10. Parking in Illegal Areas
Despite the fact that most parking areas are monitored fairly
closely, drivers continue to park where they shouldn’t This includes
handicap parking spaces, red zones, along curbs outside of
clearly-marked legal parking hours, and so on. Having your car towed can
be expensive, so even if you’ve gotten away with illegal parking in the
past, you should resist the urge to park “just for five minutes” in
restricted areas.
9. Accelerating Through Yellow Lights
Sure, it might be exhilarating to speed up in order to make it
through a light, but often you don’t quite make it, and you end up
holding up other drivers who actually have the green light. This is a
bad habit to have, as it could lead to major collisions. Some lights are
longer than others, so you may think that you have time to make it when
you really don’t. Do the responsible thing and slow down when the light
turns yellow if you’ve got room to stop.
8. Ignoring Traffic Signs
Do you blow through stop signs or fail to yield when it’s required of
you? Those signs are there for a reason, and even if no one’s
around, you should obey them. You never know when a car or pedestrian
might come out of nowhere, or even a cop!
7. Not Checking Blind Spots
Blind spots are implicitly dangerous, but not even trying to check
them is more dangerous. Drivers who don’t look have a tendency to start
moving over into other lanes and nearly colliding with other cars; this
can cause, at the very least, anxiety and distraction, and at the most, a
serious car accident. Always be sure to not only check the appropriate
mirror when switching lanes, but to glance over your shoulder too to
make sure the coast is clear.
6. Merging Improperly
How many times have you been on a freeway onramp and found yourself
behind someone who doesn’t understand how to merge? They let car after
car zoom past them, thinking they’re being polite, when really, they’re
holding up the flow of traffic.
By the same token, there are motorists who don’t know how to be
patient. They seem to think that racing to the front of a line of cars
getting on the freeway, when they know that the lane merges, is
acceptable behavior. This is wrong too, and shouldn’t be put into
practice!
5. Not Using Turn Signals
If you don’t tell other people where you’re going, how can you expect
them to know? Changing lanes or turning without signaling throws others
off, and it could put you in harm’s way. The worst is when drivers slow
down to turn without putting their blinker on: this can catch the cars
behind them off guard, and the offending individual could get
rear-ended.
4. Cutting Other Cars Off
When you’re in a hurry, you often wish that the roads were completely
clear so that you could zoom right through. But this is seldom the
case, and weaving between lanes without regard for others is downright
hazardous. You run the risk of being hit from behind if the driver
you’re cutting off isn’t paying attention, and if you’re going too fast
and squeezing between two cars, you could end up slamming into the car
ahead of you. Don’t put yourself in this situation!
3. Tailgating
Tailgating is maddening for both parties involved. The driver in
front is annoyed that the person behind them won’t stay off their
bumper, and the driver in back of him is annoyed that he can’t go any
faster. Why create this tension? After all, tailgating can lead to car
accidents AND it can lead to intentional vindictive actions, like brake
checking. If you want to go faster, pass the car ahead of you in another
lane if it is safe to do so, but keep a safe distance if it is not.
Remember the two-second rule!
2. Speeding
Okay, we all do this once in a while. But that doesn’t make it okay!
Driving above the speed limit is one of the biggest reasons car
accidents happen, and it leads to many of the other behaviours on this
list. Just think: how many bad incidents would be prevented if we all
adhered to posted speed limits?
1. Using Your Cell Phone While Driving
This is the big one, and unfortunately it’s become common among most
drivers out there nowadays. While talking on your cell phone may be
legal in some places under certain circumstances, it’s still a bad habit
to have. It can be tempting when that ringtone goes off while you’re
behind the wheel, but it’s better to resist the urge to answer. Talking
while on your cell phone is distracting, and distracted driving is
dangerous driving;
it puts you and others at risk. And don’t even get us started on
texting while driving! That’s got to be the biggest no-no of all.
That’s because reports
have been coming out recently that have added to the anti-cell phone
message for drivers. If cell phone use while driving has become a nasty
habit for you, or you just want to learn more about how it affects your
driving, consider taking a
defensive driving course.
Source: I Drive Safely
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