interesting thread about how much to tell your SO about your riding, and observances about distracted drivers. what can we do about it?
last week, me and the kid are out for a nice leisurely ride. We're on the bike path on a bridge and traffic is slowing. Right beside us, a car screeches to a halt, just barely misses plowing into the back of a pickup truck. I look over, the kid is texting. Roll over, knock on his window, and ask him to please don't text and drive. He says "i'm just GPS'ing" (as if that makes any difference). Tempers flare, words are exchanged. I tell him texting and driving is stupid and dangerous (forgot to mention illegal) and that i'd like to grow old enough to see my kid grow up and meet my grandkids. A bit hyperbolic, sure, but by this point i'm shaking with rage.
Thing is, i see it all the time along this stretch of road. Traffic is backed up and the bike path is a major transit to the good riding areas. Easily one or two out of every car i pass that is sitting still the driver is on a device.
So, we both continue on our way. Feeling badly for losing my cool, I figure i should go apologize thinking perhaps there was some overreaction on my part. The car is now waiting for the light further on, so I roll up and am about to say sorry when what do i see? He's still fooking texting! Now i just complete lose it on his punk ass. By the end he exasperatedly put the phone aside mostly out of fear at this raving, foaming-mouth lunatic cyclist.
I'm not proud of my behaviour and am wondering how would you handle these kinds of situations? Do you think a "Please don't text and drive" card slipped under their windshield wiper work? I don't think confrontation works. People feel entitled and immediately get defensive and it's too easy for the situation to escalate. What are the best words to use? It's so hard to not let it become an emotionally-explosive situation.
Really, texting and driving is fast becoming an epidemic (if not already), and it's not long until one of us falls under the wheels of their distracted-driving, don't-give-a-$4it asses.
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/09/14/b...ation.html