Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm not particularly interested in what anyone thinks about my self diagnosed mild road rage. My only point, and my husband would agree with this assessment, is that just because someone exhibits irritation/anger while driving, that doesn't mean they are a closet rage-a-holic in other aspects of their life.
Well, given the fact that you continue to post on here and argue with people about it, that does not appear to be true. And it also doesn't point to the "I only have irritation/anger issues in that one aspect of my life"
Thanks for proving everyone's assumptions about road ragers though. Nice to know it was well founded
I'm not arguing about anything, I admitted it wasn't my best quality straight up!
Gotta be honest you seem way more angry than I do champ. Have a nice night![]()
And the passive aggressive LOL emoji
It just keeps getting worse
Anonymous wrote:Honking the horn is now considered road rage? For real?
Anonymous wrote:I could never date someone who had road rage. That's just one of those things that, IMO, is indicative of so much more. And a general entitlement/intelligence/anger issue.
Anonymous wrote:Honking the horn is now considered road rage? For real?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I will admit I have what I call mild to moderate road rage... No one's perfect!
Figure your issues out. You are a danger to others on the road
+1 Think of good behavior and self-control in the car as an extension of the rules of the road. Rules make a complicated moving system work and by extension, keep more people moving faster and more safely. "Honking at people doing dumb things" is distracting to everyone around you (the driver you're honking at, the other drivers, and to you too). It's the community-level version of yelling at someone. It disrupts the system. That's why it's so selfish.
Anonymous wrote:I'm not particularly interested in what anyone thinks about my self diagnosed mild road rage. My only point, and my husband would agree with this assessment, is that just because someone exhibits irritation/anger while driving, that doesn't mean they are a closet rage-a-holic in other aspects of their life.
Anonymous wrote:NP here. I get annoyed with people blocking a right turn lane bc they zipped past a long line of traffic and then try to force a merge back into the main flow of traffic. They block all of us trying to go right and cut ahead of all the people who adhered to the assigned lanes. I will often honk trying to get them give up and just go right so our lane can go -- and have honked as I pass them to chastise them for being scofflaws. Unreasonable? Should I just make peace with this behavior?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm not particularly interested in what anyone thinks about my self diagnosed mild road rage. My only point, and my husband would agree with this assessment, is that just because someone exhibits irritation/anger while driving, that doesn't mean they are a closet rage-a-holic in other aspects of their life.
Well, given the fact that you continue to post on here and argue with people about it, that does not appear to be true. And it also doesn't point to the "I only have irritation/anger issues in that one aspect of my life"
Thanks for proving everyone's assumptions about road ragers though. Nice to know it was well founded
I'm not arguing about anything, I admitted it wasn't my best quality straight up!
Gotta be honest you seem way more angry than I do champ. Have a nice night![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm not particularly interested in what anyone thinks about my self diagnosed mild road rage. My only point, and my husband would agree with this assessment, is that just because someone exhibits irritation/anger while driving, that doesn't mean they are a closet rage-a-holic in other aspects of their life.
Well, given the fact that you continue to post on here and argue with people about it, that does not appear to be true. And it also doesn't point to the "I only have irritation/anger issues in that one aspect of my life"
Thanks for proving everyone's assumptions about road ragers though. Nice to know it was well founded
Anonymous wrote:I'm not particularly interested in what anyone thinks about my self diagnosed mild road rage. My only point, and my husband would agree with this assessment, is that just because someone exhibits irritation/anger while driving, that doesn't mean they are a closet rage-a-holic in other aspects of their life.