That is luck not skill. Humans are not good drives and never can be.
> Stay focused on the task at hand and be responsible.
That helps. It would help some more if you would also get updated training - safety engineers have discovered a lot of things over the years that few people know.
Luck is enough. The average road is about 2 accidents per million miles. https://www.dot.ny.gov/divisions/operating/osss/highway/acci... so if we assume the OP doesn't drive drunk he is isn't enough above average to claim skill based on the evidence we have.
More importantly, the OP should not claim skill even if he has some: that leads to complacency. If he claims luck he is more likely to admit he isn't perfect and thus pay attention to changes in what he best practice for driving. What he was taught in drivers training 20 years ago assuredly has some things that we now know were wrong, and it didn't even cover some things we now know is important.
I don't think bluGill is entirely wrong ( as indicated by the downvoting ), the average driver believes they're better than the average, which isn't possible. But, I'm sure, the average person is much better than then average _some_ of the time, and they're thinking about their best when they rank themselves -- I think this falls into the same reasoning as, 'we judge others based on their actions and we judge ourselves based on our intentions' -- intending to drive error free is likely much more common than actually driving error free
But, it also sounds like, some of the driver assist features aren't so good yet either ( reading many of the other comments in this thread )
> That is luck not skill. Humans are not good drives and never can be.
This is a stretch. The better argument is that the best human reflexes can't react to others' stupidity with the speed and precision modern safety mechanisms can.
That is luck not skill. Humans are not good drives and never can be.
> Stay focused on the task at hand and be responsible.
That helps. It would help some more if you would also get updated training - safety engineers have discovered a lot of things over the years that few people know.