My father taught me to drive when I was about thirteen. Yeah, I know,
it was illegal. What are you going to do, arrest him? There were kids
younger than I driving mini bikes, snowmobiles, horses and farm
equipment on the same roads. He taught me many valuable lessons, one of
which was to "drive your own car." That is to say, don't necessarily
be nice, don't yield your right of way and never wave another vehicle to
move when they don't have the right of way. You can leave a hole but
never wave someone on.
The drivers around you have an
expectation that you are going to operate your vehicle in an orderly and
predictable fashion which maintains the natural flow of traffic. Any
time you yield your right of way, you not only introduce an unknown
factor into the mix - the other driver who doesn't have the right of
way, but your expected action deviates from the natural flow and another
driver who may not be paying attention can get caught off guard
resulting in an accident.
My father also taught me to never
follow a driver who has damage to the rear end of his vehicle for,
chances are he performs erratic and unexpected behaviors which can cause
accidents with drivers behind him.
There is an old joke about
an elderly driver who gets pulled over for doing 35 in a 55. She tells
the officer that she has never had an accident in her life but a lot of
drivers behind her have. That joke demonstrates that a driver who is
driving in an unexpected fashion can interrupt the natural and expected
flow of traffic.
Here is a short video demonstrating the dangers of being nice or, as my father put it, "driving someone elses car."
http://youtu.be/yM0M8Q6ObIo
You
can see me driving down the road while there is a line of stopped
traffic on my left. A grey van is looking to get out of a parking lot
and the driver of a black SUV decides to be nice and most likely waves
him out - not taking into account that I am coming from the other
direction. The driver in the grey van takes the word of the black SUV
that it is safe to cut across when, it wasn't. You can see that she
cuts right in front of me. Luckily I wasn't texting, eating, changing
my clothes, putting on make up, talking on the phone or rifling through
the glove box as I see so many other drivers do. Because I was paying
attention I was able to brake in time. You can see that I also began to
veer off the road a bit in anticipation of a crash.
Further
analysis of the video will reveal that if the black SUV waited, there
were not many vehicles behind them and the grey van could have navigated
themselves out of the parking lot all by themselves in their own time.
The lessons here are (1) never tell someone else how to drive
their car with a wave for, chances are you can't see what they see and
you are only focused on being nice, not the ancillary drivers who don't
know what you are doing with someone else's car. (2) Never take the
word of a nice driver that it is safe for you to move because they can
only yield their right of way, not that of ancillary drivers.
If
someone waves for you to pull out and another car hits you, whose fault
is it? The guy who hit you? You for cutting in front of them? Or the
guy who told you it was safe to pull out?
Nice is different than good. Be a good driver, not a nice one.
Musician Malcolm Kogut has been tickling the ivories since he was 14 and won the NPM DMMD Musician of the Year award in 99. He has CDs along with many published books. Malcolm played in the pit for many Broadway touring shows. When away from the keyboard, he loves exploring the nooks, crannies and arresting beauty of the Adirondack Mountains, battling gravity on the ski slopes and roller coasters.
Showing posts with label bwf9493. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bwf9493. Show all posts
Saturday, March 21, 2015
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