The Brainshrub Bus Project is now over three months old, and at this point I'm surprised to report that my regular vehicle the more cumbersome method of transportation. I actually get annoyed when I have no other choice but to drive it.
I move through the city of Asheville quickly, efficiently and with minimal energy. I know the bus schedule well enough that I don't even bother looking at it as I run my errands.
I use the roads just as much as you do, only I haven't needed to re-fill my car's tank in six weeks.
Six. Freaking. Weeks.
In other words: I'm a public transit ninja.
Becoming a public transit ninja wasn't an overnight process. It took a solid month to understand how the bus-system worked, and another few weeks to internalize the habit so that it became second-nature.
A public transit ninja is similar to being a vegan in that most Americans consider a 100% animal-free diet as an alien concept. When people meet a healthy, active vegan, it challenges their assumptions about their own diet.
Similarly, when people find out that I'm dedicated to public transit in a small city, I'm quizzed as if they don't believe that what I'm doing is possible. The same questions are asked over-and-over again:
Question: Doesn't it take you longer to get around?
Answer: If you time it right, no. In fact, I've never been on-time more often than these past few months.
Question: I hear that Asheville busses are unrelaiable.
Answer: That is a myth. Asheville public transit does a great job 95% of the time. Before you condemn them for the 5% they might run a tad late - are YOU on schedule 95% of the time in your car?
Question: Don't you hate it when you miss the bus?
Answer: If you arrive at the bus-stop at least 5 minutes in advance you'll never miss the bus. The key is to stop being scared of waiting a few minutes.
Question: What about places where the bus doesn't go?
Answer: If you look at the public transit map, you'll notice that with a bicycle, you can get to pretty much anyplace you need to be within 5 minutes.
Question: What about the people you meet on the bus?
Answer: That is part of the fun! But if you don't want to meet anyone, a set of headphones and a book drowns them out.
Question: What's it like being a public transit ninja?
Answer: It's great! I have more money to spend, more time to read and it's much less of a hassle to get around town when you are letting someone else do the driving. As an added bonus, I've lost 7 pounds from the biking!
This was originally posted here.
For the explanation behind the Brainshrub Bus Project, click here.
To see all posts for the Brainshrub Bus Project, click here.
2 comments:
You rock, o public transit ninja!!!!
good creative post, glad to hear you're still at.
enjoy it this winter!
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