Shared Commute

I’m a creature of habit, I take the same route to work every day along with many others. I recognize many people on my commute. There’s the girl with the gold helmet, her guy friend who wears plaid shirts exclusively. There’s the middle-aged woman with the very large panniers who always dresses for rain. There’s the girl with a straw-basket-bag rigged as a back pack. There’s the girl with the old rust-orange bike who always insists in biking faster than me no matter what. Of course these are all bicyclists.

I’ve always suspected I’m biking alongside the same drivers everyday too. But it’s hard to tell since cars are pretty anonymous looking. Only the unusual cars ones stand out. Or the dangerous ones.

One day last May I was riding home in the rain. Because of the weather, the crazy traffic, the door zone, and the collective mood of the street I didn’t feel comfortable filtering and wanted to stay as visible as possible. Even if it was slower. So I took the lane.

Shared Commute

I ignored it. They always honk. But then:

Shared Commute

I tried to ignore her. Yelling is just honking but with words.

But she was wrong and I couldn’t hold back. I started to give a well-researched explanation about road rules. She rolled up her window fast and…

Shared Commute

…used her car to forcibly pass my in the left half of the lane.

I was pretty shaken. The light changed immediately after and she wove through the dense traffic. I never got a plate and I regretted it. Even if I had, I didn’t know if I could do anything with it since I was not physically injured.

But like me, she apparently is a creature of habit. Because 10 months later…

Shared Commute

…which gives me a small bit of satisfaction. There may not be anything I can do but now I’m even more researched and know that I have a right to file a police report for aggressive driving if something like this happens again.

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61 comments

  • John March 28, 2012  

    I have a section of suburban two-lane road with a wide shoulder, but including a stretch that is in terrible shape with potholes and loose gravel. Sometimes I use it, sometimes I don’t. When I don’t, I need to control the travel lane if there is oncoming traffic. Twice in this situation, the motorist behind me has pulled onto the shoulder and zoomed past me on my right!

    It may have been one of those people with whom I got into a “discussion” at the red light a half mile later, and when we were done “discussing”, as he was rolling up his window, I heard him mutter “Jihadist bastard”! That was so out there it actually made my day!

  • Ethan Fleming March 29, 2012  

    This comic is a good way to describe why I love my helmet cam

  • Night Owl City April 12, 2012  

    Something that I keep coming back on my ride into work in the morning, why did you choose not share the license plate in the comic?

  • Wendy May 1, 2012  

    Apparently this woman was in DC to lecture the Crown Prince of Denmark as well as some other notable officials.
    http://www.copenhagenize.com/2010/06/danish-crown-prince-in-dc.html

    That is one of the things I like about bicycling, (and I say this with a great dose of facetiousness) it’s a great deal more socially equalizing. No matter who you are, if you’re on a bike, you’re a second class citizen like the rest of us.

  • Rudy Breteler March 16, 2014  

    My most violent experiences have been with male drivers, and I would say my interactions with negligent or verbally hostile drivers have been about equally split between genders (I am male). I wonder if female bicyclists experience a disproportionate percentage of negative altercations with female drivers because males are generally less inclined to provoke confrontation with women? (Excluding men whose goal is sexual harassment of course). That’s just a theory, and I would be happy if somebody respectfully told me they think it is wrong.

    I hate to say it, because I really wish nobody would feel inclined to wear a helmet camera, but since I have started using a helmet camera, I haven’t had a single interaction like the one you just described. I think drivers see it up there flashing away on top of my helmet and swallow their impulses. Before I wore one, these things happened all the time. I started wearing one after a somewhat similar instance to what you just described, but instead of simply cutting in front of me, the driver intentionally hit me with his car in a fit of road rage, slightly injuring me and totaling my bicycle. Sadly, though I used to make as much fun of people with the helmet cameras as everyone else does, that instance prompted me to join them.

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