I'm convinced driving is not something I'd be any good at and I don't like trying out things I'm no good at, such as tennis or maths.I am a woman who cannot parallel park. Mind you, I am also a woman who can't drive, so maybe that's irrelevant. But I'm
Harriet Walker: Driving and parking on life's journey
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Driving ... some people can and some can't. Photo / Thinkstock
I'm convinced driving is not something I'd be any good at, and I don't like trying out things I'm no good at, such as tennis or maths.
To those who still argue about which sex makes the better driver, these stats will no doubt serve as conclusive evidence. The daft bints, more interested in checking their lippie in the rear-view mirror than learning the logistics of the road, the Alan Partridges among us will say, nodding sagely and sucking their teeth in smug satisfaction.
But it's a bit of a thing, isn't it, that men will bustle in, take charge and tackle their fears head on, while women will do their research and seek out the more placatory and peaceful solution to a problem. Perhaps that's why men are more likely to die on the road than women.
But by avoiding directly confronting their fears, by shying away from challenges, perhaps women do themselves down. Who's to say a quarter of them who won't parallel park definitely couldn't, if pressed to? They could probably do it without even having to switch off Sade's Greatest Hits.
It's the same story with careers, job interviews and even university exams; the male candidates, content to simply have faith in themselves and their abilities, score more highly and progress more quickly than their female counterparts by being that much more blase about it all.
A lot of it is bluster and the ability to put oneself forward. That isn't to say women should be cut some slack - if anything, perhaps we should cut ourselves some of it and stop assuming there are quite so many things we're bad at.
-Independent