Yesterday, I posted the following status update on my main social media accounts (especially on Twitter and Facebook):
(Enkerli) cherishes carfreedom and a carfree lifestyle. / apprécie le fait de vivre sans voiture.
This update prompted one reply on Twitter and started a whole conversation on Facebook. Needless to say, I’m quite happy with the results.
Most reactions from my friends and contacts on Tw and Fb were in agreement with me, often providing some more specific support for the concept of carfreedom. One commenter, a childhood friend with whom I’ve reconnected in the past two years, has offered another perspective. While I’m grateful for all comments, I focus on this friend’s counterarguments in the interest of a thoughtful conversation.
This friend began with a comment about the near-impossibility of living without a car when you have children. Though my soulmate and I have yet to bring babies into this World, I have given carfree parenthood a fair bit of thought. I can’t tell for sure that it’ll be easy for us to be carfree parents but I know (and know of) enough carfree parents to think that it’s doable. Because carfree living and children are so important, for me, the possibility of raising children without being bound to a car is an important issue. We may end up using carsharing networks like Communauto or Zipcar. I don’t necessarily want us to be carless. But I do hope we can be carfree.
The one thing I found most problematic (or, at least, annoying) is when people tell me: “you’ll see that you’ll need a car at that point.” My friendly commenter didn’t use such a statement and, even just for that, I’m grateful.
This same friend then asked for some examples of what I started to call “carboundedness.” In what ways are people tied to their cars?
This is the focus of this blogpost.
Now, to be clear, those people I call “carbound” are a small subset of the overall driving population. I’m thinking about people who’ll take their car to go one block from their homes. Those people who need a car in their lives, couldn’t imagine life without a car, and live their lives based on what they can do with their cars. Not that it’s necessarily “their fault.” There are some contexts in which cars are just unavoidable. In fact, that’s what I’m thinking about as the core of “carboundedness”: the dominance of “car culture.” The contexts which make car ownership something akin to an “absolute necessity.” As a social scientist, I don’t perceive car ownership to be one of the basic human needs. And I think that my life “proves” that it’s possible to live happily without a car.
Not everyone who has a car is so tied to her/his car as not to be so free. But I’d say “carboundedness” isn’t so rare, in North America. It tends to be less frequent in and around large cities. I’d also guess that it’s somewhat less prominent in Qc than in other parts of the continent (including Acadia). But I’ve seen enough of it to be thinking about the implications.
So, some examples of carboundedness from the perspective of carfreedom.
My friend mentioned my homebrewing activities in another comment and beer does provide me with a first example. See, sampling beer is part of my lifestyle. I can easily go to a pub to get a couple of beer samples and leave after a few minutes. On occasion, I’ll do some pub-hopping or even a full-fledged pubcrawl. While I don’t worry about the consequences of drinking too much, I usually don’t drink much and I often know exactly when to stop. So I enjoy my sampling session while it lasts. The main constraint is that I won’t do it if I have to work afterwards. For instance, I won’t drink a drop of alcohol before grading. And I’ll limit my alcohol intake radically if I have to teach the following morning. In this sense, my work does put a limit on something I enjoy doing. I accept that wholeheartedly because I’m passionate about my work, but it does represent a constraint.
When a carbound person meets me (or anybody else) for beer, it becomes a whole event. If these people are responsible and they’re the ones doing the driving, they control their intake as radically as when I have to teach the following morning. They also make sure they wait at least an hour after the last drink. And the moment they’re having a beer isn’t as free and casual as when they’re in their homes or when there’s a dedicated driver. In other words, they’re “in control” for external reasons. I cherish being “in control” but I prefer it to be for personal reasons.
If these carbound people aren’t driving, they tend to drink more than they usually would because they enjoy the opportunity to drink more. My sense is that they measure their freedom based on how they get home. Something similar happens to me if I have lots of constraints from work for a significant period of time. It’s not beer that I really miss when I can’t have it. It’s the freedom to choose when I can have it. It’s still easy to be in control. But the control comes partly from external reasons.
