Bird
Rest in Peace
People all react differently under stress, duress and pressure. The bottom line is we just don't know who will handle a situation, until the critical time is upon them.
We all think we know exactly what we'll do in an emergency, so it's easy to criticize those who didn't react as we think they should have.
You know this past Christmas, we had snow and ice, lots of ice, on the roads, and we went about 31 miles on I-35 to a daughter's home for the day. Along the way, my wife counted over 30 cars and trucks off the road in the ditches. Ridiculous, bad drivers, right? Now I've driven high speed pursuits, I've done a little stunt driving, I've done 360s on ice for fun, I was in charge of the department's safety section for awhile, I received an award for 20 consecutive years of safe driving of police vehicles, I've taught driving, etc. And I'd never lost control of a vehicle on ice. But Christmas morning, I did. The back end of our Ford Crown Vic decided to pass the front end, and did so. Now I can give you all kinds of "reasons" it happened; the power steering is lighter and more sensitive on the Crown Vic (which my wife normall drives) than the Ford Ranger (which I usually drive), I wasn't expecting anything unusual and was following the same tracks the other traffic had taken, etc.
But you know, no matter how you cut it, it was pure "pilot error". I'm sorry to say, I over compensated both directions; bad driving on my part. Fortunately, I got it under control and stopped without leaving the pavement or hitting anything. But it can happen to any of us.