One night while practising night driving with my mother, we decided to get practice on the main road. I felt I wasn’t ready, but then again, who is? As we were approaching an intersection with 5 different roadways, I began to get confused, having difficulty reading signs and seeing arrows. With so many lights reflecting, I found it hard to adjust. When I signalled into a turn lane, I noticed there were two of them. It was a busy road, so I just assumed they were going in the same direction.
I learned something new that day.
As the light turned green, I went and began to turn my wheel like the cars next to me. My mother panicked, cars were screaming, and before I could process anything, I felt a jerk of the steering wheel.
“Pull over now!” My mother yelled.
I saw a dollar store and signalled to pull in, only for my mother to shout at me again about how I was going into a dip too fast. But when I pulled into the empty parking lot and turned off the car, she began to hyperventilate and then screamed— I can’t recall the last time she did that. The next five minutes were a blur as I tried not to cry from all the scolding I was getting. Eventually, her lecture ceased and the car was quiet.
“Get back on the road,” she told me.
I looked at her in bewilderment, surprised she even wanted to have me drive her again. But then I turned the car back on and pulled out of the parking lot. While driving home, I restrained myself from crying, knowing it would impair my vision more than it already was.
I learned I wasn’t afraid of death.
After that experience, I was always hyper-focused on not harming others, but not once did I consider myself nor those who are with me. It wasn’t until after that event that I reconsidered my priorities. Not only did I need to practice road safety, but I also needed to have a grasp of everything around me. I realized that I had to learn the roads so well to the point I could drive impaired in case lights blinded me. If all I did was take a driving test, pass, and receive my license, who knows how many people would’ve been injured. I would never know how unprepared I would be. How quick I must act.
Along with this, I want to propose not necessarily a solution, but an addition in an effort to provide safer roads. Countless times I’ve seen potential accidents occur due to slow reaction time, and it’s no doubt that the older a person gets, the slower their reaction time is. So, to test how quickly a person could react in a potential crash situation, I believe there should be a reaction-time test for all drivers (and soon to be drivers) that need to renew their license. The test is uncostly and a simple way of determining how fast an individual processes something. All that would need to be done is to hold a ruler in front of the testee and let go at random. After repeating this another two-ish times and calculating the average based on what number they grabbed on the ruler, it can be determined how fast a person’s reaction time is. This same process was tested on me two years ago. After I volunteered to be a test subject, my physics teacher dropped a ruler at random for me to grab. He looked at the measurement that I grabbed and audibly noted how I had a pretty quick reaction time. The only downside with this test is that it doesn’t account for possible impairments. Along with that, this test only measures a person's reaction time when focused on a singular object— unlike driving which requires multitasking. Other than that, this seems like a suitable way to see if a person is prepared for quick-thinking.
With the help of my mom and drivers ed teacher, I learned the fundamentals of being a driver along with what it took and the amount of responsibility it possessed. And possibly the only way to ensure that deaths from car-related accidents are kept to a minimum is to make sure future (and present) drivers are made aware of the amount of power they hold in a single contraption. Nothing can prevent human error, but we can prepare for it. After all, practice makes some-what perfect.
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