Home › Forums › Chat Forum › Have you ever forgotten what side of the road to drive on?
- This topic has 69 replies, 59 voices, and was last updated 1 month ago by andrewh.
-
Have you ever forgotten what side of the road to drive on?
-
1tpbikerFree Member
Just picked up a new car from the garage. Had a really stressful day, anxiety taking over etc etc. And feeling rushed
Anyhow I go to pull out the carpark and all the cars parked on the right side of the road are facing me. My brain literally went into meltdown and I couldn’t remember which side of the road I should be on. So I just sat there at the junction. Remembered in about 5- 10 seconds, but it was actually quite scary..
This kind of temporary memory loss/brain fog ever happen to anyone else? I’ve never experienced it before.
mytiFree MemberHave you driven abroad much? I get a brain freeze after being abroad and coming back.
MikkelFree MemberDont drive, but when i moved from Denmark to Scotland 20 years ago i had a couple of interesting movements on my bike in the early days, especially when i had turned right onto a side street as i found myself heading to the right side of the road.
biggingeFull MemberWhenever I come out of the compound where I have a storage locker I have to pull to the right of the lane to get to the keypad for opening the gate. Once you pull out of the lane you’re in a two lane b-road with no central markings. I’ve cought myself, at least twice, several hundred meters down the b-road before I’ve realised I’m still over on the right hand side.
4mattyfezFull MemberOnly on one occasion when in Spain, I got confused comming out of an underground garage, otherwise my brain seems to flip pretty easily between left and right.
Oh wait.. are you saying you are in the UK and you got confused? if that’s the case, I’d suggest maybe you are incabable and should go for some medical tests.
EDIT:
stressful day, anxiety taking over etc etc.
This just suggests that you are unfit to drive due to the above….so you should have called a taxi. Never drive if you are really stressed out, a taxi is always cheaper than a smashed up car and all the other problems that may come with that.
martymacFull MemberI haven’t done it.
But i can totally understand if someone has been abroad semi recently, or originally lived in a country that drives on the other side.
I’ve never driven abroad, but I’ve been a passenger abroad, i find it impossible to fully relax tbh.sadexpunkFull Memberonly once, on lesvos this year. wide road, no cars on it, missed a turning so decided to do a u-turn but for some reason went back onto LHS of the road. maybe because there were no other cars to follow, dunno.
otherwise my brain seems to flip pretty easily between left and right.
same. i just seem to be able to ‘mirror image’ my driving when im in europe, never have any problems with roundabouts, right/left turns etc.
i sometimes wonder if ill just be able to switch seamlessly straight back to LHS of road when in uk, but i always do.
_tom_Free MemberAlmost went the wrong way round a busy roundabout when I was in France last summer. Could have been interesting. It was my first time driving abroad, first time in an auto and had people from work in the back, very stressful!
2scotroutesFull MemberOn driving abroad and then on returning (I find roundabouts the worse!). I’ve never “forgotten” under normal circumstances.
susepicFull MemberI find driving abroad that I’ll be really conscious of staying on the right side of the road, but the danger time is a few days in when I feel acclimatised, find myself on autopilot, and then suddenly realise i am on the wrong side.
My BiL was on autopilot the with his bike on the roof when he went to park in a multistorey. He’s got a towbar rack now, and a new bike.
ircFree MemberDid it on my bike first UK ride after 2 years living in Canada. Along similar lines, when driving in the USA for a 3 week holiday for some reason I can never get comfortable with LH turns. It just feels wrong. Everything else seems to come together OK.
tpbikerFree MemberJust to be clear, the memory lapse lasted about 5 seconds whilst I was stationary, having just jumped in a car I was completely unfamiliar with, and also an automatic which ive never driven before. I certainly wasn’t driving down the wrong side of the road. It was quite a narrow road that i was about to pull out on, so the cars in the left lane facing me threw me, and I temporarily had a complete brain fart
But also this..
This just suggests that you are unfit to drive due to the above….so you should have called a taxi.
I pulled over at end of road to clear my head before continuing
I suppose a better title for the thread would have been ‘do you ever forget really basic stuff when stressed’
1james-rennieFull MemberYes, briefly done it a fortnight after returning from France. In my defence it was on a road with no markings and no other traffic, but I very quickly realised when a car appeared coming towards me.
Much more worrying was a situation about 6 years ago when I was on a road ride and suddenly didn’t know where I was or why I was riding my bike. I stopped, had a little cry, then turned around and went back the way I came until I recognised where I was. I suspect that was stress related too.
I don’t think I’ve ever told anyone about that incident.
