I really think that people that don't live in Metro areas have a hard time getting around the fact that some people live very happily without ever getting a license. We do and I bet we save a ton of money over a lifetime never having a car payment, paying for gas and insurance. Pays for my Disney obsession
Well, I don't know how much money you're saving. My experience with the "big city" is that everything else is so expensive that whatever you're saving by not having a car would be MORE than offset in other expenses that are much higher than elsewhere. Certainly, you'd save money compared to
others in the city who do own a car, but not so compared to those in outer areas. The hope is that your income would offset those expenses. I could never survive the big city on my income - car or no car
And yes, it's a difficult concept - not so much for the day-to-day in the "big city". My HS girlfriend went to finishing school & college in NYC and had no car there. Even at my college in a small town in MO, many of the kids didn't have cars (all of them did have licenses though). There was no bus to get around town, but 99% of everything we needed was at the dorm & there was always someone with whom you could catch a ride. That said, my friends in Chicago, Denver, KC, & San Francisco all have multiple cars, however - as is the case with everyone I know here in STL. Same goes for my relatives in London, Edinburgh, and Dundee. I get the impression that the "not driving" thing is much more of a Northeastern concept than a "metro area in general" thing.
But, even in big cities, it's not like NOBODY is driving. Those cabs, busses, trucks, and other vehicles don't drive themselves. 2 of my coworkers were in NYC on business 2 weeks ago to meet with a client on a project we're about to kick off & among the people they met was a young kid who had received a pretty substantial promotion primarily because he could drive (he was from Queens).
And it's just a hard thing for me to wrap my head around the idea that one could go their entire life not ever "needing" to be able to drive. For me, it has been a requirement of probably 80% of the jobs I've ever had - be it operating equipment at work, traveling to rural places as part of business travel, or actually driving company vehicles on the road. And my hobbies all revolve around things that couldn't be accomplished w/o at least some driving. Places I've been for vacation, I'd have to skip most of them if I couldn't drive. The idea that you could never, ever go anywhere completely on your own is indeed a tough thing for someone like me to wrap my head around. But hey, if it works for ya, that's more space on the road for the rest of us
