I admit it I suffer from motion sickness, especially when it is hot out, and the sun hurts my eyes. Reading sometime will do it. Sometimes, this happens in a car, definitely happens in a boat, and I don’t think I will ever be able to use a VR headset, unfortunately.

In a car, I do all that they say…look at one point in the direction you are moving and not at the moving landscape out the side window, use the wrist bands, take medicine, get enough sleep, don’t eat too much and stay cool.

Apparently, driverless cars promote motion sickness, and this week Volkswagen recently announced they want to do something about this. Good luck!

According to VW, car sickness is caused by a confusion in the motion that the eyes see, and the body feels. Yep, that is a good description, but I think this is a bit simplified. There are so many factors that go into motion sickness.

Motion sickness is caused by a conflict between signals of various senses. Eyes observe the environment; inner ears sense we are moving, but if the two signals don’t match…boom—you feel like you want to die and cannot wait until the car stops (even then it doesn’t go away right away).

Oh, yeah—facing backwards also increases motion sickness 100 percent during normal urban driving apparently. Also, not being able to see the horizon out the front window can be a big issue. As I said before, many factors go into motion sickness, and if you are susceptible, you want to avoid at all costs.

Luckily, when you drive, you don’t generally have the green gills because you are in control of the car, actively driving, planning for what is next—not confused but activated in the process. As a passenger, your focus is on something else besides where the vehicle is going.

VW researchers also say that motion sickness could affect up to a third of all passengers. When (or if) we become passengers in driverless cars, this could be a problem, especially if the car is shared…think about it. Oh, yeah—smells can also trigger motion sickness.

Here are some ideas VW researchers are working on to help driverless car passengers with motion sickness:

Other researchers have other ideas besides the directional lighting, which shows which way the car will turn.

So, is this all they got? All the above ideas seem a bit nauseating to me.

My solution—drive the car myself.