Ksa
Ex-Bluelighter
I am 31 y.o. and it happened to me so many times to drive with an older person, well in their 50s or 60s in the passenger seat and I noticed a weird pattern:
- On the highway, when someone is cutting off several lanes with signal on and speeding in between cars, they call them idiots, crazy, completely stupid and they don't understand what they're doing.
- On several occasions, on the highway or in town, especially when I'm passing a long trailer truck and moving between cars, some got scared to the point of wanting out, I had to calm them down.
From my vantage point, I can realize some drivers make sudden decisions and take some drastic actions, but I can certainly understand what they're doing and it all makes sense to me. To older people however, it's completely crazy, and they complain that more and more crazy people are on the road. This left me puzzled for a while, then I realized what may be the cause of this:
Older people, when they first drove a car in their young age, they had zero hours of driving simulation. For them, the perspective of moving landscape and objects was completely new. My generation however, when they first drove a car, they could have had up to 10,000 hours of behind the wheel driving simulation, thanks to games like Need For Speed or GTA, which allow them to do almost anything that's possible behind the wheel of a car, in a pretty realistic city environment with moving cars, people, buildings, traffic signs and everything else. They experienced every single thing that could go wrong from driving too fast and took direct corrective action within the game to avoid these situations.
It so happens that gamers who were exposed to these simulators are able to process a lot of information when driving a car. I know myself can process the position in time of over 10 different cars in the next 3, 5 and 10 seconds, which technically makes it very easy to move in between them and not hesitate in doing so. I also noticed that gamers always check their rear-view mirror, a lot more than older people, so they have a complete picture of what goes on behind, and in front.
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- On the highway, when someone is cutting off several lanes with signal on and speeding in between cars, they call them idiots, crazy, completely stupid and they don't understand what they're doing.
- On several occasions, on the highway or in town, especially when I'm passing a long trailer truck and moving between cars, some got scared to the point of wanting out, I had to calm them down.
From my vantage point, I can realize some drivers make sudden decisions and take some drastic actions, but I can certainly understand what they're doing and it all makes sense to me. To older people however, it's completely crazy, and they complain that more and more crazy people are on the road. This left me puzzled for a while, then I realized what may be the cause of this:
Older people, when they first drove a car in their young age, they had zero hours of driving simulation. For them, the perspective of moving landscape and objects was completely new. My generation however, when they first drove a car, they could have had up to 10,000 hours of behind the wheel driving simulation, thanks to games like Need For Speed or GTA, which allow them to do almost anything that's possible behind the wheel of a car, in a pretty realistic city environment with moving cars, people, buildings, traffic signs and everything else. They experienced every single thing that could go wrong from driving too fast and took direct corrective action within the game to avoid these situations.
It so happens that gamers who were exposed to these simulators are able to process a lot of information when driving a car. I know myself can process the position in time of over 10 different cars in the next 3, 5 and 10 seconds, which technically makes it very easy to move in between them and not hesitate in doing so. I also noticed that gamers always check their rear-view mirror, a lot more than older people, so they have a complete picture of what goes on behind, and in front.
Comment on this...