In many cities, the crosswalk has become a territory of constant negotiation, not a space of automatic respect. The pedestrian stops, hesitates, waits for a stop signal that sometimes never comes. The driver, impatient, accelerates so as not to "waste time." Here the harsh reality emerges: the fragility of rules in the face of individual urgency. We live in a culture where the collective, all too often, yields to the rhythm of the private. The pedestrian crossing confronts us with an uncomfortable question: are we capable of symbolically yielding the right of way in our daily lives, or do we only move forward when the red light of our conscience forces us to?
Beyond traffic, the "pedestrian crossing" also exists in our work, family, and political relationships. These are the moments when someone slower, more vulnerable, or with fewer resources needs to cross our path. Reality shows that, without a framework to guarantee it, those in power rarely stop of their own volition. Therefore, respecting pedestrian crossings is not an act of courtesy, but an indicator of a society's level of civilization. Where cars stop at the white line, there is a community that has understood that mobility is not only about efficiency, but also about care.
So, the next time we stop at a pedestrian crossing, let's recognize that we are not just obeying a traffic law. We are practicing, in miniature, the art of inhabiting a shared world. Because reality moves fast, but only by stopping in time can we build a city.
Credits: The translator used was Google Translate.
The image is my own work.