If some carbound people aren’t responsible, they might drink and drive. But I don’t see drunk driving as appropriate behaviour.
Carbound people technically could spend only a little time at the pub and only drink a little bit. But it’s not what happens, usually. Because of the importance of their cars in their lives, they conceive of alcohol in a way that is quite different from responsible drinking.
Now, because my friend was talking about children, the relationships between parenthood and alcohol seem relevant. One might say that responsible parents don’t go to pubs. Thing is, I’ve known enough responsible parents who do go to pubs and, in some cases, they even bring their children along. I might even say that being exposed at an early age to people who were drinking has helped me gain a balanced perspective on responsible drinking.
In North America, especially among English-speakers, there’s a tendency to perceive alcohol consumption in a rather negative way. Though it may be allowed to bring young children to a restaurant where alcohol is served, these parents will refrain from drinking any alcohol in front of their children. Some of the same people do drink rather large quantities of alcohol but never in front of their children. For a large number of reasons exposed by Ruth Engs and others, some of these children end up binge drinking as soon as they leave their parents’ homes. There may not be any causal relationship between this attitude toward alcohol and carboundedness, but they do go together quite frequently.
Then, there’s the set of choices people make. There are people who wouldn’t live downtown because traffic is too heavy or because parking space is too difficult to find. I perceive this as a limiting. There might be other reasons why these people don’t want to live in certain places. But my observation is that a number of people think about where they live based on their cars. I’ve lived in places which were quite hostile to pedestrians and my perspective on these places is connected to my pedestrian lifestyle. I’d argue that the same happens with carbound people.
My carfree lifestyle is connected to my attitude toward freedom in other ways. When I move to a different place, I freely explore the city or town as much as I can. I go everywhere I can, which tends to be just about anywhere. And, since I’ve moved several times to places which are quite different from one another, local exploration has been a not-so-insignificant part of my life.
Moreover, I did notice that, rather frequently, I get to know a place more quickly by foot and public transit than drivers do, if they never leave their cars behind. Not that drivers can’t explore the place. But they often don’t, partly because it can get rather complicated to bring their car around.
Not only do I have no reason to think about one-way streets and parking space but I can also cross parks, walk down alleys, stop whenever I feel like it, take my time to look at different things, and get the feel of a place by the way it sounds, smells, looks…
A related point is that my perspective on those places where I’ve lived is quite different from that of a carbound person. I’d argue that I get to inhabit a city in a deeper sense than someone who feels the need to drive anywhere. Though it may sound like I’m saying my perspective is somehow better than that of a carbound person, I mostly mean to say that it’s a different experience and that it’s one about which I care. Some people don’t want to have a deep experience of the place where they live, and that’s perfectly fine with me. There’s something about a “drive-by” or “drive-through” lifestyle which can be quite enticing. It’s just not the kind of life I want to lead.
Though I call myself a “pedestrian,” much of my carfreedom has to do with using public transit. As I’m carfree, I usually use public transit quite a bit, depending on where I live. Because I use public transit a lot, I value buspasses.
Now, a buspass, for me, is freedom-inducing. Once in a while, I’ll use my buspass to go somewhere different, just because I can. Of course, I could do something similar with a car and there are places I can’t easily reach by bus. But driving around aimlessly can be costly and it’s much easier to get lost (without a GPS). Some of the drivers I know do occasionally drive for the fun of it and I can easily relate to that. Though I’m a bit sad about the implications for the environment, I respect their choice. These drivers aren’t necessarily carbound since they choose what to do with their cars.
