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Propensity to Look Down
2024 Driver Education Round 3
Serena Brudnik
Eldon, Missouri
I made a pinky promise with my mom that I would stop glancing at the phone while driving if she did too. It’s one of those addiction promises that you make with your friend ie. smoking, drinking, cursing. Well maybe not cursing, but I, personally, am trying not to curse. If it is an addiction to be on our phones, then why is it not more widely discussed. Having a phone on your person should be acknowledged as something that diminishes your health. And while I know that I am writing about the causes and effects of bad driving, I still think it is sad that technology has become such a staple in our day to day life. After all, we carry two things with us everywhere we go: our phone and our car!
Every fifteen minutes someone passes away from an automobile accident. I am grateful to this organization, and my high school especially, for reintroducing this reality to me time and time again. When I was in high school we attended a seminar where five or six of our graduating class volunteered to put on a play or an act about themselves being the victim of a very bloody car accident. The sense of peace fleeted from the room as we watched a fake video of them being carted to the emergency and operated on. Their real parents wrote a fake eulogy describing the playfulness of their deceased youth, so soon taken away due to a drunk/distracted driving accident. It was really sad, more so because we knew them. I just hope that everyone stays aware when they are out on the road. More people die of car accidents than has ever been during the last several wars, ranging between 36,000 and 48,000 every year. A last thought that I will leave you with is one I originally began with: If minds were worlds, there are a lot of them out there, all equally excitable but prone to error. The gravity of the thought is enough to stabilize you in the moment, raise your guard and appreciate the world around you. Be safe in cars!
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