Dubliners also don't wait for the green light when crossing a road on foot. They look for an opening in the traffic and dash across. When we first arrived we couldn't get used to this. It was hard enough to get a handle on what direction traffic was coming from. With driving on the left cars make turns from very (to us) unusual and unpredictable directions. We approached each intersection with barely disguised terror. We would stop at the curb, look in at least eight different directions - left, right, forward, back, up (no helicopters landing...whew), down, sideways, and kitty corner - then look again, then take a deep breath and stride purposefully into the street. Only to turn and race back to the curb when a car, horn blaring, came roaring from an impossible angle. What the...where did THAT come from??? Sandy would get so nervous I had to grab her hand and yell "Now!" as we would dash. And half the time I was STILL wrong. Thankfully we are finally getting the hang of it. Especially since we are now learning to
Drive. As I mentioned in a previous post we have bought a car. A tiny, feeble Toyota hatchback called an Auris (otherwise known as a Corolla). It is the slowest car I have ever owned. But it is small, and that's what counts. The roads here are narrow to begin with, and, because there is such a shortage of parking spaces, seemingly every road allows parallel parking on both sides. This means the usable driving space is narrowed even further. On some streets there is not room for two cars going in opposite directions to pass each other. This creates some interesting moments as you try to discern whether the other guy is going to pull to the side and let you go, or if he's just going to keep coming. And we're having to learn some new traffic signals, such as intersections where there are two or three sets of lights side by side, and some turn red while others show a green arrow, and you have to figure out which one pertains to you. Sandy nearly got rear-ended on her first drive in our car in such a scenario. Neither of us had any idea whether she was supposed to stop or keep going. Fortunately all we got was a honk and a glare.
And we are having to learn some new road signs. This is one that really stumped us:
We couldn't figure out what it meant. And then as we drove a little further, sure enough electronic ambient music suddenly started playing on our car radio and these finger-like objects came in through the windows and started massaging our shoulders. It was awesome!
OK, maybe that didn't happen. And maybe it was referring to speed bumps that just slowed traffic down a bit. But you have to admit my idea is pretty cool.

