Girls Who Drive.
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Blind Spot.

The hidden area your mirrors don’t show

Quick Definition

Blind spot is the area around your car that your mirrors can’t see. If you don’t physically turn your head to check it, another car, cyclist, or pedestrian could be there without you realizing it — which is how many lane-change accidents happen.

Why This Matters

Understanding the risk

Blind spots are one of the most common causes of avoidable accidents. You can be a careful driver and still hit someone simply because you didn’t see them. Mirrors alone are not enough — checking your blind spot is what makes your driving actually safe.

Key Risks

  • Sideswiping another car while changing lanes
  • Hitting a motorcyclist or cyclist you didn’t see
  • Failing your driving test instantly
  • Causing sudden braking or swerving from other drivers

When This Happens

Common Scenarios

Changing lanes

You check your mirrors, but a car is sitting just outside your view.

Merging onto a highway

Cars move quickly and can enter your blind spot fast.

Turning at intersections

Cyclists or pedestrians can be hidden beside your car.

What To Do

Recovery Steps

01

Turn your head quickly

Do a fast shoulder check before changing lanes — don’t rely on mirrors alone.

02

Check right before you move

Look immediately before switching lanes, not a few seconds earlier.

03

Adjust your mirrors properly

Set your mirrors wider to reduce (not eliminate) blind spots.

04

Move smoothly, not suddenly

Gradual movements give you time to react if something appears.

Common Mistakes

Avoid these errors

!

Relying only on mirrors

Mirrors reduce blind spots — they don’t remove them.

!

Checking too early

A car can enter your blind spot in seconds, so timing matters.

Next Steps

Practice shoulder checks every time you change lanes

Adjust your mirrors before every drive

Be extra cautious around motorcycles and cyclists

Build the habit until it becomes automatic

CHECK