
How to Have a Heart Attack and Blame Everyone Else – The “Brain on Vacation” Overtake
Šiauliai, Lithuania. A roundabout. The sky is clear, cars hum along as usual—until the moment life, apparently, takes a dramatic turn. Or at least the driver with the dashcam thinks it does.
It all starts when our dashcam hero decides to attempt something no self-respecting driver would do: overtaking via the right lane on a roundabout, as if he'd discovered a secret dimension invisible to the rest of traffic. And the car ahead? Blissfully unaware that a high-speed IQ test is unfolding just behind it.
Then, the unexpected! The car in front heads for the same exit. You know, as cars tend to do on roundabouts. A normal, fully legal maneuver. But in our hero’s world, this is betrayal. Treachery. Grounds for an emotional lawsuit. The brakes slam, the camera shakes, and the driver unleashes his inner Shakespeare—though instead of sonnets, we get an unbroken string of expletives.
Naturally, the comment section explodes. Some blame the lead car for not signaling. Others say the dashcam driver is a certified drama magnet who needs more magnesium and fewer nerves. A third group suggests the entire roundabout was designed as a psychological endurance test—if you make it through alive and emotionally intact, you deserve a gold star with your driver’s license.
Whatever this was—an overtake attempt devoid of logic, a forgotten turn signal, or just the average daily circus of traffic—one thing is certain: this wasn’t a driving video. It was a documentary on human psychology.