Author Topic: Look mum no L plate

Look mum no L plate
« on: May 04, 2013 »
The blind spot blues


No thanks, I just ate

"Can you honk the horn please?" asks the man with the clipboard after enquiring of me how to check tyre pressure. Yes Sir. Show and tell over, he settles in to ride shotgun. "Go left." Mirror Signal Manoeuvre, Sir Yes Sir. Roads may have not been built for cars, but Tunbridge Wells is full of them today. Even if it wasn't, I must be observed to be observing. Schrödinger would approve.

Left, right, left, and on it goes, not a particularly exciting ride until The Event. I start turning into a street which is really a parking lot with a narrow corridor as a courtesy to those of us going somewhere. Suddenly another vehicle appears dead ahead. The rear end of my clown car is sticking out into the 4-way intersection and I'm completely stuck, an embarrassed jetty in the eddy of traffic. All I can do is keep an eye on everything and make slight adjustments so the other guy can pass.



"I've just failed," I mutter miserably. As a human being, I almost want to add. We carry on until he says to pull over to the kerb. "You haven't failed," he says. "That wasn't your fault."

Does he mean it, or is this merely an act of mercy so the rest of our ride isn't covered by a dark cloud on this otherwise beautiful afternoon? Whatever the case, ample time remains to screw up. Even with a lot of driving experience under my belt (got my license across the pond years ago) it's still possible to make a mistake. I don't, unless you count giving a pedestrian right of way because his body language told me he just might be stepping off the pavement.



"You didn't check your mirror when you stopped," says clipboard man later. That's because I was busy making sure I didn't end up with a young lad under my wheels, I want to say, but don't, because at the end of the ride he signs off on me, making him my new best friend.

Back at the test centre I could kiss my driving instructor. We shake hands instead. We've been through so much together. She's heard an abridged version of my hopes and dreams. She's listened to me vent. She's the one who informed me that Maggie Thatcher had died just as we were about to start a lesson. She's been drill instructor and personal Sat Nav from hell: "Check your mirrors." "Handbrake on." "Faster." (As a cyclist I don't care for that last one, but the system likes you to be near the speed limit. And we wonder why speed is a problem.)



Once upon a time she was the better half of half of Wang Chung, which has little to do with my (re)induction into the league of motorists but is one of those random scraps of information I love to collect. I've been taught to drive – correction: I've been taught how to pass the test – by somebody once married to a verb. Cool.


because everybody Tom Jonesed yesterday