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Riding on Lincoln tonight, I had the pleasure of a car honking and passing within less than 12 inches. The man then rolled down his window at the stoplight to yell, "Ride in the bike lane, you idiot," to which I responded that the bike lane is covered with ice and please be aware of my safety, thank you. The ride was no fun at all.
Riding on Lincoln tonight, I had the pleasure of a car honking and passing within less than 12 inches. The man then rolled down his window at the stoplight to yell, "Ride in the bike lane, you idiot," to which I responded that the bike lane is covered with ice and please be aware of my safety, thank you. The ride was no fun at all.
Riding on Lincoln tonight, I had the pleasure of a car honking and passing within less than 12 inches. The man then rolled down his window at the stoplight to yell, "Ride in the bike lane, you idiot," to which I responded that the bike lane is covered with ice and please be aware of my safety, thank you. The ride was no fun at all.
I feel for you, Leslie - sorry you had such a bad commute! I surrendered to the cold a week or so ago and am not as adventurous when it comes to weather. Today when I was standing on the El platform watching the bikers, I was in awe and hoping they got to work OK!
Michael Malone said:Sorry to hear that Dottie! In that instance you are allowed to let out any aggression you have on the driver of the SUV. Really let him have it for being so ignorant (and for driving an SUV). Keep riding in the car lane, the cars are in our bike lane constantly.
Dottie said:Riding on Lincoln tonight, I had the pleasure of a car honking and passing within less than 12 inches. The man then rolled down his window at the stoplight to yell, "Ride in the bike lane, you idiot," to which I responded that the bike lane is covered with ice and please be aware of my safety, thank you. The ride was no fun at all.
I have to respectfully disagree on both points. Letting out aggression leaves the rider no less frustrated and the driver villified and has the potential to escalate.
Think about the fact that you're sitting in front of a computer telling someone else to place themself in the path of a vehicle.
Dottie handled the situation perfectly. If you have the opportunity, and succeed in letting the driver know exactly why they are wrong in a way that doesn't guarantee that they will not hear you, you've done about the best anyone can.
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