Since we moved to a bigger city, we don't drive much. We both walk to work (5-minute walk), and the neighborhood is totally walkable with many restaurants, stores, and an awesome movie theater.
We still own two cars, but we hardly ever drive them. We have driven a total of 1500 miles in the last 6 months, with the vast majority of these miles being a trip my wife took with her parents to some caves as well as trips to the store and to church.
I wanted to share some of my observations about how our lives have changed since we quit driving.
1) I have quit eating fast food. I used to eat fast food almost daily, and I never really worried about it because I'm missing a substantial part of my small intestine (terminal ileum) and therefore don't absorb cholesterol much. Anyway, I never really expected to quit eating fast food, but this experience has made me realize that I am very unlikely to eat fast food if I'm not driving.
2) We have both lost weight. We weren't really overweight. (She definitely wasn't overweight, but I guess I could have stood to lose 10 pounds or so.)
3) I used to listen to the radio every day (especially folks like Glenn Beck), but I don't get to do that anymore. End result is that I am much more at peace with the world when I arrive at work.
4) We have saved a ton of money on gas and other car-related expenses.
5) Russians like to refer to America as "одноэтажная Америка (one-storey America)" because it is surprising to them that our population is sprawled out in suburbs. I wouldn't trade any American building for the concrete monstrosities in which most Russians live, but I'm starting to wonder if America hasn't gone too far in the opposite direction.
People will do what they want to do, but I wonder about the costs of sprawl on our society as a whole. In any case, someday I'll undoubtedly go a little more suburban just like the rest of the bourgeoisie.
We still own two cars, but we hardly ever drive them. We have driven a total of 1500 miles in the last 6 months, with the vast majority of these miles being a trip my wife took with her parents to some caves as well as trips to the store and to church.
I wanted to share some of my observations about how our lives have changed since we quit driving.
1) I have quit eating fast food. I used to eat fast food almost daily, and I never really worried about it because I'm missing a substantial part of my small intestine (terminal ileum) and therefore don't absorb cholesterol much. Anyway, I never really expected to quit eating fast food, but this experience has made me realize that I am very unlikely to eat fast food if I'm not driving.
2) We have both lost weight. We weren't really overweight. (She definitely wasn't overweight, but I guess I could have stood to lose 10 pounds or so.)
3) I used to listen to the radio every day (especially folks like Glenn Beck), but I don't get to do that anymore. End result is that I am much more at peace with the world when I arrive at work.
4) We have saved a ton of money on gas and other car-related expenses.
5) Russians like to refer to America as "одноэтажная Америка (one-storey America)" because it is surprising to them that our population is sprawled out in suburbs. I wouldn't trade any American building for the concrete monstrosities in which most Russians live, but I'm starting to wonder if America hasn't gone too far in the opposite direction.
People will do what they want to do, but I wonder about the costs of sprawl on our society as a whole. In any case, someday I'll undoubtedly go a little more suburban just like the rest of the bourgeoisie.
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