My Driving Experiences Learning To Drive example essay topic

614 words
I always thought learning how to drive would be easy until one afternoon when I was 14 I decided to teach myself how to drive. I found out that afternoon that driving is not that easy and cars aren't made for running into ditches. From my experiences and others experiences I have found out that it is not easy to learn how to drive. When first learning to drive you will definitely need a car and a person to teach you how to drive. I found out that if you first learn how to drive a manual it's a piece of cake to drive an automatic.

If you start out with learning to use a clutch then you have already got the hard part out of the way now you just have to learn the rules of the road. After you learn how to drive a manual it will come so natural to you that you will wonder why you weren't able to figure it out. First off to drive a manual you need steady feet and good hand eye coordination to shift. To start the car push in the clutch (far left pedal) and turn the key away from you. After starting the car keep the clutch in and put the shifter into first gear. Slowly let your foot off the clutch until you can feel a catch, and then apply a little gas to get the car going.

It wont happen the first time you try it but by the time you get the hang of it the person in the passenger seat will need a neck brace from the car stalling time and time again. When I was in the stage of learning how to drive my parents were a nervous wreck and so was I with all the screaming they did. Usually when I got my chance to drive my mom was in the front seat and my dad was in the back so I got a double dose of getting yelled at about my driving. I always wondered what it would have been like if they had a mute button on them so they didn't make me so nervous that I would be scared to drive. I almost think of my learning to drive experience like a driving boot camp with all the yelling and screaming going on. I did not learn to drive a manual from my parents, I just learned the correct way.

When I was 14 my dad was gone to Portland and drove his Harley so his car was just sitting there waiting to be driven. What do you think a bored 14 year old in the summer would do if the keys were on the table and know one was home? I live out in the country there was no way that I would get caught, right. Wrong. During my little escapade I ended up crashing his car in the ditch about a mile away from my house. I walked home, called my dad and told him what I did.

I walked away from that accident with not one scratch or bruise but a summer's length grounding and the wrong way to drive a manual. In my experiences in learning to drive you cannot jump ahead of yourself and try to learn it as fast as you can. You need lots of time and experience to become a good driver. Once you learn to drive it will come easy to you and you wont even think about it..