I traded in my car a couple of weeks ago and the guy at the dealer was so shocked that I only drove 11k miles in 4 years. He was like, do you even buy groceries? Well, working from home and strategically living close to all the places I regularly need to go to makes me drive less. As for me getting a new car after just 4 years, that’s another story.
I get what you mean, but I’m in a conservative state. But yes, just being able to work from home and afford to live close to the city is a privilege, and I’m aware of that.
I traded in my car a couple of weeks ago and the guy at the dealer was so shocked that I only drove 11k miles in 4 years. He was like, do you even buy groceries? Well, working from home and strategically living close to all the places I regularly need to go to makes me drive less. As for me getting a new car after just 4 years, that’s another story.
Farmers <– (hand hold meme) --> city dwellers: “Being able to get eggs at any time of day”
Don’t the farmers have to wait on the chickens to lay some tho?
Normal distribution with outliers meme:
you forgot the dreaded “does your truck have 4 seats to bring the whole family with?”
I have some chickens, I haven’t had to wait on eggs. I have had to give some to the neighbors though.
Wfh and strategic home location are privilege.
Disclaimer, I do this too.
But this is the “if your state/country is conservative/bad/repressive just move” of commuting.
I get what you mean, but I’m in a conservative state. But yes, just being able to work from home and afford to live close to the city is a privilege, and I’m aware of that.