Anonymous wrote:It's lazy af and I'm from NYC. I can drive a stick too. There is no excuse not to learn how to drive it's a basic life skill whether you ride the bus, taxi, subway you still need to know how to drive.
Anonymous wrote:...and are now in their 40s.
Not because of any trauma or anything, just didn't get around to it.
Have to rely on everyone else to get rides or Uber everywhere.
Anonymous wrote:...and are now in their 40s.
Not because of any trauma or anything, just didn't get around to it.
Have to rely on everyone else to get rides or Uber everywhere.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know a middle aged woman who does not drive but is a diehard feminist. I think it’s contradictory.
Is it contradictory that I vote for every woman to be able to have access to safe and legal abortion but don't want to get an abortion myself?
I don't think so.
It kind of is, actually. Yes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think they grew up in a city. Then I think nothing more of it.
+ 1. If I lived in NYC I wouldn't learn to drive.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know a middle aged woman who does not drive but is a diehard feminist. I think it’s contradictory.
Is it contradictory that I vote for every woman to be able to have access to safe and legal abortion but don't want to get an abortion myself?
I don't think so.
It kind of is, actually. Yes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know a middle aged woman who does not drive but is a diehard feminist. I think it’s contradictory.
Is it contradictory that I vote for every woman to be able to have access to safe and legal abortion but don't want to get an abortion myself?
I don't think so.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think how close that could have been me.
I had anxiety along w/an irrational fear of being behind the wheel of a car that I did not get my license until I was 32.
At school they scare the living daylights out of kids about driving. It's no wonder they don't want to learn.
Anonymous wrote:My mom grew up in NYC with six sisters. They all moved out to the suburbs and she and 3 other sisters learned to drive in their 20s.
The three sisters who didn't learn how to drive also did not take much agency over their lives - they were homemakers or secretaries and their husbands picked them up and dropped them off, they did not have a lot of outside hobbies or activities.
Those 3 sisters (out of 7 girls) are the only ones to suffer from dementia in their 70s. One passed away, and the remaining 2 are quite advanced. The other sisters are all pretty healthy cognitively in their 80s.
I'm not trying to say not driving = cognitive decline, but certainly, I see a correlation in my own family between low personal agency and declining cognitive health.
Anonymous wrote:I think how close that could have been me.
I had anxiety along w/an irrational fear of being behind the wheel of a car that I did not get my license until I was 32.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My mom grew up in NYC with six sisters. They all moved out to the suburbs and she and 3 other sisters learned to drive in their 20s.
The three sisters who didn't learn how to drive also did not take much agency over their lives - they were homemakers or secretaries and their husbands picked them up and dropped them off, they did not have a lot of outside hobbies or activities.
Those 3 sisters (out of 7 girls) are the only ones to suffer from dementia in their 70s. One passed away, and the remaining 2 are quite advanced. The other sisters are all pretty healthy cognitively in their 80s.
I'm not trying to say not driving = cognitive decline, but certainly, I see a correlation in my own family between low personal agency and declining cognitive health.
It feels like the women who never learned to pay bills, get a bank account, or manage whatever money they have. I guess it's a generational thing at this point (I hope?). Is it still common for women to just not learn to drive?
It depends. You’re asking a group that leans towards UMC — so they likely had access to available cars and ongoing instruction and opportunities to practice; who, despite the name of the site, tend to live very suburban lives.
As a former New Yorker, there are lots of us who never learned to drive — because we had other available options.
What’s interesting is that thanks to public transportation, I had a huge amount of freedom from the time I was about 12. I used public transportation for school — and pretty much everywhere else that I wanted to go. That’s possibly a few years earlier than the kids who lived in less urban areas who relied upon their parents for transportation.
But that doesn't seem gendered, right? NYers (and other people raised in areas with excellent public transpo) of all genders would seem equally likely to not get licenses/learn to drive.