"If You Catch My Drift" explores the relationship between private and public spaces by portraying urban settings as extreme playgrounds. Transforming public areas into private arenas blurs the distinction between professional engagement and recreational enjoyment. Within this dynamic, a support system is revealed, as all subcultures and alternative underground scenes rely on collective actions and interactions to stay alive. The work examines local environments through automotive activities, revealing both moments of visible excitement and the underlying scars of the process. While primarily focusing on Tbilisi, the material includes scenes from Yerevan, Zagreb, and Cairo. Drawing parallels to prehistoric depictions of spirals and mazes that symbolize humanity’s journey through complex, ever-changing terrain, the work unfolds this analogy through the trajectories of racing tracks and the paths taken by drifting cars. In this context, customization emerges as a tool of resistance. Whether by appropriating public areas or reworking practices, inhabitants carve out their presence in systems that often seek to marginalize or exclude them. The work examines and celebrates the act of reclamation through a female gaze, embracing the blurred line between creating work and finding joy in the process itself.