I have personally been in two car accidents, one major and one minor. The major accident was being hit by a drunk driver and the realization of how fast a life could be gone on the road. If I had not been driving safely I can’t say that I would have survived and I will always be grateful that I did. Since this accident I have had a lot of anxiety on the road and have become hyper aware of the drivers around me. In another accident I was the passenger and we got rear ended due to the driver that hit us not paying attention to the road or the fact that traffic had stopped for construction. You never know when you might be the victim of an accident or the distracted driver, we must get out of the mindset that “it isn’t going to happen to me”. Although being in these accidents affected me in some negative ways I am grateful to still be able to live my life and be aware of how myself and others are driving. It has made driving with others a bit harder because I notice when people are braking, I look behind us to make sure the car behind us is going to stop, I wait a little extra to make sure someone doesn’t run a stop sign, and the list goes on.
At the end of the day going over the speed limit to get there a minute earlier is not worth crashing into a median, checking what someone texted you is not worth hitting an innocent pedestrian, driving with your knees to show off to friends isn’t worth losing them, not wearing a seatbelt in an Uber isn’t worth flying out of the car in a collision and the list goes on. The moral of the story is to encourage your loved ones to fasten their seatbelt, not rush to their destination, call a ride when they drink, and wait to answer that text until they stop. I think we can make a difference just in the way that we interact with people. Something that was really impactful in my life was having a boss that told us to never speed. Even when he noticed that employees were late over and over he never mentioned it to them because it was so important to him that they got to work safely. No, you shouldn’t consistently show up to your job late, but this one action could have saved lives. If he had reacted in a different way they may have felt like they had to speed and things could have gone much differently. So, before you get upset at someone for being late, also take the time to be glad they made it safely too. Take time to think about what small action you could change to make the roads a little bit more safe for yourself and the people you love.
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Steering Toward Safety: The Transformative Power of Driver Education
Emma Zinkowski