Published in The Hindu Open Page
Surviving road rage
The heat and dust on thoroughfares despite signals and wardens
October 22, 2023 12:45 am | Updated 12:45 am IST
Many consider traffic signals as
suggestions, leaving it to their discretion to jump the signal or not. | Photo
Credit: Getty Images/iStockphoto
You honked a second before you
noticed the sign “Silence Zone. No Horn”. Without a horn, there is no way to
attract the attention of the jay-walking folks intent on mobile phones.
We consider traffic signals as suggestions,
leaving it to our discretion to jump the signal or not, especially if the
signal is manned by traffic wardens — the poor souls burdened with
responsibility devoid of authority. At unmanned signals, it’s a psychological
war between the strictly complying motorist who heeds the red light, and the
nothing-is-off-limits trucker who is running late.
You are in the middle of a cluster of
vehicles at a red light. The countdown of the signal has begun from 120, while
more vehicles arrive behind. You switch off the engine, as do many other
vehicles. When the countdown arrives at 60, there is a single beep from behind.
It’s some trigger-happy driver’s force of habit. Irritated, you try to locate
the perpetrator, dramatically swivelling your head. You glare at him, which
unsettles him, and he furrows his brows and acts as if that beep was an
accidental touch on the horn. When the countdown reaches 20, there is a general
impatient shuffle of vehicles, for nothing. When the countdown reaches 10,
there are several beeps, the consensus being that countdown 10 is as good as a
green signal. In spite of that, when the actual green signal does come on, the
driver of one of the frontline cars is busy texting on his mobile, and the car
next to him has stalled. Both of them receive a lifetime’s worth of colourful
curses thrown at them from other drivers.
Any monster truck, dented, corroded,
soot-stained, rattling and belching smoke, ticks all the boxes of fear. Right
now you are cruising far ahead of such a truck visible in your rear-view
mirror. A hundred metres in front, you see the amber light has come on. You
slow down and know that you would be the first to halt at the red light. That
truck is now tailgating you. There is no space for it to get ahead. The driver
intends to beat the amber light, and you are in the way. He floors the accelerator
just when you apply the brakes. The rest is road statistics.
https://www.thehindu.com/opinion/open-page/surviving-road-rage/article67427606.ece

many a time felt this situation. wondering then what to do ... to stop or not to stop!
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