The following are actual statements found on insurance forms where drivers attempted to summarize the details of an accident in the fewest words possible:

  • Coming home, I drove into wrong house and collided with a tree I don’t have.
  • I thought my window was down, but found it was up when I put my head through it.
  • The other car collided with mine without giving warning of its intentions.
  • I collided with a stationary car going the other way.
  • A truck backed through my windshield into my wife’s face.
  • A pedestrian hit me and went under my car.
  • The guy was all over the road. I had to swerve a number of times before I hit him.
  • I pulled away from the side of the road, glanced at my mother-in-law and headed over the embankment.
  • In my attempt to kill a fly, I drove into a telephone pole.
  • I had been shopping for plants all day and was on my way home. As I reached an intersection a hedge sprang up obscuring my vision, and I did not see the other car.
  • I had been driving for 40 years when I fell asleep at the wheel and had an accident.
  • I was on my way to the doctor with rear end trouble when my universal joint gave way causing me to have an accident.
  • As I approached the intersection a sign suddenly appeared in a place where no stop sign had ever appeared before. I was unable to stop in time to avoid the accident. To avoid hitting the bumper of the car in front, I struck the pedestrian.
  • My car was legally parked as it backed into the other vehicle.
  • An invisible car came out of nowhere, struck my car and vanished.
  • I told the police that I was not injured, but upon removing my hat found that I had a fractured skull.
  • I was sure the old fellow would never make it to the other side of the curb when I struck him.
  • The telephone pole was approaching. I was attempting to swerve out of its way when it struck the front end. I was thrown from the car as it left the road. I was later found in the ditch by some stray cows.
  • The indirect cause of the accident was a little guy in a small car with a big mouth.
  • The pedestrian had no idea which direction to run, so I ran over him.

(from The Humorama Newsletter)


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An old-timer sat on the river bank, fishing pole in hand, although the fishing season had not officially opened. A uniformed officer stood behind him quietly for several minutes.

“You the game warden?” the man inquired.

“Yes sir.”

Unruffled, the old man began to move the fishing pole from side to side.
Finally, he lifted the line out of the water. Pointing to a minnow wriggling
on the end of the line, he said, “Just teaching him how to swim.”

(from Jacob M. Braude, Braude’s Treasury of Humor, (Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1964)

 


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Before you make too many excuses based on your having gotten a poor start in
life consider the study made by Victor and Mildred Goertzel. They studied the
backgrounds of hundreds of highly successful people. Three out of four had a
troubled childhood! One fourth of them had some physical handicap. The fact is
that no one grew up in a perfect home, and no one has a perfect body or perfect
mind. Read the list of kings in the Old Testament and see how many overcame
spiritual disadvantages. How often it is said that “he walked not in the
ways of his father!”


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