driving and texting my dog, oh my …
19. 01. 2010 um 16:46 UhrThe pool is green and murky. Part of me wants to egg it on. I want to see if it can grow something, see if something scaly can hatch and swim around. Part of me, though, wants to call Bob because he’ll fix it. He’ll dispense with the murk, he’ll fix contraptions that need fixed, he’ll make the pool blue again. Bob lives in Lafayette. I want Bob to fix the screen door, too, but that seems inappropriate. The screen door blew off the wall. There was a windy night, maybe Saturday, and the hinges ripped out and the doorframe splintered up. One time X. kicked a door in to open it because it locked itself and no one had a key, and that door did the same thing. It splintered the doorframe, it damaged a hinge. That was the door to where laundry goes if you want to come look.
That’s just noise, though, it’s Oregon who’s on my mind. Oregon, a couple weeks ago, told a bunch of us (the ones who live here) that we can’t drive and text. They said we can’t drive and talk either, (without a headset) but I rarely talk so that doesn’t affect me. The texting thing, well … that’s a problem, I’ll tell you why. It’s been shown in studies, I’m sure, and therefore accepted, that texting while driving (TWD) is safer when done openly with the gadget balanced in some fashion on the wheel, than when it’s done covertly below the seat which requires one’s attention to be almost completely away from the road.
Oregon, try this experiment. Right now drive to Safeway to get milk (non-fat, please, a gallon). And on your way there send me two texts. Type the first one wide open in everyone’s full view. You’ll hold the device near your vision, I bet, and you’ll still be facing the road. You’ll find this simple and safe, you’ll feel relaxed. The second text, however, please type out slyly. Type it so nobody sees, below the dashboard perhaps. Then tell me which text caused a wreck. Oh, really? The second one? Yes, that’s my point.
This morning I had Scruffy on my arm and the motorcycle police in back as I tried to covertly text. I am telling you Oregon, no one benefits from this. Certainly not Scruffy. He had to steer. T. says he stops driving to text. He stops and pulls over and texts from one side of the road. This is fine, I suppose, until sides of roads are all full and there’s nowhere to stop. Then what? K. has her children type the texts for her. This is fine, too, I guess, though my texts are sexually explicit and usually involve bugs. My kids might have trouble with spellings.
L. is meeting me somewhere very soon so I need to go now so I can walk. I’m not walking so I can text freely, without blame, but for the air, it’s nice outside.
(While I’m gone, there are dirty water glasses in the small house. They must be carried to the kitchen. Thanks, people. I owe you one.)
