Sir John Whitmore also wrote a thought-provoking piece today.
Quote:
Driving is so normal - that we are lulled into forgetting the hair -trigger response and power of the machine in our hands. We simply do not take the lethal potential of the car seriously enough
Both Wildy

and self told our eldest the same as our teachers told us - the car can kill - and the moment you set off - if you do not apply COAST - you can kill someone.

William took the message seriously - but let's not forget - he knows what happened to his Uncle Ferdl and his Mama.

In this - he has an advantage over his peers - but his younger brother is a very different animal - and I tread much more carefully as a Papa with this one.
Think I'm winning - think, hope, pray it's just the
teenage strop and challenge phase
I stress - he's a good decent lad - and I am sure his hormones will settle before he turns 17. He's simply going through the normal "challenge his Papa" stage as I did and we all did before him. He's normal and I'd be more worried if he did not try me out.
This bit is very very important
Quote:

IG has passed coment on here in the past and to me in person

The widow of the man who hit Wildy - so full of remorse and guilt. We try to tell her we forgive. We have her and her family to share our Christmas with us and we have her stay with us for a holiday as well. We hope to show her that my wife recovered and she has no need to feel so upset. She still beats and blames herself for not taking the car keys

that day.
Not her fault. NOT his fault - and if Wildy had died that day - her legacy would have left me with kids to be proud of and her work to that point would have survived her as well. Yes - speak from my heart - not my head - perhaps - on this!
But too little consideration is given to person who causes a fatal.

He's a human being and a civilised society has to take this into account.
I see what Sir John is getting at.
Quote:
I am no condoning careless driving / But accidents are not deliberate and before we condemn we should consider what level of concentration, competence we expect, bearing in mind our own complacency
I have to say - I find myself very much in agreement here. True drivers and cyclists evaluate each drive and ride.
Sir John wonders about advanced training and even asks
Quote:
How would we feel if a small error results in monstrous consequences? Is our refusal to do with avoiding an uncomfortable truth about ourselves?
Indeed.

And I seem to recall posting a similar thought in the early days of this forum when our Paul broached this very subject for discussion.
You heard it debated on this site first!
Sir John poignantly recalls how he felt responsible for two skiers marooned off piste in the mountains and asks how we can make drivers feel this each time they get behind wheel when feeling tired, ill or under influence of drink and drugs.
He goes on to remark that 17 year old boys in particular are eligible to drive before the safety conscious part of brains have kicked into place and asks how we can reduce risk whilst still allowing boys to be – well
boys
As a Papa – consider myself to be firm, friendly and open to my growing kids. I encourage them to ask questions and I would worry if they did not challenge

my authority over them as I do consider this to be normal behaviour,
But from toddler stage – followed the Swiss/IG example of constant safety led guidance
Quote:
The reality is that the majority of drivers are unwilling to change because they do not understand the risks or see the problem as someone else’s fault and thus the accident was unavoidable
Um – it also applies to cyclists – realise that ed.m , Cyclist and Peyote may pick up on me as “slating posters elsewhere”

but I cannot get over the fact that so many of them come across as “holier than thou “

and unwilling

to accept that cyclists as well as drivers make mistakes of abhorrent magnitude!
In my mind – all road users must take and share responsibility for safety and COAST does seem a more comprehensive safety approach – simply because following the code inevitably leads to driving and riding at safest speed for the conditions

– which may be at limit or below in an urban situation - and in the case of fast dual carriageway road – maybe just above!
IG, self and the Swiss mob are trying to pass on an important message in COAST – which is part of DIS and Speed Awares

- the latter from things IG showed me on social calls to my home and from the Speed Aware Assess form - courtesy of Wildy's colleagues,
Sir John asks who decides the acceptable ratio – given that someone has to explain to bereaved of both parties – and let’s face facts here. – I have never ever forgotten the day the officer told me about my wife nor the second we heard about Ferdl

and I would be equally shocked to the core if my kids caused or were victims of an accident of any kind.
Thus – my wife and self have spent some time spelling it out to them. I think - and still reinforce it - they have the message – even my more lippy/laddy second son!
Sir John wonders whether or not we should invest in technology to limit the speed of our young.

. Well - they can drive on motorways at 70 mph - so how would you stop a silly speed on a urban if you limited the car to 70 mph per NSL dual

- and what happens if you travel abroad where the motorway limit is 81.25 mph in the dry?
Sir John does ask what – as a society are we willing to pay to save a life?
Speaking as a consultant doctor who engages in a bitter argument over funding, beds, budget, available prescriptions, etc on a daily basis – I’d say very little. :furiusL
Or rather the government seems to talk a lot and do little to deliver. – and society’s fault lies in political apathy in not voting this idiot out of office when they had the chance/

:fiurious:
Sir John finally asks whether or not we are prepared to invest in advanced training and riding lessons as he does not know what else we could do.
Nor do we – Sir John – but we do think some kind of periodic assessment – COAST basei and with some kind of reward in reduced insureance costs could help rather than hinder.
