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[mishaa]

After more than 35 years of driving I decided to share my experience - and I post my thoughts here and in several other places...

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Prudent driving

I don't like the term "defensive driving". There is something military to it. Tactical road... Defense map... We ourselves are our worst enemies, so let's talk about prudent driving...

Aug 18, 2008 - Texas Defensive Driving

Many states, Texas and Florida chief among them, have promoted the development of defensive driving courses. States have incentivised the private sector to develop these tuition based training facilities, by offering what amounts to moving violation credits. In many jurisdictions, this means you can have that speeding ticket wiped out in exchange for going to school. Some of these institutions even offer to let your learn over the internet instead of spending your Saturday sitting in a classroom.

For states to give up ticket revenue, something very positive must be going on. What’s at the root of this generosity is twofold. First and foremost, is the body count, especially among young folks 25 and under. The second is the insurance industry exerting powerful leverage to cut down on the cost of their vehicle insurance losses.

Whether you got your drivers license last week or 40 years ago it’s impossible to ignore the risks we some drivers take. Not only with their lives but also sometimes with ours. It’s pretty natural to spot a dangerous driver. So, it is also likely you can tell right from wrong on the road. What we all need to focus on more, is that small patch of our brain cells that links knowing with doing.

Many of life’s challenges can be easily and successfully tackled if we learn to add a bit of pride in ourselves to the task at hand. You will quickly notice that you drive better if you are proud of your driving.

Driving a car is the closest most of us will ever come to flight under our own power. Just step on that gas and go, go, go. It’s easy to get carried away and some of us forget there are others out there on the road with us.

When you realize that many of those other drivers you are out there with are amateurs and may well represent a serious danger to you and your passengers…  is usually when the light goes on and you start to change your driving habits for the better.

For you to make that transition from amateur to pro easily and quickly, you simply need to admit that bad drivers… possibly including you… represent a real threat to your health and wellbeing. Not to put too dramatic a point on this, but the risks are quite genuine and very much include that line between life and death.

If you understand this, then you are a good driver or well on your way to becoming one. Watch everything and everyone around you, from the time you turn the key to when you park at the end of the trip. Safe drivers live longer and spend a lot less money on insurance premiums… two admirable goals to achieve, wouldn’t you agree? Sure Texas defensive driving helps to do just that.

6:02 pm | Categories: traffic safety, defensive driving, safety, driving styles, highways, roads, road rage, driving, traffic, courtesy, cars
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Feb 12, 2008 - Prudent Driving—Some Tips to Control Your Environment

Defensive driving is predictable driving. When other drivers know what you’re going to do, it’s easy for them to keep a safe distance. On the other hand, when your actions behind the wheel take other drivers by surprise, they may not be able to react fast enough to avoid a collision.

Predictability—clearly communicating your intentions to other drivers—is one of the key elements of prudent driving. One of the simplest ways to reduce your risk of being in an accident is to drive with your low beam headlights turned on during the day. Other drivers may think it’s weird, but they’ll always see you. And that’s all that matters.

There’s no sense getting angry when an oncoming car or truck fails to dim its headlights. Only people with a clear death wish intentionally try to blind you with their high beam at night—all the rest are simply bad drivers. They may be fatigued, distracted, talking to someone on the phone, or trying to eat dinner behind the wheel. Whatever the reason, getting angry will only impair your own ability to focus on the road.

The worst thing you can do in this scenario is try to punish the driver of the approaching vehicle by switching on your high beam. When an approaching vehicle appears in the distance with its bright lights on, I’ll switch to my high beam for just a split-second and then switch back to my low beam. This will remind a distracted or tired driver to make the switch; it may also help him stay alert. Of course, I never use this tactic if there is a car ahead of me

But if it doesn’t work the first time, I simply focus my eyes on the guardrails (or on the edge of the road, if there are no guardrails). This is one of the most important skills in night driving. You can’t let the bright lights affect your concentration, of course, but it’s just as dangerous if you let your own anger affect your self-control.

The most dangerous time of day for drivers is twilight. Most drivers wait until it’s almost dark before they turn on their headlights. Prudent driving means doing the safe thing whether you’re required to do it by law or not. Many collisions could easily be avoided—and thousands of lives could be saved—if drivers turned on their headlights as soon as the sun goes down. 

One of the secrets of prudent driving is to keep an eye on any vehicle that gives you a reason to think you can’t predict what its driver is going to do. Defensive driving means learning to spot potential hazards as soon as they come into your field of vision.

Two things to watch for are rental trucks and parked cars with people inside them. People driving rental trucks are unusually unfamiliar with truck driving. They may make a sudden, dangerous move because they don’t see you behind them.

Whenever you see people in parked cars, always be alert to the possibility that the driver may suddenly pull out into traffic. When you learn how to predict such movements, you increase the amount of time you have to make an adjustment. That means you can easily avoid the hazard without having to make a severe evasive maneuver at the last moment.   

Prudent driving depends on being in control of your driving environment—and on being in control of your own emotions. When you take care of those two things, you become a safer, more responsible driver.

8:05 am | Categories: traffic safety, defensive driving, safety, driving styles, highways, roads, road rage, driving, traffic, courtesy, cars
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Dec 8, 2007 - Courtesy Is The Antidote To Offensive Driving

In order to be courteous to a fellow human being, one first has to be aware of them… to notice the reality of them… isn’t that correct? The dictionary uses the locution “consideration toward others” to define politeness.

Let’s consider this for a second, shall we? The more you go on toward being an expert driver, the easier it is to discover that the common denominator to defensive driving is your feel of what’s going on beyond your car body bounds.

Most all the issues, less one, that can turn you into an evil driver revolve around actions inside the car. Phone calls, chatting to passengers, text messages, enjoying music… all this is what distracts you from concentrating on fellow drivers.

Another part is your attitude. Ponder it, if you are irritated with something, a car is not the best spot to be and you should be self-aware enough to adapt your driving until you calm down, or not drive at all. Your standard should always be politeness.

If you are courteous then a bunch of nice things are going on in that processor in your brainpan. When you are respectful, you are paying attention to what’s transpiring  outside. You are also mindful to other drivers' needs, which is as good as it gets. There are tons of chances on the ordinary ride around town to be respectful to others. They may not invariably notice your respect, but they usually do. In my long experience those small good turns you donate to complete strangers usually get returned to you by other complete strangers as if by white magic… kind of cool actually. You unexpectedly notice drivers letting you into tight spaces when before they acted up like dorks… white magic I advise you.

If you will only try to be as courteous as possible to other drivers for a week, I predict you will be astounded. It actually switches your whole perspective on driving while at the same time clearly identifying you as a true jimdandy. Who among us doesn’t aspire to be a jimdandy?

What winds up going on, is that you shortly find yourself seeking opportunities to cut the other guy some slack, which makes you feeling proud of your actions. It also focuses you… pay attention here… focuses you beyond the bubble in your car. You are concentrating on what’s going on out there much more, when you try to be courteous to other drivers.

This small practice in human relations can propel you from a so-so driver to a safe one in no time. So… you if you want to be an expert driver, it is easy… just cut the other guy some slack. Even if they don’t recognize it, you will be a best human being and a safer driver for doing it.

7:59 pm | Categories: traffic safety, safety, driving styles, highways, roads, road rage, driving, traffic, courtesy, cars
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