Dear listeners, dear listeners, that’s it, it has begun: European Mobility Week. Until next Thursday, Europe is challenging us: to move around more cleanly. So we’re going to ask ourselves the question that we don’t have the answer to:
Should we change the way we move?
Are you taking part in the Jean Luc mobility challenge? For my part, I came by bike this morning, yes, that’s the smell. To ride a bike you need a good deodorant, but if I put on Narta, with a non-recyclable spray bottle full of plastic, chemical and toxic products, don’t I pollute as much as if I come by car without deodorant?
JLP: So you need a zero waste deodorant,
Absolutely, and HAPPILY you can ask the Zero Waste La Rochelle association for recipes and participate in workshops to make your own deodorant, shampoo, scrub, etc…
Another dilemma, Jean Luc, the shower! If everyone starts cycling to work in 42 degrees celcius. Everyone is going to need a shower when they arrive. What do we do ? Soccer locker rooms and guys compare penis sizes while girls talk about cellulite?
You meet your boss under the pommel “Hello boss, hop say so the water is cold it seems” All that is reflected.
JLP: indeed, the solution undoubtedly lies in the multiplicity of soft means of transport
(it was difficult this sentence huh “Am I good at this dear serge”) So yes indeed the key in ecology is to avoid that everyone uses the same source of energy.
Mobility week is not just cycling, it’s also teleworking (that way you don’t move, it’s settled, but you’re not mobile, it doesn’t work) Walking does work, on the other hand.
It is also carpooling. Besides, I heard that the Aunis Atlantique community of municipalities, which straddles mobility, had taken up the challenge, they have set up an organization worthy of an airport to manage departures, arrivals, and who passes take who, and how and on which line etc…
JLP: it all takes time
That’s it ! You put your finger on something important Jean Luc… So can you remove your finger please? Thank you… Time is THE problem. We always want to go faster, so spending 1 hour on a bus that makes 67 stops when you can get there in 20 minutes by car is not just a mode of transport, it’s a lifestyle choice.
JLP: the choice of a better life, no doubt
A different life where we take the time to read or chat on public transport, a life where we get some fresh air on our bikes, where we exert ourselves physically, where we organize ourselves with our fellow citizens to share vehicles, a life where you don’t have vagal discomfort when you pay for your gas tank… Yes, I think we can talk about a better life.
Are you going back on a Poulette bike?
I don’t have a choice I think, I have the seat bones that make the mouth but it’s only happiness. Conclusion Should you review your mobility, it’s up to you to decide
Chicken from Bresse