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Brief history of an Indian’s driving adventures in America
Posted by Yashika Totlani Khanna
on
8:32 PM
(This post is part of a series of write-ups about life in America, from an Indian’s perspective who recently moved to this country)
Ever since I was a child, I wanted to drive. I took to the
wheel very early and have been driving on the roads for over a decade now.
Driving in India was tough. Geared vehicles, heavy traffic and unruly two-wheelers.
What I never realized through those times was that the whole exercise was
preparing me to drive anywhere in the world. When we arrived in Chicago in
August 2013, the right-hand side driving intimidated me no end. We do not own a
car here, but those experiences riding in cabs rattled the day lights out of
me. I was horrified at the thought of eventually taking on the wheel and
steering myself on these roads. Unlike India, the left turn is a longer one and
the right turn is a shorter one. Your steering wheel is on the left-hand side
of the car and the fastest lane on the road is the left lane too. What scared
me more were the surplus traffic signs and instructions on every single inch of
this country. It’s all mapped out and a traffic violation can get you hefty
fines sometimes amounting to $500! Everyone strictly drives in their lanes and
the car’s odometer denotes distance in miles (and not kilometres).
So obviously, when I finally decided to take my driving test
in March this year, I was a bundle of nerves. We hired a car (with insurance –
which is a necessity for all vehicles here) and my husband gave me rudimentary
driving lessons before the real big day (he is a fantastic driver, even in the
US). I didn’t do great with the directions and my mind kept making me take
reckless left turns and long right turns. We practiced parallel parking as well.
I read and memorized the ‘Illinois – 2014 Rules of the Road’ guide by heart.
And then came the test. My documents were verified and after furnishing two
solid address proofs, came the vision test. I cleared that with ease. Next step
was the written test which also, luckily, went well. It comprised mostly of
identifying road signs and answering some questions about road safety (it’s
always safest to select the most secure option). In my preparation, I had learnt
amazing things like how everyone stopped their cars each time they saw a school
bus boarding/unboarding children. Things like the ‘right to road’ and ‘yield’
were all very important lessons for the long term. I learnt that white lane
lines meant one-way traffic and yellow center lines denote two-way traffic.
Solid yellow lines mean no overtaking and broken yellow lines mean that one can
overtake with caution. These learnings from carefully reading my road guide
helped me sail through the written test too. And then came the third and last
leg of my driving test travail. The actual driving test on the road with an
instructor. The instructor was an old, quirky guy (nothing like my gentle
lesson-giving husband) and after observing me drive for 15 long minutes, he
failed me. Yes, for the first time in my life, I had actually failed a driving
test. His reason – I was too slow. Obviously, I was gutted beyond belief. We
chose to keep the car for another day and give it one more shot (only one trial
is allowed per day). When we reached our parking spot the next morning, the car
had a parking ticket stuck to the windshield. Fine of $150. The spot didn’t
allow parking from 3am-6am. And obviously, because such a regulation was
counterintuitive, we were surprised but ended up paying the fine anyway.
Anyhow, my instructor was a friendly and warm young fellow this time who was
more than happy with my driving and didn’t even make me do the complicated
garage-reverse test. ‘I have seen enough’ is what he said. I was issued my
driving licence instantly and voila, I was now a licensed driver in America,
registered in the state of Illinois!
And thus started our most adventurous driving chronicles
ever. My husband and I decided to undertake a cross-country drive from Chicago to
New Jersey for the 4th of July holiday weekend. It involved 776
miles of driving (1249 kilometres) and cut across five states (Illinois,
Indiana, Ohio, Pennsylvania and New Jersey). This long adventure required us to
drive for 13 hours, one-way. We started off early in the morning and switched
the driver’s seat every two hours. Leave alone driving on an expressway in
America, I had never even driven on a highway in India! The roads though turned
out to be extremely smooth and the cruise-control feature on our automatic
sedan was a god-sent. We made three pit-stops for gas (I had packed food for the
journey in advance) and were able to make it to New Jersey by midnight (you
lose an hour when you go from Chicago to NJ because of a time-zone difference.
Even within the US, four different time zones operate. Such is the magnitude of
the land monstrosity in this country). Our 10-hour drive in the day was a cake walk.
Long easy sweeps of seamless roads. Right-most lane reserved for trucks and the
remaining lanes for cars. After my initial hesitation with the speeds (you can get
a ticket if you go slower than the minimum speed limit too), I was able to gain
firm control on the wheel. The minimum expressway speed limit is set at 45mph
in most cases. The maximum is set between 70-80mph in most states too (rules
and laws changes in every state). It is however common practice to reach a
speed limit of 10mph over your permitted speed limit and set your car to cruise
control, the auto-pilot. Once you set the speed, you are almost sure that you
won’t over speed and hence save yourself the trouble of being caught by a state
trooper (term used here for a traffic cop). The state of Ohio had a state
trooper parked after almost every five miles, reading people’s cruising speeds.
The state of Pennsylvania had deep gorges and was beautiful to drive through
and click. The last three hours of our journey, however, involved driving
through the night. Those were probably the most taxing moments. Craning our
necks to follow the yellow lines blindly on the road. We passed a fog-zone too
where the windscreen totally fogged up and we had to stop to clean it up. Deer
zones were crossed too, where actual deer can actually jump out into the middle
of the road and sometimes ram into your car. Finally after both of us had
rendered stiff unbearable necks, we made it to our destination. The weekend
with family was sheer bliss. For the drive back, we made full use of the
daylight (summer days here stretch from 5am to 9pm) and didn’t have to drive at
all at night. Crazy story to tell our kids… check.
The next drive happened between Houston and Dallas on a trip
to Texas. This time our car was a hatch-back and the drive was just 4-hours
long. It almost ended too soon for us and we got just 2 hours each behind the
wheel. The roads were the same stretches of butter (metaphorically, of course)
and the drive was as big a joy as the last one. Except that it was much hotter,
because this was scorching Texas.
We now occasionally rent a car to drive around Chicago and
get chores done. My fear of driving in America has evaporated progressively
through this one year. I now find it easier and much more enjoyable than
driving in India. People are civil and no one flouts traffic rules (mostly).
911 is at your service in case you ever meet with an accident (which we
haven’t, thankfully) and the non-geared automatic cars are a delight. I have
finally made peace with right-hand side driving and having the driver’s seat on
the left-hand side of the car. I am amazed at how the road network has been so
evenly laid out all across the USA. At some places, I have seen as many as
seven fly-overs stacked one on top of another. The word ‘urbanization’ had swirled
in my head several times. My new worry is an upcoming trip to India and how I
would adjust back to driving on unruly roads with violent traffic and geared
cars. But at least I feel elated with the realization that I am now equipped to
drive easily anywhere else in the world :) A little bravado goes a long way in
liberating you from your fears. Always make the extra effort!