing everything about yourself to everyone else, even your siblings, because everyone is a different person. We're all good at (and weak at) different things.

7:52 PM

 
Blogger kraryal said...

I think the robot cars would work nicely as a mass transit system. The usage time of each car per day is quite low; I suspect we could cut traffic by ten times in urban areas with robot cars and ways to call them. (Sort of an automated taxi service.)

It's nice to know I'm not unique here. Dad always wondered why I drove faster on rural roads than in town. There were so many fewer objects to track!

Everything is very far apart in my country, so I had to learn how to drive anyway. I ended up studying cars so much that they lodged in my facial recognition circuitry, which I really don't recomment, it's way too much work. I'm looking forward to good mass transit with fewer people on each bus/train car.

12:32 PM

 
Blogger Xuenay said...

krayal:

I ended up studying cars so much that they lodged in my facial recognition circuitry, which I really don't recomment, it's way too much work.

This sounds interesting. Would you mind elaborating a little?

12:35 PM

 
Blogger kraryal said...

@Xuenay

Arg, I can't type. "recomment" indeed.

As you may know, people have a specialized brain area for recognizing faces.

There's reasonable evidence that this area is involved in fine-grained visual distinctions among well known objects as well.

Thus, you can insert objects into this area by insane amounts of practice. Cattlemen, car designers, stamp collectors, etc.

After about three years of looking at every car I could find, reading car design magazines, year by year change list, etc, hanging out with car nuts, I got to the point where I can see two cars of the same year, make and model, and tell which car is which. (Body panel fit, discolourations, taillight alignment, modifications, etc.)

So my brain sees each car as essentially a "person", which lets me track them.

2:05 PM

 
Blogger abfh said...

Kraryal wrote:

As you may know, people have a specialized brain area for recognizing faces.

There's reasonable evidence that this area is involved in fine-grained visual distinctions among well known objects as well.


I'm sure you're right about that. I've never had much ability to recognize either faces or cars.

After many years of finding driving hard and stressful, I did get used to it eventually. It just clicked one day when I was 29; all of a sudden, the input processing and reactions that were supposed to be automatic really were.

Learning to drive is a pretty scary thing to do, though. Eventually, when we have cars that drive themselves, I'm sure people will be amazed that we ever did something as dangerous as steering our own cars.

6:45 PM

 
Blogger Javan said...

Have you ever tried computer games which simulate the driving scenario, either racing games or normal road traffic? I wonder if you would face the same issues or not.

Beside this, I agree, not everyone has to drive. There are lots of cars flying around today, aren't they? ;-)

Oh, and what about flight simulations?

9:01 AM

 
Blogger AnneC said...

Javan: I've played a fair number of driving-oriented video games (well, if you count things like "Mario Kart" in that category...). I'm horrible at them, but I play them anyway because they're fun. :P I've definitely found, though, that on some games, there will be certain "tracks" or levels or areas where I can eventually get really good with practice, and other tracks I'll just plateau on and never get past the point of constantly crashing, going the wrong way, etc.

I would actually be interested in trying out a realistic driving simulator if I could find one, just out of curiosity (and I'm not talking about a console or PC game here -- I'm talking about a full-on "car cockpit" simulator that includes an actual steering wheel and all the controls you'd find in a typical car). One of the things I've always suspected MIGHT make me a better driver is being able to practice in a scenario where I can crash repeatedly without dying or causing extensive property damage.

I'm very much a trial-and-error learner in a lot of ways, which is one of the issues I have with driving practice -- if I never get a visceral, physical sense of what actions and scenarios actually cause crashes, I will never develop the ability to anticipate one and avoid it. And obviously when you're driving a real car, you can't exactly afford to keep crashing until you learn how not to!

But -- still, I don't think I'd trust myself on the road even if I learned to do reasonably well in a simulator. The reason for this is because I've found that even when I'm (for example) playing a video game I've gotten really good at (like "Tetris"), there will be these periodic lapses in which I suddenly start perfoming really badly. It's as if every so often, I "lose track" of incoming data to the point where I don't know how to coordinate my movements for a few minutes or more -- basically a mental "buffer overflow".

Sometimes this is due to something unexpected happening in the game, and sometimes it's due to something going on in the environment I'm in, but in any case, it's not the kind of thing I'd want to experience when the consequences could literally be deadly. It's one thing to miss getting the high score on a game, it's quite another to get wrapped around a tree in real life.

And as far as flight simulators go: I haven't really done much with those, though I have played a few spaceship games. One of my bosses at a previous job was an amateur pilot, and he had some insanely complicated flight simulator on his computer that I couldn't even fathom how anyone could keep track of everything!

10:02 AM

 
Blogger Doctor Logic said...

Anne,

Some of what you wrote resonates with me. When I was in high school, almost everybody got their driver's license at age 16. I was one of four hold-outs that I knew. (Incidentally, all of the hold-outs went on to earn PhDs.)

It's hard to describe how I felt. There was a some lack of confidence in my own ability to control the car. Sometimes it felt like the the car was driving me instead of the other way around. There's also a degree of social interaction involved when driving, e.g., at 4-way stops, and I have never been that great in social situations.

When I came back home on summer break after my freshman year in college, I gave it another go. Though the idea seemed reckless at first, I decided that I would treat the car like a video game, and like an extension of my body. That did the trick. The car no longer fought me for control. I still had to work at the social aspects, but with main activity of driving operating at an almost subconscious level, the social aspects were far less of a problem.

The way you describe your driving experience, Anne, is not exactly what I felt, so I don't presume that what worked for me will work for you. However, it may be of interest.

BTW, of the four hold-outs, I think I may be the only one who drives today.

6:35 AM

 

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