MartynSFull MemberNot long back from a 10 day trip through france and onto Spain.
i’ve not done a massive amount of driving on the continent but i do a reasonable mileage over here.
i was a bit worried about it, as i was in my car, so wrong side if road, and wrong side of the car..!
i found actually talking out what needed to happen at junctions really helped, so for a roundabout it was “look and give way to the left, looking for 3rd exit, keep on the right.
it helped, and very quickly it became natural.
Very occasionally I’d have to pause a bit longer at a junction and think about what side to go, and where the traffic might be coming from. It was harder when it was quieter!
feedFull MemberHave done, about 5 months back, it wasn’t that I couldn’t remember which side of the road to drive on, I just pulled out from a car park on to a quiet road, no traffic in either direction, so no lazy reference. Probably drove 20 mtrs down the road before becoming aware I was happily driving on the wrong side. About 8 months since I’ve driven abroad. Though complete memory loss is a bit like going to an ATM and completely blanking on what your passcode is, standing there for 10-15 secs waiting for it to come back (which I’ve done on 1 or 2 occasions).
crazy-legsFull MemberDone it on my bike. Many years ago, France, I stopped for some photos at the side of the road in a stunning gorge. Got back on the bike, rode off after the group who’d carried on then thought – why is that idiot driving straight at me? Now the arrogant fool is flashing his lights!
Oh shit, I’m on the wrong side of the road! Quick dive back to the right, a wave of apology and all was well again.
relapsed_mandalorianFull MemberYup. Posted to Germany in the mid-nineties. Used to drive back from camp to the UK travelling via tunnel/ferry. Few moments at Calais/Dover/Folkstone forgetting to switch over.
Thankfully no serious issues caused, just the odd horrified passenger when going around a roundabout the wrong way.
onehundredthidiotFull MemberSainburys straiton for some reason Everytime I go into the car park on the way out I end up driving on the right. Still in the car park and only for a single corner but I’ve done it a few times. No idea why, it’s really strange even when I know I might do it.
hot_fiatFull MemberI do about 5 to 6000 miles in Europe each year in a RHD vehicle. I get so confused, on both sides of the road, particularly when coming out of supermarket car parks which tend to have minimal road markings. I end up chanting Michel Caine’s mantra from The Eagle Has Landed: “Don’t drive too slowly and on the left hand side of the road!” to remind me what to do in the UK.
AmbroseFull MemberAll associated with being abroad in my case.
First one was turning onto a dual carriageway late at night in rural Germany in 1991. I was turning left onto the dual carriageway and turned straight into the wrong carriage way. Properly scary moment but no other traffic around. I spotted that error after about 20 metres.
Second one was in Iceland on a dirt road in the far northwest perhaps in 2008?. They have a cute habit of sometimes putting signs in the middle of the road on blind humps to show you where to be as you crest the rise. A lot of the times the roads are deserted and people drive in the middle or wherever the best surface is. Seeing the sign sort of reminded me that having been driving on the left side of the track was a silly thing to have been doing.
Most recent was in 2010 in Bracknell where, after a summer in the Alps, I somehow managed to drive the wrong way around a roundabout and ended up nose to nose with another car where I pulled sharp right up a leafy footpath. Again, no damage done but potentially nasty.
In all cases I had passangers.
Being allowed to drive again during lockdown was eye opening. All road sense seemed to have evaporated.
1KucoFull MemberNever done it myself but have seen the aftermath of someone doing it out of a junction many moons ago in Holland. UK car pulled out of a junction the wrong way straight into the path of an on coming car, results were not pleasant for both parties.
1tpbikerFree MemberThough complete memory loss is a bit like going to an ATM and completely blanking on what your passcode is, standing there for 10-15 secs waiting for it to come back (which I’ve done on 1 or 2 occasions
I don’t think it was memory loss as such. You don’t ever really think about wht side of the road to drive on, it just happens automatically. But the lay out on the road with the direction of the parked cars clearly tricked my eye, and made my brain question it as it didt look right. And at that point, my brain just got really confused ?
CountZeroFull MemberI did once when I was in LA, been down to Sunset Bvd and heading back up to North Hollywood, heading onto the Hollywood Fwy, I completely forgot which lane I should be on, turned onto the right lane as another car came down the ramp directly towards me – cue horn blowing and lights flashing, as one might expect.
It was fairly late at night, I’d only been there a couple of days, and the way the lanes go underneath the freeway are somewhat confusing, in my mitigation.
HazeFull MemberVery briefly in Kefalonia this year, I was taking a wide line out of a steep, tight hairpin and wanted to avoid scraping the bottom of the car…took a few seconds before my other half started shouting!
Seen plenty of folks ride the wrong way around islands in Mallorca, usually on the first day.
