On Cars

Automobiles have become synonymous with progress for people’s living. Unfortunately, if everyone were to own a gas guzzling vehicle our earth and atmosphere and environment would go to shit. Trouble is, that’s already happening.

I’m writing here because I want to buck that trend. It’s hard for me to relate to car ownership as a notion of “progress” because my idea of the American Dream (or rather, Ideal Life) is different from so many others.

Let me preface this with the little-known fact that I love driving. I love being behind the wheel. I love the freedom, the adventure, the tranquility of traffic patterns and the engineering that makes our roads and highway systems possible. Ever since I was a young lass all I wanted to do was drive. I would longingly dream of the day I could get my license. If I were lucky, I would sit on my parents’ lap as we pulled in or out of the garage and pretend like it was me captaining the ship. I drew mini roads and neighborhoods in chalk with my sister on our driveway at our childhood home, through which we would then navigate with our bicycles. I was ecstatic when I became big enough to drive the tractor and could cut the grass on our 3-acre piece of paradise.

To me, driving is a romanticized experience with windows down and tunes cranked, fresh air feels while cruising smoothly ahead, not a stoplight in sight.

I was also a product of my environment since where I grew up in the country we needed a car to get anywhere. There were no sidewalks, no public transportation, no bike lanes; just trees and cornfields that lined the unlined roads. The closest grocery store and most other conveniences were a 20-minute drive away. (Hence the hoarder nature in me since our cupboards were always well stocked in case of emergency.) In these scenarios, car ownership is practically a necessity. That changes though when one moves to the city.

In a city, one does not need a car. In fact, cars searching for parking spots in a downtown location account for almost half of all vehicles on the road and contribute unnecessary emissions and expenditures1,2,3. Personal vehicles, though still arguably somewhat convenient, become more of a hindrance. Even more so when you take into account the grand scheme of everyone’s personal wellbeing.

Without a car, you don’t have to worry about:

  • Where you parked your car
  • Paying for parking
  • Paying for parking tickets
  • Damage from passersby or other drivers
  • Paying for insurance
  • Paying for gas
  • Paying for maintenance
  • Time and inconvenience of taking your car to the shop
  • Getting stuck in traffic
  • Who to call for help if you break down
  • Being stranded with a huge hunk of metal that’s your responsibility but you can’t move on your own

By utilizing other modes of transportation you:

  • Gain a more active lifestyle
    • Get in better shape
    • Release positive endorphins
  • Get to experience more of your community
    • Meet your neighbors
    • See new sights
    • See old sites from a new perspective
  • Become more aware of your actions, habits, possessions
    • Combine shopping trips
    • Take only what you need
    • Minimalize and simplify for peace of mind
  • Realize the many moving parts that make a city work
  • Circumvent traffic jams
  • Reduce your carbon footprint
    • Help the ultimate environment
    • Make your immediate air quality cleaner
  • Decrease overall traffic congestion thereby improving general transportation efficiency
  • Create demand for complete streets and more efficient public transportation

I was happy and even relieved to give up my car to live in a city. Without a car, I felt more free and mobile than ever. Part of it is that I chose to live in a neighborhood in a city that was walkable, bikeable, and busable. Another part is that I no longer had an extension of me that was weighing me down–literally by 2 tons or so, but also figuratively by freeing up mental worry space. Car-free is carefree, at least to me.

A book that was gifted to me and I found extremely helpful is How to Live Well Without Owning a Car: Save Money, Breathe Easier, and Get More Mileage Out of Life by Chris Balish. It details a lot of practical advice on alternate modes of transportation such as biking, busing, or ridesharing, and even includes worksheets to help you calculate the thousands of dollars you save each year by not owning a car.

What do you love or don’t love about being car-free or not? Anything you would add to the list?

(Granted, the mobile lifestyle of car-only is intriguing to me. If I do follow that path, I would give up my stationary apartment expenses and convenience and pursue the open road. I feel like it’s one or the other, either car or apartment, at this point in my life. Ideally, the car I would get would be a hybrid, low emissions, or other environmentally friendly option. Plug-in electric charged by renewable sources doesn’t seem realistic if I don’t have a dedicated home base for the time being.)


  1. “Reducing Parking Spaces Helps Cities Cut Auto Emissions” <https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/reducing-parking-cut-auto-emission/&gt;
  2. “Searching for Parking Costs Americans $73 Billion a Year” <http://inrix.com/press-releases/parking-pain-us/&gt;
  3. “No Parking Here” <https://www.motherjones.com/environment/2016/01/future-parking-self-driving-cars/&gt;

Ideas: Organic Green Pepper

I was a server at Green Pepper, a Korean bistro and lounge nestled in the Squirrel Hill neighborhood of Pittsburgh.

It was wonderful getting to learn about a new style of ethnic cuisine, I just wish the food were organic. As a personal preference, I wish there was less of an emphasis on meat. The veggie side dishes are part of the meal too, you know.

I also wish there was recycling. And compost.

I wish I could do a sustainability assessment with the help of my friends at Sustainable Pittsburgh and their Sustainable Restaurant Program. Do a complete overhaul and highlight the process as a case study. The ground is ripe with opportunity.

I wish there was more of a dedicated space to learn about Korean culture and history instead of just K-pop and random bits of news blasting at you from giant television screens while you eat. It’s entertaining and immersive, sure, but I’m more of a knowledge and experiential seeking girl. I want to be transported to a place a world away and feel what the vibe is like for everyday people there.

I have a few ideas regarding design, efficiency, placemaking, web development, etc. I’d like to share.

On Needy People

I remember a caption to a photo in a local newspaper last year saying that a group of people (officers or other) were helping out “needy people” by volunteering to serve dishes at a soup kitchen. Kudos to them and all, but people who are less fortunate than you have exactly the same needs as you– the need for clean food, clean water, clean air, and clean shelter.

That caption irked me then and it still does today, though I’m on a different end now. I deal with needy people every day at work as a cashier at a glorified grocery store. People who “need” bags because they forgot their own. Don’t you know your own reusable bags (cloth, preferably) have greater structural integrity, speed up the checkout process, and minimize the need for virgin resource extrapolation and wasteful energy use? Entitlement and privilege, I can’t stand it sometimes.

Save a young sapling and bring your own fucking bags, please.

Poem: Universal Law

Lyrics:
I’m cutting out the meat so I go against the grain
I wanna be released from the burden of the pain
That causes others suffering–after all, we’re all the same
And duh, doing unto others is the nature of the game
It’s the Golden Rule that binds us on this here earth now as we trod
Karma ain’t always a bitch if you give your life to God
Pay it forward if you got it, if you don’t then ask for help
We’re a living breathing organism and you ain’t no single cell
We got talents, they be plenty, yeah they’re out the wazoo
Got a problem? We got solutions and we’re all here for you
We are rootin’ for the win, we believe that you can do it
Build your dreams, yes you can, focus the mind then go pursue it

Organic IS the Only Way

In a perfect world, we wouldn’t have to choose
Because in a perfect world, it is safe to assume
The farmers and regulations only want for us what’s best
But no, to “make more money” they spray toxins to kill the pests
Funny, how it works, since the toxins kill us too
They get into our bodies and the earth becomes polluted
We suffocate and die a slow and cancerous death
Our genes and our lives are never fully expressed.

That’s not a perfect world, or at least it’s not to me
But I believe we can change using the power of money
To become conscious consumers– we can all play a part
Put your money where your mouth is if you want to protect your heart.