Practicing (and Failing at) Grace on the Road

[This essay was originally sent as part of our “Words for Your Wednesday” weekly email series. If you’d like to get reads like this one sent straight to your inbox, you can join the Windrose email community here.]

Last week, I got stuck in a traffic jam on the interstate.

I was in a line of cars needing to merge into the bedlam of backed-up vehicles. We had an organized system in place, me and the cars in front of me: a car merged, then the car behind that car merged, and so on. I made my way into a gap between two 18-wheelers, neatly following the rules like the good girl I am. 

But then—l'horreur!—what did the cars behind me do? Speed down the on-ramp in an effort to get ahead by usurping the follow-the-leader system of merging we had all tacitly agreed upon. 

Teacher, they’re cutting!

I was… not happy.

Anne Lamott writes, “Sometimes the movement of grace looks like letting other people go first.”

That’s nice.

Here’s what I did instead:

Tightly tailed the semi in front of me so that not even a cricket riding a bug-sized bicycle could fit in front of my bumper. I watched in serves-you-right vindication as all the cars that had attempted to get ahead were forced to file in line behind me.

Justice, I declare!

Or was it?

What real advantage did I have by not letting a car cut in front of me—that I might prove a petty point? Does responding to disrespectful driving in an equally disrespectful manner do anything to make this crumbling world any more whole?

No.

(Plus, if Driver’s Ed taught me anything, it’s that pissing off others drivers on the road could get you harpooned—literally!—by the bow and arrow road rage of another driver. Did anyone else’s Driver’s Ed teacher make them watch that video?)

I’m not sure that polite driving is going to straighten out our societal issues. But I do know how I feel when someone honks at me (like human trash) or refuses to let me merge (boiling contempt)—so why would I intentionally make others feel the same way through my own actions? 

Maybe practicing grace on the road is a bit like throwing open the window on a sunsoaked spring day—the musty muck of a room is diffused, even if only a bit.

And next time, I hope I’ll have the grace to let someone else go first.

[Cover image by Holden Baxter via Unsplash]