C
Cyclezee
Guest
Kind of guessed that was what you would come back with TonyI smiled as I posted before, knowing that I would get this answer in one form or another John. The fact is that even this is partly under one's control as I've posted previously. So here once again:
In the early years of my driving I suffered three collisions with other vehicles, two minor one with a bit more car damage and each time the other driver admitting blame without argument. But at the time I'd been riding many more miles on motorbikes without any incidents, despite being on the same roads and journeys. Thinking about this it struck me that I must be playing a part in that outcome, there being no other possible explanation.
I took the trouble to return to the scene of that last and worst incident to study the situation and consider the whole event. From that I was able to see some ways that behaving slightly differently could have avoided any collision and another that could have alleviated the outcome, despite the other driver's clear mistake.
So I changed some things then and also started to refer to myself always as a learner driver since I'd just found after several years that there was always more to learn. That was 49 years ago and I've never had another incident since when driving cars or trucks or riding motorbikes. That is clear proof that we can also affect the outcomes of others bad behaviour on the roads.
The comeback as always may well be someone saying that an accident can always happen. Of course, anything can, a piece of an aircraft might drop on me, a part may fall from a building and kill me, a sink hole may open and swallow me, but all are too unlikely for me to take any precautions against them.
Likewise as my life has shown throughout, the chance of my suffering a life changing head injury while cycling is also highly unlikely.
There is far too much hysteria and exaggeration on this subject. Each year around 13 cyclists die in London while there are some 144 million commuting journeys alone, clearly the risks are incredibly low, and it's interesting that nearly all those cyclists were body crushed to death, not killed by head injuries.
I'll end with another example of how road users can influence accident incidence. Up to near the end of June this year 7 London cyclists had died in collision with trucks and I was one of many kicking up a fuss about this, though I advocated publicity as the answer while others tended to blame trucks and drivers.
We got the publicity but the trucks and drivers are still there and just the same. The outcome is that there hasn't been another cyclist killed in any traffic accident in London in this second half, showing how just making people think can solve the problem.
That's primary safety, not having the accident in the first place, rather than the secondary safety of effort concentrated on alleviating accident outcomes instead of the effort being on preventing them.
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Once more we will just have to agree to differ on this topic.