What Do You Do When Your Insurance Quotes Got Voodoo

From Trade Britannica
Revision as of 08:15, 13 January 2020 by Mcmillanwarming6 (talk | contribs)
Jump to: navigation, search



My father was driving on the highway through a construction zone. Traffic was going relatively slowly, and so he was following the car in front of him rather closely. I happened to be on the phone with my mother, who was in the passenger seat, and she was warning him to slow down. Before I knew it, I was hearing the sound of my parents getting into a fender bender - they had hit their brakes in time to avoid the suddenly-stopped car in front of them. However, the driver behind them had not been so careful. He struck my parents' vehicle from behind, thereby pushing them into the stopped vehicle in front of them. A three-car pile-up!

Here is the update. túi giấy kraft trơn có sẵn know when the wind will change and all of a sudden what you thought was important before, doesn't even matter anymore.




Have you ever taken a photograph or viewed a photograph taken of ordinary people or scenes and seen orbs of light or translucent people in the background of the picture once it was developed? How do we know that when a stranger appears at the perfect time to show us the way when we're lost or to help us in times of danger, that we are not actually seeing an angel or ghost or deceased loved one or agent of God making an appearance to help us in our time of need?

Being the early-bird that I am, I was up at 7:30 a.m. I took a peek out of the black-out drapes to see it had stopped snowing. However, there was about a foot of snow on the ground and the roads weren't plowed yet. I had no idea what awaited us. I grabbed a book for reading and Heather's cell phone to make calls--I wanted to let the girls sleep a couple more hours. I would definitely need my morning time today--my "alone" time, as I affectionately refer to it. There was still half a trip to make.

It was snowing harder now. I drove back through the gas station and slowed to a stop to where the young man could see me between the parked cars. I rolled down my window and motioned him to my car. "Me?" he asked, pointing to his chest.

Everything changed quickly as Dan Wheldon, at the age of 33, died as a result of injuries sustained in a 15 traffic pile up in the Indy 300 that day in Las Vegas. He went to work. He never came home.

The key to construction-proofing your insurance lies in making your car (and your driving habits) as insurance friendly as possible. If you're driving within their realms of not just acceptable, but excellent driving habits, you're going to have a better chance of being forgiven for stumbling over a pot hole and slamming into a cement median than you will if your driving record is host to a list of black marks a mile long!