1BillMCFull MemberOnce in a car and once on my bike. My mrs, although very sharp, struggles with left and right so she refuses to drive abroad. I quite like it. Oddly I’m just back from Spain and I did a double take about was I on the correct side of the road coming away from the airport and I hadn’t driven in Spain. The other thing that demanded attention was driving in Australia and remembering whether you’re on a two-lane or a four-lane road as it’s not always clear and it could make overtaking a bit interesting. Anyone remember ‘priorite a droit’? Oh and turning right against the lights in LA freaked me out a bit. It’s a wonder we’re all still here.
alpinFree MemberYeah often, but always in the UK, never on the continent.
Only a couple of times in the motor, but often on a bike…. Rolling down the hill wondering why the bus is flashing his lights and coming straight at me.
1andrewhFree MemberDone it once in Italy, but they seem pretty flexible as to which to use most of the time so not really an issue.
.
More like the OP, I’ve forgotten which way round knives and forks go when setting the table, just had a complete mind-blank. Laid them out, thought it looked wrong, swapped them over, thought it looked wrong again. Had to stop and have a think. Not stressed or anxious or anything like the OP, just a weird moment
alpinFree Memberfound actually talking out what needed to happen at junctions really helped, so for a roundabout it was “look and give way to the left, looking for 3rd exit, keep on the right.
it helped, and very quickly it became natural.
I hope you were driving alone, otherwise what did your passengers think?
Being allowed to drive again during lockdown was eye opening. All road sense seemed to have evaporated.
Are you talking for yourself or about the population as a whole? I’m assuming the former given your previous escapades.
ocriderFull MemberYep. That was me, last week at Folkestone services after rolling off the shuttle.
tpbikerFree MemberFor additional context…as the road was 2 lanes and 1 of them (the left lane I needed to be in) was full of parked cars, the only lane i could turn into was the ‘wrong lane’ regardless. I suspect my stressed brain knew that didn’t seem right, but didn’t click why exactly!
Interestingly I just asked my mate what side of the road we drive on….he had to think about it for a second! After 30 years of driving it’s just second nature.
HazeFull MemberMore like the OP, I’ve forgotten which way round knives and forks go when setting the table, just had a complete mind-blank. Laid them out, thought it looked wrong, swapped them over, thought it looked wrong again. Had to stop and have a think. Not stressed or anxious or anything like the OP, just a weird moment
I’m consciously aware that I apparently hold mine the wrong way around, so I always know the fork goes on the left…opposite to how I actually use them.
Guess I was dragged up.
ayjaydoubleyouFull MemberMidway through lockdown, when my car had probably done a weekly mile round trip to Sainsbury’s, I suddenly had cause to make a slightly longer journey (of about 4 miles).
Having barely driven irl, but spent countless furloughed hours on grand theft auto, I did have a momentary lapse on a thankfully empty road.pondoFull MemberI’ve had occasions where I’ve had to think which is the correct side, normally when on holiday or in the weeks after – only time I can remember actively doing it was when working in France 25 years ago, arriving on site and being asked to have my driving assessed, ironically. Was so focused on chatting and showing how little of a deal it was that I set off on the wrong side – was a valuable lesson!
We have a English friend with an apartment near Toulouse – he’s visited us before now and I’ve seen him head off down our road and go the wrong way round the roundabout at the end…
simondbarnesFull MemberNo, I haven’t. If I did I would get out of the car and send my license back to the dvla.
dyna-tiFull MemberWhichever country you are in, in a standard car, the middle of the road should always be on the drivers side.
So when you are driving along, and you look of your drivers side window, you dont want to be seeing a pavement immediately beside you
pondoFull MemberIf I did I would get out of the car and send my license back to the dvla.
Bet you wouldn’t. 😉
daverhpFull MemberExiting the Ferry Nab car park at Windermere gets me- the bizarre layout puts you on the wrong side and it’s very easy to just lapse into ‘abroad mode’…
I’m also amused by seemingly randomly sited road signs many miles from a port etc saying drive on left – if you got that far without working that out it would be a miracle!
2thols2Full MemberI was expecting a thread about sexual proclivities, now I see it’s just about driving, I have nothing to contribute.
jiFree MemberOnce, in Spain went round a mini roundabout the wrong way. Right outside a police station too, and it was a road I had driven a few times before.
Years ago was passenger in a car in France and ex GF was driving – late at night, long drive etc. Were on a sort of dual carriageway, but with no separation between the sides. ex GF suddenly panics, despite having been driving for an hour or more on this road, and swerves to the wrong side, thinking she was moving to the correct side. Of course at that point barriers appear, and we can’t get back over. Felt like ages before I could persuade her that she was now on the wrong side, and to stop and let me turn the car around.
Luckily it was late at night and no-one else around.
You must be logged in to reply to this topic.