smstonypoint
Super Member
- Joined
- Oct 13, 2009
- Messages
- 6,119
- Location
- SC (Upstate) & NC (Piedmont)
- Tractor
- NH TN 55, Kubota B2320 & RTV 900, Bad Boy Outlaw ZTR
Anyone else see the amazing irony in that second one?
Anyone else see the amazing irony in that second one?
Hopefully it's photoshopped
I rarely even talk on the phone while driving
I've noticed the same thing. I used to enjoy the scenery while taking a motorcycle ride. Now I need to more actively watch the road. It seems like my multitasking skills have deteriorated with time. If something else catches my attention, I'm more apt to get mentally locked onto that one thing.Heck, I can hardly gawk about noticing a field or a tractor at work,..........without swaying on the road. I try to avoid even that curiosity. It seems like, if I look "left" then I steer "left", vice a versa. Maybe it is an age related disorder, yet I've seen younger fellas do the same thing on narrow country roads. That scares the hellz out of me, when I see it coming.
Until I bought my current F150 with which I can answer calls or make calls without taking my hands off the steering wheel, I just wouldn't use my cell phone at all when driving. Whether it was receiving or making a call, I just got out of traffic and stopped to use the cell phone.
It isn't the holding of the phone that is the problem. Just talking on it takes you attention off the road. There is no such thing as multitasking while driving - you are either driving or paying attention to whatever else you are doing. The brain is wired for sequention, not simultaneous, functions.
I saw one clip of a test in a simulator, red light at eye level on the screen. Subject was text and to touch the brake every time the red light came on.. He missed over half the lights.
Harry K
I agree with turnkey4099. Maybe some other folks are different, but I cannot carry on a serious conversation, either on a phone or with someone else in the car, and pay adequate attention to the road.