Escape from the Vortex of Daffy Driving

It is good to be home. It’s especially good whenever one has spent a portion of the preceding time sucked into the malevolent maelstrom that is everyday traffic. There is rarely any simple way to drive or be driven from Point A to Point B without going through what amounts to an epic chase movie, but one whose projectionist speeds up and slows down the film at random intervals, spills a handful of hard candy into the projector where it is shredded into flying bits of sharp debris, and occasionally gives in to the urge to make shadow puppets, in front of the projector’s beam, depicting a snake swallowing a live rabbit. Really now, who thought mere traffic signals and seatbelts sufficient for dealing with this?

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There is no safe place to drive . . .

Here I am, minding my own business but driving sensibly as I always try to do, obeying the rules of the road and what I remember from long-ago drivers’ education training as best I can, and the rest of the wheeled world out there refuses to cooperate. The driver in front of me goes three-quarters of a mile down a straight road with her left turn signal winking ironically at me the whole time, apparently letting me know that she is fully aware that she is two feet into the center turn lane the whole way but has no intention of actually turning. Finally she turns off her left blinker so that she can concentrate better on getting in the left turn lane fifty feet ahead without that distracting noise. Once around the corner, I pass her at last and see her over there in the other lane, driving along while leaning so far toward her passenger that I guess she must be trying to adjust Grandma’s girdle with her teeth.

Meanwhile, I have stopped three times to let the person now in front of me pause in various uncontrolled intersections to decide whether or not to turn to the right out of them. At some point it seems there is inspiration, and the turn is accomplished. This, in the stately local style: slow to an almost complete stop; stare in the direction you are going to go so that your vehicle will understand where you intend it to take you; crawl around the corner at the lowest speed you can manage, lest you hit a pothole or a pony; at the last second, drive up over the curb at the corner because you cut it too close; overcorrect, step on the gas suddenly to free yourself from this unexpected obstacle, and lurch around the rest of the corner almost fully in the oncoming lane. The other favorite place for people here to do the stop-crawl-stop thing is over speed bumps, where I’m slightly perplexed to see so many of those He-Man monster trucks, jacked up so high for off-road adventure that a small elephant could pass underneath, tiptoeing timidly over speed bumps in this fashion. I can only surmise that such studmuffin drivers fear their exceedingly large manly parts hang too low and may be hit by the protruding speed bump if they’re not careful.

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Pay no attention to the color of the lights!

I gather as well that the driver’s handbook in this state fails to offer a definition of the word Merge. Conceptually, I had always thought it to mean something like, ‘before you enter the roadway, observe the traffic already in your intended lane and then adjust your speed higher or lower to accommodate smooth entry as you join the stream of vehicles’. Evidently “merge” sounded too much like “barge” to someone along the way and they thought it far too impolite, so drivers here instead creep up the on-ramp and hover sheepishly on the shoulder, hoping that the four lanes of behemoths whizzing by at full speed will miraculously part like the Red Sea and they can wade on in. If the desired space doesn’t show up quickly, why then the obvious solution is to build up to appropriate freeway speed while still kicking up sideline debris along the shoulder until a good spot clears on the road. Conversely, the warning to “yield” is interpreted as an invitation to stomp on the gas pedal and scream on in lest the optimal moment pass forever. Why this would be more disconcerting when the screamer whizzes by me and I can see only the top of his head over the dashboard is of course a mystery.

Accidents are a given, even at relatively low speeds. I understand that even the most attentive and careful driver can have a dog dash in front of him or have a passing bus throw up a sheet of rainwater onto her windshield. In a land where potholes of epic proportions might swallow a Smart Car, sudden hail turn a Humvee into a convertible, or a meandering red Angus shamble over and divert the oncoming pickup suddenly into my lane, things are bound to happen. But sometimes I do dream of a trip to the grocery store that doesn’t involve riding alongside a texting torpedo <LOL-swerve-OMG-swing-WTF-swissssh> or in front of somebody clearly needing to get to the bathroom NOW or behind the person whose peculiar brand of legal blindness means that all street signs, lights and obstacles look identical to her so she chooses a happy medium for all things and toddles along at the same cheerfully modest speed no matter where she goes or what piles of junk she drives through to send flying at me, and no matter what that light she just potted through might be trying to hint to her she ought to consider doing instead.

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Sending signals right and left . . .

Like selling her car.

I wish.

17 thoughts on “Escape from the Vortex of Daffy Driving

    • No surprises there–every place I’ve been there are “war stories” galore! I’ll stick with letting the Professionals do the driving if and when I get to Houston, I think!

  1. Brilliant. Actually reminded me of driving in Italy! which is MAD!.. here my biggest problem is combine harvesters driven by 12 year old kids while grandad follows in his truck. loved the bit about the old lady, i have met a few of those on country roads too.. RUN!!! c

    • Heh-heh, having traveled and lived various places as much as you have, you know the ins and outs of MANY “artistic” driving techniques! I’m just delighted that you’ve survived it all with your sense of humor intact!

  2. Don’t get me started on driving stories!!! Here in the land of “Yellow means hurry up & get across”, “Merging is fine as long as you are BEHIND me”, and “Texting while riding your Harley is fashionable, even if it means veering into the side of OUR car!!” Then comes the winter!!!!

    • I can vouch for the truth of what you say, O wise one! As I know, there are special techniques and talents associated with every region and city. The trick is just learning what those are in time to keep ‘ahead of the curve’!

  3. You should see here, my city! I can’t imagine is there any place living a traffic madness like ours? I am so glad to hear that you are at home now. Welcome back dear Kathryn. Your second photograph hit me most, the lights and the black and white building, standing amazing. Thank you, Have a nice weekend, with my love, nia

    • I *have* heard from friends who lived a short time in Istanbul that it’s quite an adventure to be on the roads! It’s just a very good thing that most people have apparently figured out how to cope with it.

      I’m so glad you enjoyed the photo! I kind of got lucky with the natural light, because this is actually a full color photo where I only increased the contrast a little! Much love from here.
      Kathryn

  4. Your photos are delicious. Can I say that? Does it make sense? Anyhow, I devour them a like a great piece of chocolate cake as I do your writing as well. And you know I how I like my chocolate so that is QUITE a compliment! 😉

    • You are so kind! I was so pleased at the way that light “trick” just happened when I adjusted the contrast on the photo–the whole thing is still full color, but the incandescent yellow really popped out suddenly.

  5. Here in Austin, many drivers coming into a highway on an entrance ramp don’t seem to realize that two vehicles can’t occupy the same space at the same time. These drivers keep pace with the car to the left of them as there’s less and less of the entry lane left in front of them, then at the last minute they try to force themselves in. Why they don’t understand that all they have to do is slow down a bit to let the car on their left that’s already in the right lane of the main road go past them, I don’t know, but they don’t. But then there are increasingly many things I fail to grasp about how the world (mal)functions.

  6. Pingback: Hey, Baby, Wanna Ride Shotgun in My Pinto Wagon? (Daffy Drivers, Part 2) | kiwsparks

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