Submitted by woodscomma_elle t3_z4hsas in washingtondc
I recently moved to DC from a more rural area where it was absolutely mandatory to have a car to get around. I decided that the additional expense and hassle of bringing my car with me was worth it for the additional flexibility and independence. It was a non-inconsequential financial decision, but a trade off I personally was willing to make.
I’m trying to navigate the social expectations for having a car in a city where most of my friends here don’t have cars. I’ve quickly found myself being the Uber driver for the group. I don’t begrudge people running around town yet, but I would feel awkward not offering a ride home from my place or somewhere I’ve driven my car to -even though a run across town to drop someone off could easily turn into an hour round trip for me.
I thought I’d poll the room because I’m genuinely curious as to how regional differences and having public transit available changes the expectation- what’s the accepted social dynamic here? Is it rude of me to not offer a ride, or is relying on the Metro or Uber an implied cost people expect when they don’t have a car in a major city?
rock_out_w_sox_out t1_ixqwe2l wrote
You’re not mom and you don’t have to drive the kids around. Your friends are adults and know how to navigate DC without a car. I haven’t found that my non-driving friends expect me to drive them around. I’ll offer if it’s super cold or something but by offering to drive all the time, you’re setting up the expectation that you’ll always drive them. If it were me, I would stop offering or start the hang out with “you’re good getting home without me, yes?” And then everyone knows what happening.
Or just drink a lot and tell them you can’t drive 😜