I love my electric car but I didn't realize my life would revolve around charging it

I love my electric car but I didn't realize my life would revolve around charging it


Not again. All the electric vehicle charging stations were taken, and I knew I was in for at least a 30- to 40-minute wait. And yet, the app on my phone showed two chargers had been available five minutes ago. I had driven in this pouring rain for nothing, but what choice did I have? My EV needed charging for the next day's commute, and this was the closest station to my home.

When my old Hyundai Elantra received a death sentence at the repair shop in 2019, I decided that my new vehicle was going to be electric. Up until then, I had cared for the Earth by doing small things, such as using reusable grocery bags and recycling plastic and paper products. I wanted to do more. The demise of my gas-powered vehicle presented a perfect opportunity. I looked forward to driving a car that did not emit pollution or run on fossil fuel.

The fact that my condo wasn't equipped with an EV charger didn't seem a big obstacle. Considering the support from the provincial government and the increasing number of electric cars every year, I presumed that it would be only a matter of time before we installed chargers in our underground parking. Meanwhile, I could use public charging stations that were popping up around my neighbourhood.

The price range of electric vehicles dampened my initial excitement. I couldn't afford any of them. Determined, I looked into second-hand EVs, and voila! There were plenty on the market. With a loan, I could afford one. After a month of research and field study, I purchased a second-hand 2016 Nissan Leaf.

I was happy. I loved the "coulis red" colour and the slightly nerdy look of its bug-eyed headlights. What I enjoyed the most was how quietly it glided on the road. Zero emission gave me peace of mind that I made the right choice for a world facing climate change. I never missed the roaring of the engine or the smell of the gasoline.
My first year of EV ownership was great. I utilized public EV chargers, most of which were free at that time, and enjoyed impromptu conversations with fellow EV drivers I met at the charging stations.

"Excuse me, no rush, but I'm just wondering how long you might be here."

"Oh, just about ten more minutes?"

Then we'd carry on with our conversation, mostly talking about our EVs.

"Nissan Leaf? How do you like it?"

"I love it."

Around the second year, the quest for charging started to become more frustrating than enjoyable. Significantly more people were driving EVs, which was encouraging. But this also meant that the chargers in my neighbourhood were almost always unavailable unless I got there before 7 a.m. or after 10 p.m. After repeated incidents of disappointment, I stopped checking the availability online beforehand. The charger that showed as "available" online was often taken by the time I got there.

In 2021, my strata council proposed spending $5,000 to assess the building's underground parking for suitability to install EV chargers. I was excited. I felt optimistic this would be approved easily.

At the annual general meeting, a few hands went up when questions and comments were invited before voting. One resident expressed his opposition to the idea of paying $5,000 to the consulting company just to get their advice. I saw some nodding heads. Another resident proposed that we could make the charger available to the public and make some money out of it. Not wanting to appear selfish by advocating for my own convenience, I kept my hand down and quietly listened to the different opinions.

Just before the chair called for voting, another hand went up. She hesitated before speaking. But once she began, she expressed her opinion forcefully. "Electric vehicles are expensive," she said. "I can't afford it. Why would we support those few who can afford expensive cars? We should use money for something that benefits all of us, not just those who are affluent enough to purchase an electric car."

I let her opinion sink in. Was I arrogant to assume that everyone would be supportive of having EV chargers in our building?

The proposal was defeated.

That night, I couldn't sleep. Not because of my neighbour's bitter comment, but because I suddenly remembered my intention for buying an EV in the first place. I should have spoken up. Greenhouse gas emissions, carbon dioxide, climate crisis ... These words jumbled in my head. Nobody had even mentioned this life-or-death issue we all are facing.

I could have at least shared my story. That I got my EV because I wanted to do a little more to protect the environment where we humans and all other species live. That I was in favour of the strata proposal not just for my own convenience, but to support future EV owners and to encourage those who are concerned about the sustainable earth. The fact our condo has a good recycling system in place is a sign that many of us do care. Given that, I wondered, if I had spoken up, would that have changed the outcome of the vote?

Two years later, our condo remains unequipped with an EV charger. Getting access to the public chargers in Vancouver seems to get harder every month. Still, I adore my earth-friendly, bug-eyed, coulis-red Leaf and have never regretted my decision to switch to an EV. While driving an EV might be just one of many ways to reduce the ongoing harm to the earth, I do wish that things were much easier.
 
