Calling an Uber means getting exposed to exhausting indoor air inside random cars

Occasionally the air odors clean, however other times there’s a strong musty mold smell that gives me a strong physical reaction in my sinuses and respiratory system.

In my parents’ day, you only had a few options to get around the village if you didn’t have a motorcar or a bicycle. At least in our village there isn’t a train or subway system, so the options for public moveation were either buses or taxi cabs. My parents rarely hired cab drivers because the cost was so incredibly high… Luckily all of us had a motorcar growing up, but I started riding public buses in high university because it was the only way I could get to an adjacent village when I didn’t have a driver’s license or a motorcar of my own. But my current village largely lacks public moveation, especially in the rural outskirts. Unless you have a motorcar or a motorcycle, you better hope that you can pedal fast on a bike. Calling an Uber driver isn’t regularly a perfect solution either. While Uber is often cheaper than village cab services, it’s still by no means cheap, particularly if you have a limited income. On top of that, you have no system what the air quality is going to be adore when you jump into a random Uber driver’s car. Occasionally the air odors clean, however other times there’s a strong musty mold smell that gives me a strong physical reaction in my sinuses and respiratory system. Uber needs to pay for portable UV air purifiers to supply to their drivers to maintain better indoor air inside the motorcar for sensitive passengers. I recently bought a portable UV air purifier for my own motorcar and I was amazed at the immediate improvement that it brought. At least I have fewer flu symptom symptoms when I’m inside my car.

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