The tribe just returned to the wig-wam from a road trip. This gave birth to a succinct, three point sermon. None of these points, no doubt, apply to my above-average readers, which means they will be wasted breath, except for the therapeutic effect on the preacher, but here goes:
#1. If you are driving, drive.
You would think this would be a no-brainer, but apparently not.
If you come up on somebody driving 7 degrees slower than anyone else, with a biggish gap between himself and the car in front of him, as likely as not when you pull around him he will be texting.
Just stop, people. It makes no sense to be doing that and navigating a two ton machine with your leftover brain. At the very least you impede the smooth flow of traffic. At most you endanger your life and the life of everyone else in proximity. Put your phone down and drive. You don't have to be communicating 24/7, world without perceivable end. You can sit there and drive. You can.
#2. Pay attention and be thoughtful.
There are other people on the road besides you.
If you are going down a two-lane interstate don't pull adjacent to someone in the right hand lane and just hover there. Go around him. If he's going too fast to pass, slow down and pull in behind him. Don't sit there while traffic piles up behind you mile after oblivious mile. If you are the innocent party in the right-hand lane and somebody pulls next to you and stays there, don't be contrary just because you're not doing anything wrong. Be a sweetie. Hit the brake or the gas till the people behind you can pass. It won't kill you to reset your cruise.
#3 Stopping to merge is not smart.
If traffic is fast and heavy, the gaps are already precious. It takes a FAR LARGER gap to merge when you are creeping, and the chances of you finding one plummet if you are at a standstill.
Matching your speed to the traffic is the way to go. Unless traffic is truly bumper to bumper and there is no where to get in, period, put on your signal light, and merge. Just do it. The traveling public will thank you. Amen.
Would the song leader please lead us in a song?
I loved this! Didn't it make you feel a little better to just have expressed how everything could be done better? It reminded me of one I wrote a few years ago, on Hospital Reform after a couple of nights in the hospital turned me into an expert. You might get a laugh out of that http://drawingotherstochrist.blogspot.com/search/label/hospital%20reform
ReplyDelete~ Vicki
This was too funny. I thought surely my husband must have written a guest post for you! :) I promptly shared it with him so he could give you a hearty, un-mennonite, "Amen. Preach it, sister!!" :) :)
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