Skip Navigation
71 comments
  • 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!

  • 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.

  • I mostly dislike it because traffic and idiots in cars. It can be fun, but usually it's just frustrating.

  • 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.

  • 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 driving, been doing it 30 years now, sucked the whole time. There's nothing like a thorough train/subway system.

  • 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.

  • 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.

  • 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

  • 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)

  • No. I'm good at it. I've got truck and motorcycle licences too. I prefer walking or bicycling, there aren't great options for those in my suburb.

  • I have to drive quite a bit for work and absolutely hate it, its time consuming (/waste of time), tiring, bad for the environment. The only reason I like driving is that its currently faster and cheaper than public transport.

    I just wish public transport was a lot better, currently it'd take me 50 minutes to get to the closest major city close to me while its 25 minutes with car.

    In terms of going home, its a 2 hour 30 drive. With public transport it'd be 50 minute bus + 2 hour train + 30 minute bus resulting in a longer commute but also the car costs about 40-60 euros in gas (which I don't have to pay cause company car) and public transport would be 80 euros train + 5 euros bus

    (Prices are approximate, gas prices and public transport prices keep going up)

  • I like driving. My commute is not so busy that I have to deal with slowdowns, I can listen to whatever while I go to and from work. It's a nice little break where I decide what is happening. A manual transmission would add to the sense of control, but alas, I haven't bought one of those. Also strictly enforced speed limits limit the enjoyment.

  • Used to like it, but it faded over time, mostly due to the car being far beyond its prime. Not that I minded driving an old car, but I could no longer assume that it'd last the entire trip without trouble.

    Then a little over a week ago I bought a new (to me) car. And that's when I noticed what I'd been missing for the past few years: I'd started to enjoy driving again.

    Another factor was that once upon a time everything I owner could fit into my 1996 Volvo 940. And I took advantages of this a few times by moving across Europe. Later I became a family man, so that wasn't the case anymore, but it was OK: The entire household could fit in the car with a lot of luggage space as well.

    Around the time when the old car symptoms really started to show up more and more frequently, we got a surprise 6th family member, and traveling anywhere now involved a lot of planning and usually sticking the oldest kid on an airplane or coordinating with someone else driving the same route.

    But my new car (2019 Volvo XC90) can fit everyone, so now we can just hop in the car and go. So come summer I think we're just gonna go on a road trip down through Europe for the first time in 15 years.

  • I like driving, road trips, weekend excursions, trips to the local race track, cruising events, take a drive to clear your head and listen to some music, etc. I'd give it up for better cities designed around people and walking and biking than cars, but driving never bothered me as long as I can avoid very densely populated cities and countries with traffic conventions I'm not experienced with.

71 comments