The event which prompted me to send an update about carfreedom was quite trivial. As I was walking across the parking lot of the métro station close to where I live, I was asked by a minivan driver if, by any choice, I might not be going to get my car. This happens to me rather frequently and it means that people are looking for an empty parking space. This time around, my response was that I’m much freer than that, as I don’t have a car («J’suis bien plus libre que ça! J’ai pas de voiture!»). Sure, it may sound overstated, obtuse, smug, etc. But it was fitting, in the moment. The driver in this case seemed to have a thoughtful attitude and I needed to have a bit of fun. A standup comic my soulmate and I saw perform, during the Just for Laughs festival, was talking about teasing such drivers by faking getting into cars and then take the bus. I wouldn’t do that. But I still like to have fun.
I do feel free, in my daily life, and part of this has to do with being a “compulsive” pedestrian.
Speaking of “compulsion”…
Some elements of carboundedness may sound like an “addiction” to driving. But the concept of “addiction” can be tricky, especially for those of us who don’t have a strong background in psychology. Still, the “-boundedness” described here is similar to what we commonly mean by “addiction.” Or “being a slave to.” And it’s much trickier than “car culture” in general.
For personal reasons, the addiction about which I tend to think the most is smoking. Sure, there are people who only smoke when they want to smoke. These are smokers who can control their desire for nicotine. But that’s not so typical of most smokers. There’s probably a lot to be said about “addiction-prone personalities,” especially from a psychologist’s perspective. But I’m thinking about these issues from a social perspective which may or may not relate to psychological issues.
The thing about smoking is that it’s often “justified” by those who do it. There’s a social discourse on smoking which often seems to have more to do with advertising than with people’s genuine feelings. The reason smokers feel the need to “justify” their habits and behaviours is clearly social. Partly because one person’s smoke impinges on the freedom of non-smokers, there’s a broad conversation about reasons to smoke or not to smoke. There’s also a lot of talk about the meaning of “tolerance.” As I have a difficult time “tolerating” smoke for physiological reasons yet always try to maintain a tolerant attitude to any behaviour, my perspective is quite specific. I do perceive most smokers as being dependant on nicotine and I do which they would stop smoking, for my own health. But I also respect their choices.
To go back to carboundness… I’m not really against it. And I don’t want to have a negative attitude toward those people I perceive as being “carbound.” I’m mostly trying to put forth my perspective as a “compulsive pedestrian.”
Obviously, this blog’s title is a joke. I don’t really have a “compulsion” to walk. Although…
I can readily admit that my pedestrian lifestyle is also restrictive. In my case, I specifically make choices related to the possibility to live happily as a pedestrian. I do cut myself off from a carcentric lifestyle. And the fact that I don’t drive does imply some constraints on a few things I like to do. In other words, though I tend to think that all of these choices I’m making are “free,” I can agree with someone (likely a sociologist) who’d say that these choices are (at least partly) “conditioned.”
As I’m preparing to teach sociology, I think about conditioning a fair deal. Contrary to most anthropologists, sociologists have this habit of arguing that freedom is an illusion, that individuals often have no choice in most matters, that social life is constraining, that there’s a strong cultural determinism involved in human behaviour. Maybe I’m internalizing this discourse in order to take my role as a sociology teacher. But I’m also an advocate of critical thinking and my course will even be focused on critical thought. So, as I’m thinking about freedom, diverse perspectives offer themselves and I choose to take them one at a time. Kind of like a “thought experiment” or like “playing devil’s advocate.”
It’s fairly easy to take a pro-car approach, especially when considering a mainstream North American lifestyle.
Of course, carless people like myself can be limited in what we can do, in a given social context. But that notion is already so mainstream as to be considered “common sense.” The association between cars and freedom is so strong, in North American popular culture, that it doesn’t seem like most people take the time to think about the reverse: freedom afforded pedestrians. My statement about carbound people was meant to be thought-provoking, if not provocative.
