THE YEAR THAT NOTHING IN THE UK WORKED
Rolling Stone UK|December 2022/January 2023
This year, I realised I needed to learn T how to drive. I'd been made redundant during the pandemic, and a few months later was forced to leave my rental accommodation when my landlord decided to sell the house.
SELIM BULUT
THE YEAR THAT NOTHING IN THE UK WORKED

By the time I found another job, I had left London and moved in with family. The new office was not too far from where I was living, but there was a small problem with commuting there. By train, it would be a two-and-a-half-hour journey each way, and a day return ticket would cost me £65. By car, it was only a 50-minute drive. The solution seemed obvious.

But what should have been a straightforward process of calling an instructor or driving school, finding somebody who could fit me into their schedule, and starting lessons a couple of weeks later, ended up being a tedious, months-long process. Every instructor I called was booked up, thanks to the huge backlogs caused by Covid.

In the meantime, I took my theory test and kept looking around. I had some luck when one company told me they could fit me in after a four-week wait, which was significantly shorter than the three or four months I was being told elsewhere. But when I finally had my first lesson, my instructor seemed confused. Why had I booked an intensive course, when it would be months before I could actually take my test?

This story is from the December 2022/January 2023 edition of Rolling Stone UK.

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This story is from the December 2022/January 2023 edition of Rolling Stone UK.

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