21/03/2026
You’re driving to work, no traffic lights, no cars in sight. Most people just roll through that intersection without thinking. It feels harmless, right? But this one “harmless” habit is quietly behind a lot of the near‑misses and crashes we see every week.
Road crashes have jumped significantly since last year, and it’s not always wild speeding or drunk driving. Often, it’s tiny lapses: not fully stopping, assuming others will yield, or guessing what that pedestrian or cyclist will do next. Outdoorsy people and daily commuters see this all the time: you’re trying to be careful, while others gamble with seconds.
Here’s the simple road courtesy that changes everything at uncontrolled intersections: slow early, scan wide, and treat every crossing like it’s busy, even when it looks empty. Come to a full stop or near‑stop where required, make clear eye contact with pedestrians and other drivers, then move only when you’re sure everyone understands who goes first.
This isn’t about memorizing complex traffic codes. It’s about building one tiny, repeatable habit: whenever you approach an intersection without lights, tell yourself, “This is where crashes happen.” That quick mental reminder nudges you to cover the brake, check mirrors, and look twice in both directions.
The transformation is subtle but powerful: your commute feels calmer, you’re not relying on luck, and you’re less angry at reckless drivers because you know you’ve reduced the chances of their mistake becoming your tragedy. Small courtesies—like clearly yielding, waving others through when safe, and never blocking a crossing—turn random chaos into predictable movement.
If you love road trips, cycling, running, or just getting to work in one piece, this is where the journey starts: one quiet intersection, one extra pause, one choice to value someone’s life over saving five seconds.