I was out driving the other day, and someone overtook me in a lovely Porsche 911 Carrera S. I looked across as it glided past, and at the driver at the wheel, and thought “what have you done to deserve that car?” Not in a judgemental way, mind you, but it got me thinking.
In many car racing computer games your entitlement to drive particular classes of car has to be earned through proving your driving skill, rather than just the accumulation of money. It strikes me that actually this is a fair and sensible approach, and one that highlights just how inadequate and antiquated our current system is. At the moment we only have one driving test, which is a simple yes/no answer to the question “did this person meet the minimum requirements on the day of the test”. The same driving test entitles someone to drive a rusty old Vauxhall Corsa, or a Bugatti Veyron. There’s something wrong there, methinks.
And so, as I drove along in my Ford Escort, I worked out the finer details of my idea to revolutionise driving tests, licences and car manufacture. To my surprise and delight, it looks like it might actually be a good idea!
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This post could also easily have been entitled “Why I’ve had nursery rhymes going round and round in my head for the last few days”. But that’s a bit of a long title. And it has nothing to do with television.
I like to think of myself as a Driver. Not just someone who happens to drive, mind you, an actual Driver. With a capital D. I see a car not as an object or a tool to be controlled, but as an extension of my own body. The wheels are my limbs, gripping to the road and telling me all about the road surface. The engine is a muscle, delivering power when and how I determine, and which needs rest and exercise to operate properly. And the driver’s seat, the steering wheel, the pedals, the gear stick, are all part of my central nervous system, delivering the impulses from my brain to the respective parts of the extended body. Driving, for me, is not about getting from A to B – it’s about living life in an augmented reality.