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I love migrants, but I didn't realize my money would be spent sustaining them.
I love the government, but I didn't realize my entire life would be theirs to do as they see fit.
I love black lives, but I never fathomed they would strike and assault me.
I love LGBTQ, but I didn't realize they would chastise me for not wanting to share a bathroom with them.

Ad nauseum.
There is no unplugging these people from the matrix.
What's that line? "These people have become so dependent on the system they will fight to maintain it."
 
(ex)member of my household spent a bunch of money to install a tesla charger
had a bitch fit and moved out
no idea how he charges that thing now
if anyone knows how I can make money off the charger I'm all ears!
 
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Reactions: Neo-Nazi Rich Evans
what are you supposed to do at these fucking fast charging stations?
just hang out?

they're going to become so much more dangerous than gas stations ever were
imagine the smokers it will attract once they are as prominent as gas stations

or what happens once niggers start driving EVs?
now everyone is smoking blunts and drinking 40s at the fast charging station
I hope you have sentry mode for when they start twerking on your tesla's hood

the future is bleak for cars my fellow kiwis
 
lol 30 to 40 minutes just to wait to charge your car? It takes me maybe 3 minutes to fill up my 22 gallon tank.
if anyone knows how I can make money off the charger I'm all ears!
Rent out your garage to some Tesla cuck for his own premium charging station. Figure out how much it costs to charge the car and charge him like, triple or something a day.
 
Do Canadians really get themselves in debt just to buy a car?
Is it really a strange idea to just buy a cheaper car and not have to get a loan?
I got a loan for every car i ever bought. rates were comical low for 2 decades, so why should i use my money that can easyly make 4% a year instead of getting a loan for 2.5%?
it even got more comical in the 2010s, when you could get a car loan for 0% from some dealers.
 
I just can't see the point in buying a vehicle that's an active liability if you want to go more than half an hour away from the suburbs, in a country that has vast areas that are uninhabited with brutal road conditions. Also, people who buy vehicles with a lithium battery because it's 'more environmentally friendly' are deluded. Ask a firey what he thinks of lithium battery fires and he'll scream nonstop for hours before crawling into a corner and sobbing himself to sleep. There is more than enough information out there on just how horrifically damage lithium is on just about all levels for everyone and everything. Why didn't he just decide to take the bloody bus?

And then the way he just expected that people in his building would think exactly the same as he did without asking a single fucking one of them, and saying absolutely nothing when he discovered that they didn't... what a weak minded twat.
 
According to this article, you're supposed to sidle up to your fellow EV users and smug it up about how much you love being right-on about the environment.

That alone is enough to put me off buying electric.
It's amazing those charging places aren't hotspots for crime. You have people who can't chase you, are guaranteed to be middle/upper income with over expensive vanity tech and it's a wide open space. Someone need to shepard Niggers into them for the benefit of the rest of mankind.
 
Just before the chair called for voting, another hand went up. She hesitated before speaking. But once she began, she expressed her opinion forcefully. "Electric vehicles are expensive," she said. "I can't afford it. Why would we support those few who can afford expensive cars? We should use money for something that benefits all of us, not just those who are affluent enough to purchase an electric car."
That night, I couldn't sleep. Not because of my neighbour's bitter comment
What a cunt.
 
I think the best market for EVs is urban people who don’t drive long distances. If you’re a suburban person with own charger and maybe even solar then they’re probably an OK bet. They have a place. Absolutely not everywhere, but for cities I think it works.
But you’d be very silly indeed to buy one unless you had somewhere to charge it that you controlled
 
what are you supposed to do at these fucking fast charging stations?
just hang out?

they're going to become so much more dangerous than gas stations ever were
imagine the smokers it will attract once they are as prominent as gas stations
No, you don't understand, you're supposed to go an dhave a cofee while you wait, because that's what most people do when they're at a rest stop anyway. Have a coffee. You're supposed to use the time to rest and improve yourself with a walk, or a meal, or some yoga in the park that would definitely be nearby if only everyone drove electrics. You're supposed to just accept that you have to wait instead of being able to fill up and leave immediately! You're supposed to learn that driving should be a privilege, one that you should only use in exceptional circumstances! YOU'RE SUPPOSED TO USE PUBLIC TRANSPORT INSTEAD OF YOUR WHEELED DEATH MACHINE! TAKE THE BUS CHUD!!! AAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHH!!!!
 
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