twoWDWfools
No, I don't think I'm done quite yet.
- Joined
- Jan 23, 2008
- Messages
- 1,278
After an incident on my way in today, I feel compelled to remind people of the dangers of being on your cell while driving.
I was riding my Silver Wing on the tollway in a construction zone this morning. I was in the left hand lane which had been the shoulder so there are concrete barriers along the left. As I started to come up on the person in the center lane noticed she was on her cell phone. I was up just behind her shoulder - literally if she had so much as glanced over to the left she would've seen me. However, she had her phone plastered to her left ear so without signaling or looking she began to quickly change lanes into me.
I hit the horn, slid as far left as I could and started to accelerate. The driver behind me hit his horn. She ignored both and continued to move over. At this point she should've been able to see me w/o turning her head but apparently the conversation was far more important. As I cleared the front of her car, horn still blowing from the car behind, she looked surprised. I had to pull off the road for a bit to calm back down.
I've seen car accidents happen the same way. Phone on left ear, no signal since no free hand, not looking over because phone is there and they pull right into another car. If she had slammed over any faster I would've been caught between her car and the wall.
Please, please, please....do not talk while driving!
I was riding my Silver Wing on the tollway in a construction zone this morning. I was in the left hand lane which had been the shoulder so there are concrete barriers along the left. As I started to come up on the person in the center lane noticed she was on her cell phone. I was up just behind her shoulder - literally if she had so much as glanced over to the left she would've seen me. However, she had her phone plastered to her left ear so without signaling or looking she began to quickly change lanes into me.
I hit the horn, slid as far left as I could and started to accelerate. The driver behind me hit his horn. She ignored both and continued to move over. At this point she should've been able to see me w/o turning her head but apparently the conversation was far more important. As I cleared the front of her car, horn still blowing from the car behind, she looked surprised. I had to pull off the road for a bit to calm back down.
I've seen car accidents happen the same way. Phone on left ear, no signal since no free hand, not looking over because phone is there and they pull right into another car. If she had slammed over any faster I would've been caught between her car and the wall.
Please, please, please....do not talk while driving!