Drivers Ed Online
Distracted Driving is Not the Way to Go
Jenicka Nayary Vargas
Wake Forest, North Carolina
About two years ago I was involved in an accident on my way home. My dad was driving and a man rear ended us. The man wasn't paying attention to the road, he was texting and driving. My sisters and I ended up taking a trip to the hospital on an ambulance to get checked out. We all had whiplash and were very sore. I ended up receiving a CAT scan because I couldn't feel anything from the back of my head all the way down to my neck. Three years before that incident, a girl named Hannah Vial, who I went to middle school with, died in a car accident. Her and her friends were messing around with a vehicle that was stolen from a parent. They went drinking at a college party and on their way home they were speeding going around 60 mph through a neighborhood. The driver lost control of the car rounding a turn and crashed the vehicle into a tree. Hannah was projected from the car and instantly died on the sidewalk. Since then I”ve been more cautious about who I should be getting in a car with. To become a better and safer driver you must simply pay attention to your surroundings, and make sure you communicate with people you are sharing the road with by using your signals. Drive responsibly and with vigilance. Limit distractions while you are driving, do not play music too loudly and do not drive recklessly. Always be sober when you're driving and discipline yourself to become a designated driver.
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