As a teen I often get stereotyped as a bad driver but this is a very unfair judgment. The fact is I have helped prevent accidents the closest I have ever been to being in an accident was the fault of an older gentleman. Still the numbers do not lie teens have the most accidents of any age bracket. Why do teens have the highest accident rate? I believe it is because of inexperience not bad habits. Most teens have only been driving for a very short time, if at all, when they receive their license this leads to accidents. People get bad diving habits from being in a hurry or just being lazy they are not natural. When people are in a hurry and shave while they are driving once and they get away with it, they are likely to do it again in an effort to save time even it they are not in a hurry.
Observing my father who has been driving for 30 year and my little brother who has had his permit for 5 months I have noticed my father has many more bad driving habits. My father will not signal while switching lanes, drink coffee while driving or even talk on the cell phone in heavy traffic. These habits are not exclusive to my father ether may adults develop bad habits such as these. Many drivers young and old seem to be getting worse and worse at judging distance. I cannot count how many times I have been tailgated, illegally passed had a close call T-boning, or high beamed all form motorists who cannot judge distance. Tailgaters seem to be the most dangerous drivers of all.
The Essay on Bad Driving Habits
Thousands of people are killed in car accidents every year. There are an assortment of reasons why; from driving drunk to even falling asleep at the wheel. The main reason that most people are killed in car accidents each year is because most people have very bad driving habits, and the main of these people are teenagers. Many teens believe themselves to be immortal, so they feel they can do ...
When a tailgater gets behind you on a wet road your best bet is to pull off and let them pass because tailgaters are where 50 car pile-ups come from. Most T-bone collisions could be avoided if drivers would allow larger gaps when pulling out of a store or going though and intersection. Some drivers in this sea of horrible ones seem to be retaining good driving habits. Just the other day I needed to turn into a store off of a two-lane road and a kind gentleman let me into the parking lot, by stopping short of the driveway. Most people with little cars have no idea how much more room it takes to swing a bus or truck when turning most drivers box them in. Last week I saw a car stop 100 feet back from an intersection to let a bus turn just out of courtesy.
Drivers of all sorts share our roads the good ones and the bad ones. At all times alertness is required and attention must be paid in order to arrive safely. Drivers’ habits under the currant trends will only get worse and the few courteous will become few and far between. Civility must also not be taken for granted on the road use opportunities as they come..