As with so many things, the ideal is a balance. In this case, the equilibrium point between carboundedness and exclusive pedestrianism would be to have easy access to a vehicle and still not let this access dominate our lives. There are even ads, these days, about a family owning a minivan or SUV and choosing not to use it. Though it sounds quite strange in an ad (“buy this expensive vehicle so you can refrain from using it”), it does relate to the concept of carfreedom about which I’ve been thinking. The car-owners in that ad are somehow carfree since their car isn’t a constraint on them. That’s making abstraction of such practical issues as the cost of driver’s insurance or the need for a place to leave the vehicle for significant periods of time. But, as abstractions go, this one seems fairly appropriate. At least, these are people who may perceive the World as not designed exclusively for cars.
As is usually the case when I blog, I still have many things to say. But they’ll have to wait for other occasions. Hopefully, I’ll get comments on this post in the meantime. Thoughtful comments are a very efficient method of thinking critically. I may sound forceful, at times, but I mostly want to think with diverse people about the implications of carfreedom.
Carboundedness and Carfreedom « The Compulsive Pedestrian | americantoday
Aug 26, 2009 @ 16:37:57
Aug 27, 2009 @ 08:35:25
Hi Alex,
Thanks for keeping the ball rolling, as you called it.
After reading this blog, I must say that I do have a better understanding of what you refer to as “carboundedness” or being “tied” to ones car.
I would like to specify that when I mentioned that “I just can’t imagine life with kids but without a car….”, I was referring to my own life, my priorities and the way I consciously or unconsciously decided to structure things in my life.
That being said, if you bear with me for a minute or two, I’ll tell you a real story about one of my fiends and I will follow up with some thoughts on life and choices.
A close friend of mine lost her permit about a year ago after having two many speeding tickets. Basically, her permit was revoked for 6 months, until new demerit points became “un-expired”.
Two working parents, father puts in long hours, mother handles most of the kid-related errands, 3 kids… including a 18 month old boy in daycare.
Obviously, this was hell for her. Not because she was tied to her car or was dependant of it (that’s my way of seeing things) but because she obviously structured her life around the fact that she died have a car and the additional freedom of mobility it provided her.
Therefore, she lived in a nice kid-friendly neighbourhood, which did not have a very efficient bus system, no subway anywhere close. Well, those were not criterias when they bought their house since they both had their own car and the kids were way too young to think about teenage years and their eventual need for buses or subway.
IF they did not have cars, I believe they would have chosen a different house, in a more transit organized neighbourhood, picked another daycare, etc.
How did they survive? They managed. Taking a cab to the daycare (which was not a walking distance away), then to work. The father had to cut down is hours drastically to be more present, which is not such a bad thing overall. But it was hell.
Thinking about my life and my choices, my friends situation and what they lived and after reading your blog, this is were I’m at.
I believe that we do organize our lives around what’s important to us and in harmony with other choices that we made and that we make everyday.
A carfree person, being for economic, environmental or other personal reasons, decided (or sometimes did not have a choice) to not own a car. That person therefore structured his life in accordance to that fact: city and residence choice, hobbies, friends… and perhaps even a mate, etc.
The carfree person, if their method of transportation were to collapse suddenly (broken bike, transit system strike or closure, etc) would also see their world collapse. Unless one lives from a walking distance of everything in ones life, that transportation breakdown will have impact and possibly major ramifications. If you do have kids and the city decided to re-organize the bus lines and the bus no longer passes near the daycare of your kids… what would you do? Finding a daycare spot is already a headache… If you do need the subway to get to work, what happens if there is a strike and no buses to take you?
We, as social beings, do want to maintain contact with the outside world and most of us actually have other obligations that need transportation like getting to work, school for us or our kids, daycare, etc. We are all dependant on our method of transportation, whatever it is and whatever the reasons for choosing it may be.
If, for a reason, that method of transportation is compromised, we are all in trouble since we structured our lives around that fact. Taking for granted that it will always be there to fulfill our needs.
A carfree person is also dependant on the transit system and a entirely different set of constraints. Sure, you can go to the pub and drink what you want and not worry about your car. But you do have to worry about the cab fare, the bus/subway schedule, asking a buddy for a lift if you live far, etc.
