Friday, 15 March 2013
Pay It Forward? No Chance!
A few years ago, I was on a long haul flight to Hong Kong and watched a movie called Pay It Forward starring Haley Joel Osment (the kid from The Sixth Sense). It was a mushy tear-jerker that I didn’t really enjoy at all.
Having said that, I quite liked the idea behind the film, the basic philosophy, if you like. When somebody does a favour for you, don’t return the favour; instead pay the favour forward by helping three other people instead.
I have been thinking about this a lot in the last two weeks while driving in Oman.
When I arrived in Muscat, I had a choice: either I get a taxi to and from work every day or I drive. Having been to the United Arab Emirates last year, and seen how inconsiderate drivers can be there, and having heard that in Oman they are just as bad, I opted to travel around by taxi instead.
I arrived with a colleague who doesn’t mind driving and during that first week of our trip he was happy to take on the Omani drivers. Every day he offered me the keys to the car and every day I declined.
Why did I refuse, I hear you asking. Three reasons:
(1) Drivers in Oman are at least as bad as drivers in the UAE.
(2) In Oman they drive on the wrong side of the road (the right side as opposed to the left).
(3) Muscat is a maze.
Sadly, that colleague has now returned to the UK and left me with a hire car. My manager asked me if I wanted to take over driving for my final two weeks. I decided to take my chances with taxis.
But that is a problem too. The place I am working is a construction site and it is not easy to get a taxi back to the hotel. Worse, taxi drivers here, while very nice people, are very keen to, shall we say, take advantage of foreigners. The trick is to barter with them before they set off and agree a price. I am not a fan of bartering.
At the hotel, I jumped into a taxi and told him where I wanted to go.
“10 Rials, he said.
“Last week it cost me 8 Rials,” I said.
“10 Rials,” he persisted.
“8 Rials,” I argued.
“10”
“8”
And so it went on for a good five minutes until finally he said “OK – 8 Rials”.
When I got to work, I paid him and boasted to my work colleagues about battering the taxi driver down to 8 Rials.
“From your hotel it should only be 7 Rials,” one of the guys said.
Now I know that the company will pay for the cab, but that annoyed me. And I really didn’t fancy having to go through the rigmarole of bartering for every taxi ride for the next two weeks.
After careful consideration, I reluctantly told my manager that I would drive. It would be more convenient and I could come and go as I pleased without arguing with taxi drivers.
Sadly, however, Muscat is a maze to me and with the inconsiderate drivers and the struggle to make sure that I do not inadvertently career head first into oncoming traffic by driving on the wrong side of the road, I have had a lot of fun negotiating the route to and from work.
After a week of this I have a well established route – not the best route but a route that works for me.
It has not been without pain though.
Three times I have taken the wrong turn and found myself heading in totally the wrong direction, thanks to the maze of Muscat. My colleagues who have driven have told me that it is impossible to get lost in Muscat. Believe me – it is very easy to get lost in Muscat.
What has made it more difficult is the inconsideration of other drivers. To them, the road is theirs and they can do with it what they like. There is absolutely no way that they will pause to let another car out. Worse still, there is no way they will slow down to let you leave a motorway at your required exit.
A day or two ago, I was driving along the motorway, searching for my exit and I spotted it just a little bit too late. In the UK I would have slowed down and indicated and most other drivers would have flashed to let me in.
Not in Muscat.
I started to indicate and edge over but just behind me in the lane was a huge truck that simply refused to budge. In fact, rather than slow down slightly to let me in, he sped up started honking his horn (a favourite pastime here in Muscat). The car behind the truck also refused to budge and I ended up being forced to stay on the motorway.
In the UK I would have succumbed to road rage.
In Muscat road rage was vanquished by fear.
I had no idea where to go. I had no idea where I was.
“What the phaarrrkkkk do I do now?” I screamed to myself.
I ended up coming off at the next junction and after driving around aimlessly for ten minutes, I found myself heading back towards work instead of the hotel. Luckily, I spotted a road that I recognised and managed to get back on track, arriving at the hotel about twenty minutes later than I had anticipated, all because this bozo wouldn’t do me a favour.
And this is where Pay It Forward comes in.
