I know I have made this point to some of my colleagues (and many of them even stayed awake while I was making it) but sometimes you have a trainee who feels so liberated by realising that at times - on, say, a narrow road with parked cars along it - it is fine to ride in the middle of the road that they then can't stop doing so, even when the road is free of parked cars. So you have to pull them over and discuss it, discuss how road positioning is a dynamic thing and that we have to be considerate of other road users and so on and so on.
It's not easy to make that point in a single pithy phrase.
Or a single interesting paragraph, I hear you say.
So cruel.
I know I have made this point to some of my colleagues (and many of them even stayed awake while I was making it) but sometimes you have a trainee who feels so liberated by realising that at times - on, say, a narrow road with parked cars along it - it is fine to ride in the middle of the road that they then can't stop doing so, even when the road is free of parked cars. So you have to pull them over and discuss it, discuss how road positioning is a dynamic thing and that we have to be considerate of other road users and so on and so on.
It's not easy to make that point in a single pithy phrase.
Or a single interesting paragraph, I hear you say.
So cruel.