A car owner can also drink if they want. If they plan on not restraining themselves, they take a cab or other method of transportation. If they don’t plan ahead, a cab is always there.
Different people, different reasons, different choices make for different lives and different constraints. As long as we all make these choices freely, I do believe that we are all equally free in our lives.
Dan ;o)
P.S. Please forgive any english atrocities I might have committed… french is my first language and I am not nearly as fluent as you are my friend.
Aug 27, 2009 @ 11:32:44
@Dan
Thanks a lot for this. I really am grateful for getting a glimpse of your perspective on the topic of carfreedom.
We seem to agree on most points. A smaller point I’d add: there are contexts in which it is, indeed, possible to walk everywhere one needs to go. It was the case for me in Fredericton and it’s the case in large parts of Europe. As pedestrian-hostile as South Bend was, I was mostly walking and only took the bus a few times in a whole year.
Oh, and BTW, I almost never take a taxi.
I do, personally, end up depending on the transit system when I’m living in Montreal. Yes, it relates to a series of choices I’ve made. And, yes, things got a bit harder when there were CTCUM/STCUM strikes, back in the day. I get your point on this. But, again, I think the points about pedestrians being dependent has already been made several times over. I try to offer an alternative point. Especially since dependence on elaborate tools (in this case, the car) is an important topic of discussion.
There’s a lot to be said about having a “Plan B.” Someone who relies exclusively on a single means of transportation (including one’s own feet) can be in deep trouble. Someone who’s flexible can probably adapt to any situation. In some cases, it does mean that the person needs to organize life without a car. The same thing could be said about someone who uses a computer in her/his professional life but can “make do” without a computer. That person isn’t dependent on the computer. Same thing in reverse: someone who works without a computer but who can adapt to working with computers.
A larger point I’m trying to make is that there are multiple approaches to freedom. I’m trying to break away from the notion, widespread in mainstream media, that cars bring about independence and freedom. Sure, there are contexts in which cars can increase an individual’s independence. But there are also contexts in which some drivers aren’t so free, just as there are contexts in which pedestrians are truly free.
My personal philosophy tends to be that true freedom means that you choose what constraints there are on your life. It sounds like you, Dan, made some very rational decisions and that you are indeed free.
I like that.
While I’m not trying to change the World to suit my needs, I do try to imagine the kind of world which would be optimal, in view of my perspective on life and society. I really don’t want to impose my ideas on anyone, but I feel good about describing what might be an ideal world for me.
In my ideal world, solidarity is key. People help one another and share a lot of what can be shared. Now, I know it’s not everyone’s dream. But it’s mine and I enjoy talking about it.
Cars wouldn’t necessarily be absent from that world. But they’d only serve certain purposes and wouldn’t dominate people’s lives. (They would also be much less impactful on the environment, would drive themselves, and would be quite safe.) Not only would there be an efficient “public transit system” in that world, but there would also be some tightly-knit local communities, making it easy for someone to do all sorts of activities within walking distance of one’s residence while at the same time allowing for easy travel to other communities (within the same city, between urban areas, or between urban and rural areas).
In some ways, it’s the “New Urbanism” idea, which is so close to traditional urban design. Some places in North America are inching towards it. Some places elsewhere in the World are already organized by something like it. And there’s still a movement against it based on some carcentric models.
While I was living in Austin, there was a lot of talk about New Urbanism. One reason was that there was a conference on the topic. But another reason was that ATX has rather big problems with urban sprawl. Montreal really isn’t so bad, especially if you live in, say, Petite-Patrie, Rosemont, Villeray, Ahuntsic, or even the Plateau. In ATX, it’s as if the majority of people were living in either Mascouche or Saint-Jean, and working on the corner of Crescent and St. Catherine.
BTW, about kid-friendly neighbourhoods… People seem to have different ideas about what that means. I certainly respect all of those interpretations and can even relate with most of them. But it’s my “job” to say that there’s more than one way to define it.