Unlike that arse of a truck driver, I have decided to slow down and allow other vehicles to pop into the space in front of me, thus showing Omani drivers what it is like to be an extremely considerate driver. If I am optimistic I figure that for every car I let in, the driver of that car will do the same for three other drivers at least.
And if my plan works, next time I come to Muscat (which is in April) I will arrive in a city where driving is a pure pleasure; a city where arseholes driving trucks that force innocent foreigners to miss their exit from the motorway will be no more; a city where even taxi drivers (who are a law unto themselves) will drive with due care and attention.
Sadly, looking out of the window of my hotel, which is on a busy main road, and seeing maniacs fighting for every square centimetre of space, I doubt it.
I have my work cut out.
I think it will be tougher than managing to watch the whole movie Pay It Forward without vomiting into a sick back or ranting at the sugary-coated treacle that is the plot.
What will happen when you slow down to allow another driver in is that you will be rammed from the rear. And being a foreigner you will, of course, be in the wrong.
ReplyDeleteWhile travelling by taxi in Egypt the skinny person was told (by the taxi driver) that green is for go, red is for stop and amber is 'for pretty'. Which would have scared the living daylights out of me. What are the taxi drivers in Oman like?
The next time you get to Muscat, they will have forgotten all about you, or there will be many funny stories about the foreigner who doesn't know how to drive properly.
ReplyDeleteHi EC,
ReplyDeleteI'm absolutely aware that being a foreigner I am "wrong" by default.
The taxi drivers are very friendly but, like taxi drivers everywhere in the world, they have their own version of the highway code.
:-)
Cheers
PM
Hi River,
ReplyDeleteI know which I prefer. I still have a week to go ...
:-)
Cheers
PM
Taxi, PlasMan, even if the bartering is annoying at least you won't be screaming in fright at being locked out of a turn off!
ReplyDeleteBonjour Kath,
ReplyDeleteI now have a cast iron route and I know exactly which lane to be in at which point and at which time.
Hopefully ...
:-)
Cheers
PM
I like the idea but I suspect you've just painted an enormous bullseye on your car and handed out free arrows.
ReplyDeleteDoesn't your car come with GPS?
ReplyDeletePay forward did work here. When we first moved to this city, we noticed that drivers always give way to us unlike where we came from. So we started to give way to others.
Hi Big D,
ReplyDeleteI wondered what that weird pattern was.
:-)
Cheers
PM
Hi H2B,
ReplyDeleteSadly no GPS. However yesterday I was let in twice so maybe it is working.
:-)
Cheers
PM
Hey PM, you are right.
ReplyDeleteI am a big believer in generating "good karma" on the roads - every little nice or non-arsey movement you make on the road lowers stress for others and adds to the goodwill on the road, which has the chaos-theory butterfly-wings-like effect of avoiding a triple-car collision in the next town.
Hi Jackie,
ReplyDeleteMy optimistic nature tells me its actually working, but it isn't really. Today was particularly frustrating. i only have to suffer for two more days and then I can return to the UKs chaotic roads.
:-)
Cheers
PM
Read this:
ReplyDeletehttp://personalityspirituality.net/2009/07/10/10-things-everyone-should-know-about-reincarnation/
Hi H2B,
ReplyDeleteInteresting - but I am still sceptical about such things.
I am intrigued enough to do a bit more research - and perhaps write a blog post on it in the future.
Thanks for the link.
:0)
Cheers
PM
So, you survived Muscat!!
ReplyDeleteCongats!
I know you are a sceptic, but that website is an interesting read. For some unexplanable reasons, I came to the same conclusion before reading about reincarnations.
The great thing is, unlike Christianity, you don't have to believe in reincarnation to be reincarnated. haha!
Hi H2B,
ReplyDeleteYes indeed - and I am back there is April for a week too.
Now then - if only I could remember my past lives and what I had learned; perhaps I wouldn't have made so many mistakes in this life - or maybe this is my first life ...
:0)
Cheers
PM
I liked HJO - before he lost it. And the actor who played Jesus was in it as well. Apart from that - meh!
ReplyDeleteHi Eldahossë,
ReplyDeleteNot really followed his exploits to be honest. A lot of child stars go off the rails, sadly.
:-)
Cheers
PM