Cars have their charms but are just TOO BLOODY BORING... Specially the ones with an automatic transmission. Just put the stick in 'DRIVE' mode, press the paddle, and off you go. Convenient, yes, fun?
Ah.. No. You may listen to some music to keep yourself awake, or take some selfies, drink some coffee, eat pasta or a pizza, make a call, text, or tweet... Or even put on a lipstick but that's what make cars a hazard... On a bike: Your right hand's fingers & palm controls the front brake and throttle respectively. Left hand's fingers engage clutch.
Right foot handles the rear brake, left foot is for gear shifting. Your arms are for slow speed manuvers, whereas you use your WHOLE BODY at high speeds (MotoGP? Knee Downs?
Anyone?). You use your neck to navigate, your thumbs to control horns, indicators, low/high beams. Now imagine it... You're in COMPLETE control.
Every part of your body serves a purpose on a bike. Trust me little one, there's no better connection between FLESH & METAL. Motivated yet?
While coasting, kick your guide book (not auto) into basic, well in advance involving slow traffic. You'll keep speed and use minor fuel. If you could possibly be stopping, downshift, and you may save slightly more gasoline (as your injectors convert off), but slow along quicker.
Occasionally I ought to commute 70 miles. I climb 2 hills and see just as much as 1 MPG trip advancement, per the scangauge, by simply coasting. It also gains momentum to the next hill.
(They are generally steep hills, for a new freeway. ) It can be counter-intuitive, but the measure doesn't lie. Oh, along with after driving it 130K, your Neon still has their original brakes.
I cant really gove you an answer,but what I can give you is a way to a solution, that is you have to find the anglde that you relate to or peaks your interest. A good paper is one that people get drawn into because it reaches them ln some way.As for me WW11 to me, I think of the holocaust and the effect it had on the survivors, their families and those who stood by and did nothing until it was too late.