Once read a flippant study in
the US about how everyday motorists show certain attitudes in public. The study was executed quite simply, watching
and recording behavior of motorists while idling in front of an intersection
waiting for the lights to turn.
And the expected results came
out quite cut and dried. When an
expensive car like a Mercedes (that was then the example given) tarries a bit
after the lights turn, there was a marked though muted hesitance of those in
the back to start honking their horns.
Not in the case of a more common and less-expensive car because almost
immediately angry horns would start blaring at the first sign of delay.
The obvious inference was
that those in the back associate expensive cars with important and influential
people and thus the hesitance, and maybe, the fear to enrage the mighty and
powerful. Not so with regular folks
driving the typical sedans you see toiling around.
Nothing new here. Especially in this age when perception is
king. A local Hizzoner who initially portrayed himself as the spokesperson of
the masa was noted upon his election to have selected the most expensive SUV to
be found locally, instead of taking possession of the former mayor’s
still-looking-new and expensive service car. One to commemorate and to measure
up to a newly-minted exalted position?
Anyway, this behavior is true
in the US, and true everywhere else I dare say.
And I cull from my own personal experiences to drive home this well-worn
point
Here in the old homeland, I
typically have 3 options of vehicles to drive.
There was a 4th one, a two-wheeler, but because of real imminent
dangers to life and limb decided to consign it to the mountains for some other
use.
Lucky me? Not really, since all 3 of them are quite old
– the latest one having come out in 2007, the oldest a remnant of 1995, and the
3rd, a pretender of a vehicle bought over 10 years ago. Anyway, they all have one general purpose, to
get me from Point A to Point B said idiomatically, with the least amount of
accompanying problems like ease of parking, and maneuverability in narrowed
streets and traffic jams. Thus, for
certain specific purposes and occasions, each fills the bill which the 2 others
would not be able to do as well. Thus my
choices as to which vehicle to use would be predicated by the purpose or
purposes of the trip.
In Cagayan de Oro, with all
the attendant traffic problems plaguing the city, the ideal would have been the
motorbike. It could go most anywhere,
even on sidewalks and parking would pose no problem. But the lurking trade-off
is the risk to one’s health, both physical and mental. So on to the next best
options.
Since we are dealing with
behavior of motorists, one can say outright that the vehicle that gets the
least respect and courtesy is the smallish and cheap Multicab van, and the one
that is better deferred to would be the DMax, I guess partly because of its
very robust engine and size. And thus,
its overall price. And the oldest one the L200 pick-up is in the middle, at
times getting some respect but in most other times treated like the aged senior
citizen that it is.
So how do all of this
translate or play out into the reality that driving around the streets
of the city on any given day is?
For sure, driving the
Multicab literally means getting no respect or quarter at all. From all and sundry. Not from the huge and shiny SUVs with their
deeply-tinted windows. Certainly not
from the gargantuan trucks oozing out of the city’s narrow streets. Not from the devil-may-care jeepneys/taxis
and other public utilities. Not from
the relas who live in a world all to their own.
Not from the pesky pedicabs sprouting all over the place. And yes, not even from the wayward pedestrians
and the traffic enforcers when they are around.
Why, last Friday one RTA personnel manning a busy intersection could not
help himself mutter within earshot how slow my Multicab was in clearing the
intersection he was trying to keep from tangling.
This means none of them would
give you an inch of right of way even if you waited till kingdom come. Unless one forces the issue on them, playing
a dangerous game of chicken. And worse,
all of them including the noisy motorbikes, will literally steal into your lane
or where you find yourself driving, solely at their own pleasure and discretion
and no amount of honking could even get the attention of those deaf and dumb
motorists. Though one knows they hear
all right.
Yes, the multicab hereabouts could
be deemed the perennial concept vehicle of the masa. They are just so utilitarian and so darn
cheap vehicles they can be used for anything and everything – as service car, as
family van, as public utility, as whatever.
No wonder not only the masa but including polite society can only show
derision and loathing for such low class.
And if you drive one, consider yourself as having been dumped into the
same dire category. Getting no respect or courtesy at all, or any quarter
given.
But when not driving the
multicab, the gray L200 comes in very handy.
Old enough as to not worry about dings and dents, but quite reliable
enough because of its older model diesel engine. Has good loading capacity for short hauls. Except driving it leads to a bit of
confusion, because somehow one is not sure how the rest of the traffic denizens
would regard it. Like I said at times
they show it some respect, and because of it one is not left languishing behind
in busy intersections. And one has clout
enough to play the game of chicken when the need arises. Still the classier guys those driving such
new and nice SUVS with deeply-tinted windows will dismiss you because you are
old and thus not worth much and definitely out of their league. They will most
likely not give you the time of day in terms of right of way and exclusivity of
driving lanes, preferring to ease you to a corner where you can only wait for
them to pass you by to breathe in their noxious exhaust. This they can do because they are newer and
with more muscles, and because they can.
But driving the DMax is a
totally different experience. Why you
could even play devil-may-care road hog if you had the mind and bent to do so.
You feel you are on top of the world, cruising gallantly and victoriously
through the rubble and trash called the rest of traffic. Why you make people feel that you are the
king of the road, having your way with traffic rules and regulations as strictures
to be observed only by those who are less gifted and blessed. Thus parking regulations cannot claim you as
part of their domain, but for you to lord over them, at times with a simple
flick of the hazard light button even in the middle of the street with traffic
crawling all over. In the world of the lawless, you are on 7th
heaven.
Then one wakes up and realizes one cannot be happy or at ease entertaining such lofty presumptions. Rather one wants to play the role of civic-minded motorist trying to obey traffic regulations in the hope of improving the chaotic situation. Like the proverbial candle lighted in that stormy sea of lawlessness
Still, it is nice to think that when I drive
that DMax one could actually explore an upside-down world. A world where
individuality reigns, rather than the common good. Or where selfish personal whims
pre-empt social goals.