In my own case, a kid-friendly neighbourhood allows young children to safely walk back and forth between home and the places where they need or want to go (school, friends’ places, daycare, etc.). There are playgrounds for children to play together. It offers opportunities for parents to work close enough to home that commuting is a non-issue. And there’s a strong sense of community throughout the neighbourhood.
In a way, I’m almost describing my brother’s neighbourhood in Aylmer, Qc. There are some things which aren’t ideal, such as the lack of a sense of community and the fact that there are fast cars on the road cutting the neighbourhood, making it dangerous for kids to cross. But my niece and nephew have been within walking distance of their daycare and my niece is now within walking distance of her school; my brother takes the bikepath to commute to his workplace in Ottawa; there’s a nice playground by the river; downtown Aylmer (with some nice shops) is within walking distance. My brother’s partner does have a car and she does drive to work. But I don’t perceive her to be carbound.
In case it wasn’t clear, I did interpret your comment about children in the appropriate way, but thanks for acknowledging the connections with your personal choices. Your statement might have sounded a bit similar to the “when you’ll have kids, you’ll see…” but it was significantly different. Yours wasn’t annoying at all. In fact, it made me think.
As for your English, I’m not the one to judge, as I’m also a non-native speaker. But, reading your message, I was actually impressed by the quality of your writing. Though I live in a bilingual world, I don’t see this level of second-language writing that often.
Or maybe I’m just biased in favour of my homebuddies.
Aug 27, 2009 @ 12:06:55
“In my own case, a kid-friendly neighbourhood allows young children to safely walk back and forth between home and the places where they need or want to go (school, friends’ places, daycare, etc.). There are playgrounds for children to play together. It offers opportunities for parents to work close enough to home that commuting is a non-issue. And there’s a strong sense of community throughout the neighbourhood”
Well, it seems that we have the same definition of a kid-friendly neighbourhood! ;o) We live in Blainville, a city where speeding in strictly prohibited and police presence is astounding but non intrusive. And FYI, my friend lives in Beaconsfield on the island of Montreal. Although quite different, I certainly consider them both highly kid-friendly neighbourhoods…. otherwise I would be way too demanding! And Aylmer is quite nice, worked there for about 6 months!
And yes, Beaconsfield in considered an affluent neighbourhood. From a social point of view, the events that my friend went through were quite interesting. How does one who can probably buy 2 or 3 cars and lives on the lap of luxury… manage not being able to drive their brand new car? I’m almost ashamed to say it… but I found it somehow amusing. Especially since it was an accumulation of speeding tickets… for a person who complains that people speed too much and picks her neighbourhood for its kid-friendly qualities. If not amusing, it’s certainly ironic, don’t you think? ;o)
Oh, and please stop thanking me… I enjoy smart and insightful discussions as much as you. Well, maybe not as much! ;o)
Aug 27, 2009 @ 12:31:30
The reason I keep thanking you is that it’s actually very useful, for me. For both personal and professional reasons. Also, I didn’t really expect this level of involvement. As you know, I’m over my head with social media. But I don’t expect my friends to do the same.
Though we do seem to agree on some aspects of kid-friendly neighbourhood and both come from what I would consider a kid-friendly place, my emphasis is perhaps a bit different. Though I could possibly work within reasonable distance of Blainville or Beaconsfield, it might be challenging in my line of work. At the same time, I spend most of my time working from home, but the very fact that I might have a long commute to go and teach is a kind of deal-breaker, for me. I’ll want to be with my kids as quickly as possible, without any of the stress of traffic. In fact, as much as I can, I’d like to be with them during lunch hours and such.
So my emphasis is on being able to work as close to home as possible. Maybe my partial reorientation will make it possible for me to always work from home.
To me, Petite-Patrie is a kid-friendly neighbourhood. I miss living there.
I agree with you on the irony. And it’s part of what I’m thinking about. Pointing out some of the ironies in people’s lives. There are several in my own life and I can readily acknowledge them.
Cheers!