Aggressive Driving (Road Rage)
ACTUAL INCIDENT
A 29-year-old man was shot to death, an apparent victim of
road rage. According to newspaper accounts, he had a reputation for never
backing down from a fight.
The man and his half brother were heading home from a
plumbing job when the trouble began. Apparently, three men in another car
zoomed in front of their car. These men started hurling profanities and
flashing obscene gestures at the brothers, who returned the insults.
Things escalated
until a gun was pulled. The man got out of his car and began walking toward the
gunman. Two shots rang out, missing the man, who continued to walk toward the
gunman until he was shot and killed.
QUESTIONS
* What comments do you have about this incident?
*What could have been
done?
*Have you ever felt
this way while driving?
*According to the AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety,
incidents of aggressive driving have increased by 7% every year since 1990;
however, few courts mandate anger management treatment for traffic offenders.
FIVE ZONES OF AGGRESSIVE DRIVING
THE UNFRIENDLY ZONE -
Closing ranks to deny someone entering your lane because you're frustrated or
upset.
HOSTILE ZONE - Tailgating to pressure another driver to go
faster or get out of the way.
VIOLENT ZONE - Making visible obscene gestures at another
driver.
MINOR MAYHEM ZONE - Pursuing other cars in a chase because
of provocation or insult.
MAJOR MAYHEM ZONE - Getting out of the car and beating or
battering someone as a result of a road exchange.
DO AGGRESSIVE DRIVERS SEE THEMSELVES AS AGGRESSIVE?
*Zones established by
Dr Leon James, University of Hawaii • Drivers who consider themselves as
almost perfect (with no room to improve) also confessed to significantly more
aggressiveness than drivers who see themselves as still improving.
• 2 out of 3 drivers
still insist on seeing themselves as near-perfect drivers with almost no room
to improve.
• Aggressive drivers see "the other guy" as the
problem and thus do not look at their own aggressive driving behaviour.
WHAT CAUSES AGGRESSIVE DRIVING BEHAVIOR?
• Many psychologists
see anger as the root cause of the problem.
• It is ultimately
our emotional state, our stress levels and the thinking patterns that either
cause us to drive aggressively or lead us to be the victims of others.
• Driving under the
influence of impaired emotions, especially anger.
• It is a behavioural
choice that drivers make.
• Some drivers do not know how to deal effectively with
angry feelings and how to cope with the situation.
TWO WAYS TO COPE WITH IMPAIRED DRIVING EMOTIONS
1. REDUCE YOUR
STRESS. Driving is emotionally challenging because you constantly have to cope
with unexpected things. Being in a
hurry and driving on congested roads adds to our general stress level.
Suggestions include listening to relaxing music or educational tapes on the
road, leaving 15 minutes sooner, and getting up earlier so you are less rushed.
2. CHANGE YOUR PERSPECTIVE with different “self-talk.” As a
result of life experiences, we all have "automatic" thoughts that are
generated by our mind when certain "triggers" occur when driving. We
can change our perspective and thus our angry feelings by consciously changing
this "self-talk." For example, that driver you just cut you off in
traffic might be a single mother who worked nine hours that day and is rushing
home to cook dinner, help with homework, do the laundry and spend some time
with her children.
CONCLUSION
• Make a personal decision to cope with your angry feelings
in a more effective way.
• Reduce your stress
level.
• Learn to change your self-talk.
• Avoid aggressive
driving situations or becoming the victim of another aggressive driver.
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