So clueless, anyone outside the United States who drives knows how to drive manual. I'm a female and I learned how to drive manual when I was 15. |
Which country? |
Not PP but I’m also a woman who learned to drive on a manual when I was 15, right here in DC. And so did both of my sisters. |
That is very unusual |
| Another female who learned to drive stick, along with my brother and sister. We bought an old used Mazda and taught our daughter and son to drive it. |
Harder but not impossible. |
I'm from the UK and started to drive at 17, in a manual. I didn't drive an automatic until I was about 23. |
No, not unless you have a shtty car. |
“Real men”? Sexist POS. |
My oldest daughter drives one and I’m teaching my younger one now. It is a life skill that every driver should have. |
This trend in Europe is very rapidly changing. People used to drive stick due to high fuel costs and manual was more fuel efficient. Now automatics are on par or sometimes slightly better. We have family in Europe and when we visited last week, none of the taxi/rideshare drivers were driving stick any more, and neither were our relatives. Big change from 10 years ago! |
| Just here to say honda civic, low power, but still fun and cheap-ish to maintain. |
It is a cool skill but certainly not a life skill and may go extinct in the next 20 years |
| My college BF immediately wrecked his new "sporty" manual transmission car. To be fair, he probably would have wrecked any new car eventually. |
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It is amazing how many people cant drive a stick. I had a group share beach house with a long driveway. We had rule leave keys in bowl so you don't block people in and I had to move my car a lot as people did not drive a stick.
And the few who could barely knew or still did not know. My car for instance was a R,1,2,3 shift. So up to the left was reverse and most people would thing that is first. Well not every car has same pattern. |