Seeing Things

I was waiting for an appointment the other day when I struck up a conversation with another woman in the lobby. She noticed my bike helmet and the conversation quickly turned to a discussion of cars versus cyclists.

It was just on of those casual conversations you have with a stranger in passing. After voicing the usual complaint about cyclists never stopping for red lights she added that she just “was not looking for cyclists.”

I started thinking about the word “looking.” Do drivers only see what they are looking for? And are they only looking for other cars? Which would mean, to a driver, a city intersection looks like this:

Seeing Things: Driver's POV

But when I bike through an intersection I am not looking for anything. I am seeing everything. If I were to travel through same intersection at the same moment I might see something like this:

Seeing Things: Cyclist's POV

But I probably see every street like this because I have to compensate for what the drivers are not looking for.

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52 comments

  • Marianna February 23, 2012  

    Human nature aside, I think, at this point, in Boston, people SHOULD be looking for bikes, cause they’re friggin everywhere.

  • Julie February 23, 2012  

    This makes me shit my scardey pants a little bit. We’re screwed!

  • Jon Banks February 23, 2012  

    I don’t think it’s completely fair to say that drivers only see what they are expecting and that cyclists see everything. Drivers are certainly at a disadvantage for seeing things, being inside a vehicle. But a good driver is a defensive driver who does look for everything. In driver’s ed, I was taught to expect everyone to possibly act differently than I’d expect. So if you are a good driver, I really think you see a lot more than just other cars and trucks. And there are quite a few good drivers out there. And some bad ones who really only do see other cars.

    As a cyclist, I am forced to be a defensive rider because of the increased danger of riding a bike on a road. I’m constantly concerned about cars pulling out in front of me or pedestrians not paying attention. And I’m forced to think about these things because of the risk of being the smallest thing on the road.

    • zoe morosini February 24, 2012  

      Very well put! Great post.

  • LanzaMarie February 23, 2012  

    It’s funny, but I was just discussing this with my brother, who has recently joined me in the ranks of bicycle commuters. We live in South Central Texas in small towns that aren’t known as “bicycle towns.” Fortunately, because the sight of a middle age woman on a bike is so outside the norm for drivers in my town, people SEE me… and are completely at a loss as to what to do when they encounter me on the road. I get some of the strangest (and sometimes dangerous) reactions to my presence on the road.

    Two days ago a woman was at an intersection I was approaching and I could see the puzzlement on her face: “Do I wait for her to pass or do I just go?” The woman watched me progress for more than a block and decided at the last minute to gun it and speed into the intersection before I could get past her. Unfortunately, she made the decision just as I was approaching the cross street and came too close for comfort.

    With the exception of the young lady in the monster Suburban who is always on her cell phone and the distracted parents dropping kids off at the day care on my route, people see me and I am thankful. I’m considered an oddity and I know how good I have it. (I used to live in a big Texas town and had a good friend who was hit by a distracted motorist. Thankfully, she came through the experience without any major injuries.)

  • Joe February 23, 2012  

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