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November 23, 2024
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Linking Northern and Central NJ, Bronx, Manhattan, Westchester and CT

Whenever you want to go anywhere, there’s traffic. And people know this. That’s why when you get there, everyone asks, “How was traffic?”

“Traffic was the best. I got a lot of thinking done. Also, my right leg is now about six times stronger than my left leg. I can kill a turtle.”

But there has to be some way to avoid it, right?

In the old days, we used to find out whether there was traffic by listening to the radio. (I don’t know how they found out about traffic before radios were invented. Probably the postal service.) Every 10 minutes, the radio would spend one minute talking about traffic, right after you’d joined the highway you were trying to find out whether to avoid. And then, in that one minute, the radio would zip off a million different highways, and you’d say, “Shoot! Did he say our highway? I wasn’t listening.” And the other person in the car would say, “I don’t know; I thought you were listening. Can we put on the music now?”

So you’d quickly turn to another station in the hope of making their traffic report, and then another, and it would turn out that whether or not there was traffic on the route you wanted to take was actually a machlokes. Which station do you pasken like? How come our rav never addresses that in his speeches? Unless he does, and I miss it.

Also, sometimes we’d turn on the radio after we were already in traffic, just to see if the guy would mention our highway. (“Hey! We’re on the news!”)

I think we’re actually trying to test the traffic report to see how accurate it is. That said, I’m always disappointed when I’m actually sitting in traffic and they don’t announce my highway. (“Hey!”) At first, my theory was that in certain places, it’s normal to have traffic, so they never report it. The radio isn’t going to tell you that there’s traffic in Brooklyn, because there’s always traffic in Brooklyn. In fact, that’s how Brooklyn was formed. A bunch of people were stuck in traffic, and they said, “Well, we might as well pull over and live here.”

“We can’t! There’s no parking!”

But you can’t really blame the guy in the traffic copter for zipping off highways as fast as he can and missing some, because his main priority has to be to get back to watching where he’s going. His main priority is not your personal traffic jam and whether you can hear your highway mentioned, especially since he never actually sits in traffic himself. He has a helicopter. On the other hand, when he comes late to work, he doesn’t have an excuse.

“Why are you late?”

“Traffic.”

“Wait…”

So nowadays, we have various GPS devices, whose goal is to actually get to your destination without traffic as well, because they have to actually sit in the car with you and listen to you yell at other drivers through two layers of glass.

Not my GPS. It doesn’t care. My GPS is pretty old, so at this point in its life, it doesn’t mind going slowly. It had a traffic feature when we got it, but it no longer does, for some reason. Nor does it have a way to update its maps anymore. We’ve gotten another GPS since then, but that one is actually harder to use, which is definitely a feature you want to have to deal with while driving. So basically, taking directions from this GPS is like taking directions from someone who used to know how to get there.

“Get off here!”

“There’s no longer an exit here.”

“Recalculating… Hey, what happened to the Brooklyn Battery Tunnel?”

So sometimes, if I remember, I will look up traffic conditions on my computer before I leave the house, and then hope they’ll be the same by the time I get there.

“I hope there’s no traffic getting to the traffic.”

I also don’t have a phone with any kind of map capabilities, because I mostly work from my living room, and I know how to get there. Sometimes there’s traffic on the stairs, but I can usually avoid it by jumping out the window.

My wife has one, though, and sometimes she uses Waze. I actually have no solid proof that Waze works. Because a lot of times when my wife and I use Waze, we still hit traffic, and we’re like, “But we’re using Waze!”

“Okay,” you’re saying. “But if you had gone a different way, there probably would have been even more traffic. You don’t know.”

So first of all, that statement sounds an awful lot like what we say when it comes to hashgacha pratis, where something bad happens, and you’re like, “Yeah, but you don’t know that if you’d gone a different way, something worse wouldn’t have happened.” I can hold that belief when it comes to the Ribbono Shel Olam, but I’m not also going to keep it for a phone app.

And second of all, I would know if the other highway was worse. I would turn on the radio to see if they mentioned it. That’s why cars still have radios—so you can listen to reports about all the roads you’re not taking. Though I’d never really be sure the other highway wasn’t mentioned, because the app keeps talking over the traffic report.

“Quiet! We’re listening to traffic.”

“Stay on the highway for five miles. Then stay on the highway.”


Mordechai Schmutter is a freelance writer and a humor columnist for Hamodia and other magazines. He also has six books out and does stand-up comedy. You can contact him at [email protected].

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