Saturday, January 12, 2008

If you can drive well in Jakarta, you can drive anywhere else in the world !


This journal entry is taken from one of group on Facebook.

If you can drive well in Jakarta, you can drive anywhere else in the world !

That’s right, if you can drive well in Jakarta, you can drive anywhere else in the world. But the converse is NOT always true.

Picture a typical situation on a bright sunny day in Jakarta with you on the steering wheel of a manual-geared Toyota Kijang. You are on your way from Sudirman to a meeting point at Kebayoran, which is starting in 30 minutes. The traffic jam is at its worst because it’s the peak hour of lunchtime + the end of school hours + rush hour for meetings. You know the fast lane is not always the best choice as the traffic in the slow lane usually slackens off after a major divergence. Thus aptly, you switch lanes from the slow to the fast lane and vice versa, with high skills and remarkable precision. Your intuition knows exactly when to speed up and slow down. You overtake the cars ahead that you deem hindering your movement, without any alarm of endangering all other road users. Horn and front lights are appropriately used every time you see vehicles ahead are closing by or switching to your lane. Just before the notorious roundabout, the slow lane, the fast lane, and the busway (yes don’t forget the big brother) converges, making the most chaotic and disorganized traffic mankind has ever defined. Your room is increasingly narrowing as all vehicles try to get their way past the roundabout, creating more lines of vehicles than the road should accommodate.

The Kopaja (public bus) next to your car is only at finger-length distance. But you are not scared at all. Wonderfully, you manage to get your car to the fastest-moving line at the utmost right hand side while you are actually at the utmost left hand side line. Brilliant. After passing the roundabout you go straight down towards Blok M. Your enemies this time are Metromini and Angkot (public mini-buses). For the sake of getting passengers, these vehicles believe that they have the rights to stop wherever and whenever they like. You have ever wanted to snarl at them, but you know it is all in vain, because they think they are the rightful owner of roads in Jakarta. Period. Moreover, its big brother, Metromini, is reputable for making the most unexpected turns and maneuvers as they join your line. Other than that, there is also the smallest brother, Bajai, which is insidiously mysterious. It could go right or left, anytime it wants without giving any signal. Only God knows when and where it is making those turns. We, human beings, can only pray it doesn’t happen right in front of you when you are caught unaware. But you are a skillful driver. You breeze through them without losing any cool or temper or concentration.

Don’t forget the motorcycles. They are always in a massive horde. And they like to speed up, randomly. If they slam into your car, you are to blame. So you know you don’t want to waste your time with them. At any one random time, you could be in a situation where your car is surrounded by 4 motorcycles, on all 4 sides of your car. The one in the front doesn’t have a mirror. The one on your left has 3 persons on the seat. The one on your right has a fragile small boy clinging to his dad with feeble grip on his dad’s tummy. The one behind doesn’t have front lights. ALL of them do not wear helmets. Wrong decision and you are pretty much fucked, regardless who is blameworthy. But you are a virtuoso. You get yourself out of that situation with lovely maneuvers, without harming any of those 4 bikes. When you think you are out of the shit hole, somebody jaywalks across the road. Unconcerned and unaware of your speeding car. In a split of a second, you make an accurate decision between accelerating and slowing down. You take a deep breath. The road is tapering. Without any intention to decrease your speed, you ride past that road with adorable certainty and confidence. All of a sudden, from the front side of a parked bus at the side of the road, a ‘gerobak’ (cartwheel) emerges as it jolly moves across the street. Looking at the mirror, applying brake, but keeping eyes focused on the traveling cartwheel are all done in a simultaneous order, ensuring a smooth flow of the car. Finally you have arrived at your destination. But it doesn’t give you a relief yet. You are just about to be tested on your ultimate driving proficiency. You have to park your car, on a parallel parking on an inclining slope, in between 2 luxurious cars owned by an ex-Indonesian army chief. Drains (or in Indonesia we call it 'selokan/ got') are on both sides of the narrow slopes. Don’t forget, you drive a manual-geared vehicle. But again, and again, you succeed, because you drive really well in Jakarta, and you know no other drivers in the world can match your driving skills.

In conclusion, join this group if you relate yourself to some of these points:
- used Toyota Kijang when you learned to drive.
- started your first lesson on driving when you were in junior high school.
- have ever dented your father’s car and took it to ‘Ketok Magic’ without telling your dad.
- never know of any speed limit in Jakarta.
- know the time frame of ‘3-in-1’ and ‘one way only’ at certain locations in Jakarta.
- always keep at least Rp50,000 somewhere in your car (usually in the key pouch) in case shit happens when you break the law.
- have ever bargained with the police officers when you get fined.
- hate the motorcycles when you are in a car, but you would do the same anyway if you are on the bikes.
- have ever scoffed at other kids who drive better car. His automatic gear is the main reason why you think he can’t drive, and thus should never be allowed to go out in his fancy car.
- hate angkots and metrominis for their senseless driving.
- have ever bumped any types of public transport (angkot, kopaja, metromini).
- as of above, but you chase the bastard until he gives you a compensation even if he looks like ‘preman batak’ because you fear your dad more.
- usually have your first (and the subsequent ones, of course) driving license without going through any proper driving test.
- think that you can drive with your eyes closed in USA.
- always blame on anything else, but not your driving skills, when you actually have ever failed driving test abroad, because you think you have more skills than the tester based on your experience with the worst traffic in Jakarta.
- think that Singaporeans cannot drive a car, because 80% of the cars there are automatic.
- think that Singaporeans cannot drive a car because there are no slopes or undulating roads there.
- strongly agrees that any Singaporean who has ever failed a driving test should not even be allowed to sit next to the driver. That is just way too dangerous. Period.
- you understand these terms: 'jalan tikus', 'nitip sidang', 'polisi cepek', 'joki 3-in-1', 'sim tembak'
- strongly advocates the use of Indonesian driving license as a highest qualification for a driving permit that is recognized all around the world. Simply because we have the highest standard in ‘difficulty’ rating.

Drive safely guys! Cheers!

3 comments:

Mikael Dewabrata said...

to. diupdate lagi dong to.

-kiltie fcukie-
KG

Anonymous said...

Hehe, this is so funny. Y' know I didn't actually grow up in Indonesia, but I obtained my first driving license in Jakarta (got it by a legit but still somewhat corrupted way). I dented my grandma's manual Panther hitting a blue Mikrolet Kijang and went to a Ketok magic shop. I was so embarassed the first time I had to parallel park in Jakarta cuz it took me more than 10 min, and I was not younger than 18 at that time which I believe is the limit age to be a dumbass driver in Jakarta (so ppl think I had no excuse to be that lame). Oh yea, did I tell u I did this for 2 whole months? One final thought, I do believe the traffic of the suburb area of Bekasi is much worse than Jakarta itself (the place the accident happened). Crazy bikers blocking any attempt to move forward hahaha. All in all, I am glad I experienced all that, so I now rly appreciate the driving experience in US.

Anonymous said...

Great work.