Monday
Miles: 8,376
Mood:
Confession #37- I hate the Salvation Army.
A Salvation Army truck was travelling through my neighborhood this morning. It was one of those big ones, not quite an 18-wheeler and in need of a hinged trailer, but not as small as the biggest U-Haul you can buy. I didn't measure it, so let's just say it was really big.
We came to a four-way stop at a fairly busy intersection that, for the moment, was empty (despite a few cars behind me and one that casually drifted a right turn to my left). So I stop, put my foot down, and head out into the intersection because the Salvation Army truck is still about 20 yards away. However I was watching it and, to my horror, realized it wasn't slowing down.
A few images flashed through my mind. The first was a picture of me, arms flailing, stuck under the Salvation Army truck yelling for help. Then me in the courtroom, being awarded a big settlement by the judge while I sat there helpless with broken legs and a big white neck collar that I didn't really need. Then of course the Salvation Army couldn't pay me in cash because, well, its the Salvation Army. So instead they pay me with old women's clothing and broken laminated furniture. This would be fine except there is not a single men's t-shirt to be found, and I have no intention of wearing a dress. Because folks, lets face it, by the time a man is ready to get rid of any piece of clothing, it has 30 holes, is torn in half, and has been used as an oil rag for 2 months. It goes in the trash; no one donates men's clothes (much to my disappointment upon a recent trip there).
No more will I go to the Salvation Army. I boycott them. How dare they nearly kill me and leave me with a garage stuffed with garbage and a mounting medical bill I can't pay.
Needless to say, the Salvation Army driver ran the stopsign without so much as a touch to the brake. I was in the middle of the intersection, honked my pathetic little horn, and watched them drive by. I looked up into that big safe cab of theirs and they didn't even look at me, but they sure were laughing!
To get my mind off the trauma, I decided (as I do often on my commute) to study traffic patterns. I have a new entry for the DSM, which brings me to 13 total new entries they have yet to officially publish (no doubt they are spending many years verifying my studious experiments - my journals are quite complex).
Friends and family are often impressed that I have added so much knowledge to the DSM, when I show them my home copy and point out my contributions. They are a bit confused as to why my entries are hand-written in the back pages or in the white margins and do not appear in other copies. I tell them this is a special copy distributed only Nobel Prize nominees...the room gets quiet and someone finally says "So...moving on..." Lets.
This one is filed as a compulsive disorder and I have a fancy name for it, "Excessive Lane-Changer Type Personality". There are some people who just change lanes obsessively. Constantly. Is there no relief?
These people are sick, they need help, they need to be cured. Here's how I see it. By changing lanes a small portion of your forward velocity is transferred to lateral velocity (assuming they do not accelerate to compensate, but of course that burns more fuel which is equally disasterous). Conservatively, lets say 1% of your forward speed is lost in every lane change. At 60mph for 60 minutes that's .6 mph that you have lost (or 21.6 seconds). It takes about 3 seconds to make a safe lane change, so we find that for each change you lose .006 seconds. Now on the average 30 minute commute a person may make 10 lane changes, losing .06 seconds. The Excessive Lane-Changer Type Personality changes 50 times, so they lose .3 seconds. Then they go home and lose another, that's .6 seconds. Now they drive 5 days a week, 52 weeks a year, for 40 years...thats 6,240 seconds that they have lose due to changing lanes, a good 4,992 seconds
above that of a normal, healthy, non-insane person.
Should we help these people who are losing over an hour of their life due to this disease? Of course we should...they need to be locked up under constant supervision. And just think how nicer traffic will be.
Just something to think about.